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  • What does speed have to do with sound? And if there’s no wall in the sky, how exactly

  • do you break a sound barrier?

  • Hey guys, Amy here with you on DNews today talking speed! Fast things. Not drug things.

  • Most of us will probably never go supersonic. Though the idea of cutting travel times in

  • half is so appealing, it’s not something likely to become common place anytime soon.

  • But let’s start with a bit of a history lesson. In the 1880s, Austrian physicist Ernst

  • Mach was studying the supersonic flow of gases using a shadowgraph when he successfully photographed

  • a bullet traveling faster than the speed of sound. What his images showed was a bullet

  • with a shock wave in front of it and another one trailing behind it, clear proof of the

  • phenomenon of compressibility. This research eventually led to the measurements that bear

  • his name: a Mach number is the ratio of the speed of an object traveling through a gas

  • to the speed of sound in that gas.

  • Because while we don’t think about it, air is made up of molecules, and like any other

  • physical substance, those air molecules can compress, and when they compress they form

  • shock waves.

  • It’s these shock waves that make flying faster than the speed of sound such a challenge,

  • and in the 1940s, pilots were coming face to face with this challenge. These shock waves

  • vibrate the air molecules theyre made of, and when those molecules vibrate they vibrate

  • whatever is compressing them. In the case of a fast-flying airplane, the shock waves

  • can shake an airplane hard enough to rip it apart.

  • It was clear to engineers in the 1940s that the future of aviation lay beyond the sound

  • barrier, so someone would have to build an airplane solid enough and fast enough to break

  • through that wall.

  • It was the Bell Aircraft corporation working on a contract with the US Army Air Force that

  • devised the solution. Taking design inspiration from a bullet, Bell engineers designed the

  • X-1 aircraft specifically to break through that wall of compressed air in the sky.

  • The advent of supersonic flight opened a whole new era of aviation, and though higher Mach

  • numbers don't come with the samebarriersevery increase in speed is nonetheless a major

  • technological hurdle.

  • The fastest manned flight on record was set in 1967 with the NASA-Air Force X-15, a rocket-powered

  • dart of an aircraft that hit a top speed of Mach 6.7, which is about 4,519 mph! But the

  • X-15 was a hypersonics research vehicle. Most fighter jets today aren’t nearly that fast,

  • though there are supersonic fighters. Air Force planes like the F-15 Eagle and the F-22

  • Raptor are both supersonic fighter jets, and the F-22 can even hit Mach 2 using afterburners.

  • But there’s another challenge associated with supersonic flight and that’s the sonic

  • boom. The sonic boom is the sound an airplane makes when it smashes through that wall of

  • compressed air that builds up in front of it. But the boom doesn’t just come once

  • when the plane goes supersonic; it keeps going in the wake of that supersonic aircraft.

  • This is exactly why the Concorde, the world’s only supersonic passenger plane that flew

  • from 1976 to 2003, only ever flew over oceans. In fact, the Federal Aviation Administration

  • prohibited domestic civil supersonic flight over land in 1973. But all is not lost! NASA

  • and its aviation partners are looking into identifying an acceptable loudness level and

  • working on so-calledlow boomaircraft designs to reduce sonic boom levels and maybe

  • bring back supersonic passenger flights. But that’s still something to look forward to

  • down the line.

  • And the U.S. Air Force always has its eye on the future, too, and it’s a big supporter

  • of DNews! The United States Air Force is powered by Airmen and fueled by innovation. Every

  • day American Airmen go above and beyond to break barriers both professionally and personally.

  • Whether it’s overcoming poverty to become a nurse and officer or becoming the first

  • female Thunderbird pilot, these Airmen are known for doing what was once thought to be

  • impossible.

  • Have any of you flown supersonically? If so, tell us what it was link in the comments below

  • because I’m dying to know what it’s like! And if you haven’t, do you want to? Let

  • us know in the comments below and don’t forget to subscribe for more DNews every day

  • of the week.

  • Have any of you flown supersonically? If so, tell us what it was link in the comments below

  • because I’m dying to know what it’s like! And if you haven’t, do you want to? Let

  • us know in the comments below and keep coming back to Test Tube for more DNews every day

  • of the week.

  • Have any of you flown supersonically? If so, tell us what it was link in the comments below

  • because I’m dying to know what it’s like! And if you haven’t, do you want to? Let

  • us know on the Discovery News Facebook page or on Twitter @DNews. You can also find me

  • @astvintagespace. Thanks for watching!

What does speed have to do with sound? And if there’s no wall in the sky, how exactly

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