For
release: 07/22/02
Release
#: 02-182
NASA
developing hypersonic technologies; flight vehicles only decades away
Imagine taking off from any U.S. airport and landing anywhere in the world in less than two hours. Or making a quick hop to the International Space Station and back. Sound far-fetched? Not anymore. Technology now being developed by NASA and its partners could achieve such rapid trip times within two decades.
Imagine taking off from any U.S. airport and landing
on any other runway in the world in less than two hours. Or making a
quick hop from that same airport to the International Space Station and
back — a trip that normally takes days or weeks — to drop off science
experiments, provisions and new equipment.
Sound
far-fetched?
Not anymore. Technology now being developed by NASA
and its partners could — within two decades — achieve such rapid trip
times, yielding limitless possibilities for international travel, commerce
and access to space.
And
this week, they’re going public with the hypersonic shape of things to
come.
Visitors to the 50th annual Experimental Aircraft Association’s
AirVenture Air Show, opening July 23 in Oshkosh, Wis., will be among the
first to see mockups of NASA’s proposed “Hyper-X” series. These technology
demonstrators, intended for flight testing by decade’s end, are expected
to yield a new generation of vehicles that routinely fly about 100,000
feet above Earth’s surface and reach sustained travel speeds in excess
of Mach 5, or about 3,750 mph — the point at which “supersonic” flight
becomes “hypersonic” flight.
It also
may be the point at which traditional air transportation becomes as outmoded
as the covered wagon.
Technologies for 21st century flight
Revolutionizing the way we gain access to space
is NASA’s primary goal for the Hypersonics Investment Area, managed for
NASA by the Advanced Space Transportation Program at NASA’s Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
The Hypersonics Investment Area — which includes
leading-edge partners in industry and academia — will support future-generation
reusable launch vehicles and improved access to space. Over the next
20 years, the U.S. will develop and test a series of ground and flight
demonstrators. The flight demonstrators — the Hyper-X series — will
be powered by air-breathing rocket- or turbine-based engines and ram/scramjets.
Air-breathing engines for hypersonic applications are known as “combined
cycle” systems because they use a graduating series of propulsion systems
in flight to reach an optimum travel speed, or to leave the atmosphere
altogether. Air-breathing engines achieve their efficiency gains over
rocket systems by getting their oxygen for combustion from the atmosphere,
as opposed to a rocket which must carry its oxygen. These systems capture
air from the atmosphere during flight — an arrangement that improves
efficiency up to 5-10 times greater than that of conventional chemical
rockets.
Once a hypersonic vehicle has accelerated to more than twice the speed
of sound, the turbine or rockets are turned off, and the engine relies
solely on oxygen in the atmosphere to burn fuel. When the vehicle has
accelerated to more than 10 to 15 times the speed of sound, the engine
converts to a conventional rocket-powered system to propel the craft into
orbit or sustain its top suborbital flight speed.
Despite the astounding paradigm shift it promises
for suborbital and orbital flight, the concept of hypersonic flight is
not a new one. NASA’s hypersonics program is built on research dating
back to the 1950s.
But the new effort — leveraging technology resources
and manufacturing capabilities unavailable 30 years ago — is intended to yield
practical results before mid-century: a future fleet of government and commercial
hypersonic vehicles, traveling between dozens or even hundreds of “skyports”
around the world. And beyond it.
The Hyper-X series
NASA’s series of hypersonic flight demonstrators
includes three air-breathing vehicles: the X-43A, X-43B and X-43C.
The X-43A, an unpiloted research craft mounted
atop a modified Pegasus booster rocket, was first flown in June 2001.
During the flight, an in-flight incident forced the mission to be aborted.
NASA has planned three X-43A flights; two more X-43A flight demonstrators,
built in early 2002, are being prepared for flight testing at NASA’s Dryden
Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif. Fueled by hydrogen, the X-43A
is intended to achieve Mach 7 and possibly Mach 10, or speeds of approximately
5,000 and 7,500 mph, respectively.
The X-43C demonstrator, powered by a scramjet
engine developed by the U.S. Air Force, is now in development. The X-43C
is expected to accelerate from Mach 5 to Mach 7, reaching a maximum potential
speed of about 5,000 mph. NASA will begin flight-testing the X-43C in
2008.
The largest of the Hyper-X test vehicles, the
X-43B, could be developed — and would fly — later this decade. Successful
ground- and flight-testing of various engine configurations aboard the
X-43A and X-43C will determine whether a rocket- or turbine-based combined-cycle
engine powers the X-43B.
All three X-43 flight demonstrator projects are
managed by NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va.
Next-generation flight solutions
NASA expects to spend about $700 million on hypersonics
research and development over the next five years, according to Steve Cook,
deputy manager of Marshall’s Advanced Space Transportation Program. Cook anticipates
the investment will yield unprecedented results, opening up new commercial markets
for industry, furthering human and robotic exploration of the solar system and
significantly improving national security.
“Testing conducted over the last four years proves that air-breathing
propulsion is the most promising technology we’ve seen to date for accomplishing
NASA’s third-generation space transportation goals,” Cook said.
Those goals — focusing on radically safer, more
reliable and less expensive access to space — permeate not just the Hypersonics
Technology Program, but all NASA’s space transportation and propulsion
systems programs.
NASA’s Space Launch Initiative, managed by the
Marshall Center, is working to develop the technology for a second-generation
vehicle that could lead to a replacement for the first-generation Space
Shuttle by 2012 — providing a vastly safer, more cost efficient and more
reliable fleet of vehicles. The third-generation program seeks, by the
year 2025, to develop advanced reusable launch vehicles and associated
flight and transportation technologies that will allow for even more significant
reductions in payload costs, and even greater improvements in safety and
reliability.
More about NASA’s Hypersonics Team
NASA is leading national research into hypersonics systems
development, analysis and integration. Spearheaded by the Marshall Center,
the program includes researchers at Ames Research Center in Moffett Field,
Calif.; Dryden Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif.; Glenn Research
Center in Cleveland, Ohio; Kennedy Space Center, Fla.; Langley Research
Center in Hampton, Va.; and the Air Force Research Laboratory, which encompasses
research and development facilities at nine U.S. Air Force bases. NASA
is also partnering with leading academic institutions and industry partners
around the nation.