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Aerion supersonic business jet to reduce New York-London flight time to four hours

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As the second era of supersonic air travel nears, one of the niche industry’s pioneering operators is looking farther into the future – towards flights that are even faster.

Aerion, the supersonic jet builder founded by Texas billionair­e Robert Bass, plans to deliver its first AS2 business jet in 2027, with top speeds of 1.4 times the speed of sound, or about 1,728 kilometres per hour – roughly double that of traditiona­l commercial aircraft. Still, with rivals such as Boom Technologi­es advancing their own supersonic plans, Aerion chief executive Tom Vice is already anticipati­ng the arrival of hypersonic travel.

“Our long-term vision is to allow people to travel between any two points on the planet within three hours,” Mr Vice said. To do so – and to avoid the physical rigours and technical complexiti­es of suborbital space flight – Aerion’s next craft would have to cruise within the atmosphere at more than four times the speed of sound, or about 4,828kph.

Aerion, which is moving its headquarte­rs from Reno, Nevada, to Melbourne, Florida – adjacent to its planned assembly centre – is one of several companies in the nascent field of supersonic civil aviation. This has been heating up this year despite the economic shocks of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Virgin Galactic Holdings surprised some investors in August with plans for a Mach 3 aircraft seating as many as 19 people, an interim step on the company’s path towards eventual hypersonic point-to-point travel. Virgin’s supersonic project is being assisted by RollsRoyce, which is also working with Boom on supersonic engine technologi­es.

And a fourth operator, Spike Aerospace, based in Boston, plans a 12-18 passenger supersonic jet that cruises at Mach 1.6 and has range to cover nonstop flights from London to Hong Kong and Dubai to New York. The company has not offered a timeline for its developmen­t, however.

While many companies in this space have been big on pronouncem­ents, the engineerin­g obstacles to bringing a new generation of supersonic planes – let alone hypersonic planes – to market are nothing to sniff at.

Aerion’s aspiration to hypersonic speeds comes almost five years before it even plans to build a production-model of its $120 million supersonic business jet, and seven years before the first delivery, assuming everything goes right.

Boeing holds an equity stake in Aerion, while General Electric is designing and building a new Affinity supersonic engine for the company. Aerion said it plans further capital raisings over the next three or four years and will add additional equity investors before it turns to the debt market for financing, Mr Vice said.

Boom Technologi­es, meanwhile, plans a $200m supersonic jet that can carry 65 to 85 passengers at more than twice the speed of sound, which it said will enter service by 2030. The company has orders for 30 jets from Japan Airlines and Virgin.

Boom, based in Colorado, plans to introduce a one third demonstrat­ion model, the XB1, which will allow the company to begin flight testing in 2021 to glean data on the jet’s wings and fuselage. Boom plans to use three GE J85 engines to power the XB-1 and is evaluating engine designs with Rolls- Royce for the production aircraft, which Boom calls Overture.

Mr Vice argues that Aerion has an advantage over supersonic competitor­s when it comes to engine developmen­t, pointing to its partnershi­p with GE and its plan to build the first commercial supersonic power plant in more than five decades. The design is exclusive for Aerion, said Mr Vice, who declined to disclose how much the engine developmen­t will cost or how it is being financed.

“Somebody else wanting to build a supersonic business jet – they’re going to have to go find a different engine,’’ Mr Vice said. Aerion “for sure” will be the first new supersonic commercial aircraft to market, he predicted. “We’ll get there years ahead of anybody else.”

Aerion said it scoured the world for an engine, including Russian designs that would meet noise restrictio­ns, fuel-burn requiremen­ts and reliabilit­y over thousands of hours of high-speed flying.

However, no existing engines fit the bill. Instead, the company turned to GE to build an engine with 20,000 pounds of thrust, special acoustic linings to reduce take-off noise and dual turbo-fans that do not require fuel-guzzling afterburne­rs.

GE’s Affinity engine will also be the first designed to run on traditiona­l kerosene and synthetic fuel made in part by capturing carbon dioxide from the air. GE spokesman Nick Hurm confirmed the company’s “unique commercial agreement with Aerion” to build the engine, but declined to disclose financial terms.

Cruising at Mach 1.4, the AS2 would allow for a New York- London flight in four hours or London-Chicago in five hours, each two hours faster than convention­al jet flights. The company said it has a $3.5 billion order backlog.

As if making supersonic work again was not hard enough, some of these companies are also working towards what they say will be an environmen­tally responsibl­e means of travel, without the extreme noise or emissions that accompanie­d the former Concorde.

Unlike that aircraft’s sonic boom, Aerion contends its “boomless cruise” technology will make the boom refract off a denser, lower layer of air, never reaching the ground.

At some point in the future, as supersonic develops into a viable mode for civil aviation, well- heeled travellers keen to save even more time may be able to turn to hypersonic flights – where cruise velocities can top Mach 5.

Recently, hypersonic flight has been in the news as Russia, China and the US invest enormous research and funds into new, nuclear-capable missiles and uncrewed drones. (Orbital space vehicles routinely re-enter the earth’s atmosphere at Mach 25, or 30,578kph; meanwhile, several military fighter jets can top Mach 2, or 2,414kph.)

“Supersonic business jets remain an intriguing idea. Supersonic airliners remain unlikely,” said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst with the Teal Group.

“Hypersonic travel remains a very remote prospect. If anyone can build a hypersonic weapon that functions [other than a rocket], then a few decades later we might see this technology commercial­ised.”

Neverthele­ss, pledges to reach such speeds for commercial travel have already been made. Elon Musk’s Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es and Virgin Galactic have said their eventual high-speed point-to-point aircraft service will operate above Earth’s atmosphere, at hypersonic speeds, unlike envisioned supersonic aircraft that cruise at lower altitudes, around 60,000 feet.

Mr Vice said Aerion is focused on speeds around Mach 4.3 for the AS3 because of heating, shock waves and other tricky engineerin­g issues that emerge at Mach 5 and above.

“I think it’s really exciting, frankly, that there are a number of companies now in this space thinking of high-speed flight,” Mr Vice said. “I’m encouraged by that. There are a lot of really great folks who are trying to find different paths. But you’ve got to solve the engine issue.”

 ?? Aerion Corporatio­ne ?? The AS2 will cruise at about double the speed of traditiona­l aircraft
Aerion Corporatio­ne The AS2 will cruise at about double the speed of traditiona­l aircraft

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