Mach 10 X43A Flight Successful
Sector Bug writes "NASA's X43A research aircraft made its third and final flight today, firing its scramjet engine at Mach 10 (7,000 MPH) or close to it, setting a new record. "
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One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dying
First Post!
A (possibly stupid) question: How does this compare to the speed of orbital rockets?
Random is the New Order.
X43A blurs past the camera. It is silent.
Marvin: "Where's the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom!"
EARTH SHATTERING KABOOM!
Marvin: "At last!"
I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
we shall call it the ludicrous speed.
You can't handle the truth.
This is all old tech. Think of all th toys they dont let us see.
Since their first scramjet, the A-1A, flew at 7 feet per second.
Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. There is a mystical power of double digits wrt the public.
Man,
I need one of these engines for my SAAB.
The Internet is full. Go Away!!!
Meanwhile, CNN is still reporting the flight as being delayed on the front of their Science and Space page.
Imagine an OSX cluster of these!
I bet apple invented these too, eh fanboys?
The B-52B (tenth off the assembly line) first flew on June 11th, 1955 and among other things, has carried the X-15, Shuttle solid rocket booster, and finally the X-43A (on the same pylon as used by the X-15). Read more about the ol' BUFF at NASA.
Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
I understand he was a very fast guy, much to his wife's chagrin.
Regular guy, Rex got a need
Rex, Racer X
Brother is Speed
Brother is Speed
Brother is sex
Shut up, Pops
Rex, Racer X
OK
Got a big white X
On the top of his car
Rex keeps his speed
In a little glass jar
Racer X on the road
Rex on the track
Little cartoon nips
Racer X on attack
OK
Just a man in a car
Racer X got a need
Come on, Five
I need a little more speed
He's just a regular guy
Racer X got a need
Come on, Pops
I need a little more speed
Just a goddamn job
Just a goddamn job
Just a goddamn job
Just a goddamn job
Just a goddamn job
When you're hauling strips
Just a goddamn job
Rex needs his fix
OK
OK
Rex is a man
He's the brother of sex
Aw, shut up Pops
Here's to Rex, Racer X
OK
I really hope the aeronautical industry takes advantage of the testing done with the X-43A. Alot of ideas that were scrapped b/c of red tape and underfunding I.E. nuclear powered flight, true supersonic transportation, Pulse Detonation Engines (although the last one is seeing a revival) If applied correctly this could revolutionize the airline industry and make international travel quick and affordable over time.
how long before i can hitch a ride on something that can get be half way across the world before lunch...
Get your torrents...
The rocket gets it up to speed, and the scramjet just maintains? Or is the vessel doing any of it's own acceleration?
Pretty Pictures!
Now, when I tell those guys I want my pizza in 30 minutes or less, there is no excuse!
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
Now just wait until some idiot puts that engine into his Honda.
WTPOUAWYHTTOTWPA
What's the point of using acronyms when you have to type out the whole phrase anyways?
By the way (and massively OT), doesn't a "Guinness Record" sound like something you'd like to break yourself, at least if it involved consumption?
"Prepare for the worst - hope for the best."
...can it get me around the world in 80 days?
...had to hunt for it, but here it is:
/ x43.jpg
http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0106/02x43failure
Steve Jobs invented mach speed.
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:U6u5cBlJSxcJ: www.nasa.gov/missions/research/x43-main.html+&hl=e n
Let's hope that this type of engine isn't adopted by commercial arlines. If it were, a flight cross country would take less than an hour, and the flight crew wouldn't have time to get us all drinks and peanuts.
HexaByte - he's a square and a half!
Thanks to yet another moronic attempt of mixing imprerial measurement into metric projects, the next X43A test (or whatever it will be called) is going to be a spatacular failure! If this keeps up, the Chinese will have better chance to make a working X43 than these 'too dumb to learn and/or use metric units' Yankees ever will.
(sorry I know this debate is a classic but miles say nothing to me and I guess that many international slashdoters feel the same)
Yahh, hiii haaaaa! -Major Kong, from Dr. Strangelove
USA plans to use this technology to make planes that move to fastly and high for missiles to hit and to plunder oil from irak and other nations. I wonder if it will be so easy for USA to try and control us when China and Russia develops simmilar technologies :) maybe PRC/Russia will liberate rest of world from USA tyrrany :)
I'd like to smack the guy who was holding the camera in the chase plane! He pissed his pants at the moment of truth.
Seriously, the announcer was about as dry as the visine comercial dude.
What's a sig?
24000 miles at 7000 miles per hour means you'd be home in 3.4285714285714285714285714285714 hours.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
The important question is, what would Mach 10 be in warp speed?
Nothing disturbs me more than blind loyalism towards some unrealistic and over-idealistic notion of one's nationality.
For all the shit theyve been through, NASA still fucking rocks.
Kudos to the Alpha geeks.
We bow.
no
Did anyone else think of "X-10" when they saw this article's title? ... or even better... "We must destroy X-10... we must destroy all internet ad".. ??
I can't wait for planes that would allow me to fly from Europe to US in less than an hour...
How long can the scramjet engine sustain such a (ludicrous) speed? An hour? A minute? Few seconds? Curious mind.
Eureka Science News - automatically updated
Close-up pic of the jet
Considering that GPS satellites are something over 20000 km up, 110k feet is only a fraction of a percent of getting there.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
Not even close.
Hubbles orbital speed is approximately 16,900 miles per hour.
You are not even close. He was asking about orbital ROCKETS! Not objects in orbit. Orbital rockets are the things that lift the satellites into orbit.
The space shuttle does not get anywhere near 16,900 mph on lift off. That is the speed it gradually gets to once in orbit, NOT ON LIFT OFF.
After 60 seconds, the Shuttle has accelerated to Mach 1 (the speed of sound). About one minute later (two minutes into the flight), the solid rockets burn the last of their fuel. By this time the shuttle is over 25 miles high. The now-empty solid rockets are released in order to reduce the weight carried the rest of the way to orbit. [They parachute into the ocean off the Florida coast, and are recovered to be refilled with fuel and used again.]
After the solid rockets are released, the shuttle is still attached to the external tank and its launch engines are still being fed propellants from the tank. When the shuttle reaches an altitude of about 57 miles, it changes trajectory to fly more horizontally, and pick up speed. In order to achieve orbit, it needs to accelerate to approximately 17,500 mph (~5 miles/sec). Once it reaches this critical speed (about 8-1/2 minutes after lift-off), the shuttle launch engines are shut off, and the shuttle separates from the external tank. The tank re-enters the atmosphere and burns up on re-entry. It is the only part of the Shuttle system that cannot be used again.
Q: Assume you want to get a satallite into low earth orbit. If you launched a multistage rocket with a scram jet stage how much more payload in % could you put into low earth orbit?
Assuming you're traveling at ground level. It would take a half hour longer or so if you were flying at 30,000 feet or so.
Assuming you didn't have to take off, land, accelerate or decelerate, you could circle the earth in pi hours at Mach 10.61.
So, at Mach 10, can anyone hear you scream?
It's not like they put it into space, twice in two weeks, for under 10 million dollars.
"If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer
PARENT IS A GOATSE TROLL
If it went 10,266.25 ft/s then isn't that about 318 Gs?
"I didn't spend six years in Evil Medical School to be called 'Mr.Evil,' thank you very much!"
With US too strapped for cash to continue with this program, it's time to consider sending it to China for further development. The Chinese space agency could make seriously faster progress than NASA ever could, since most of the physicists instead of being contracted from China could actually be in China year round.
China also owns the machine that made the X-32 so instead of getting stuck in red tape exporting Chinese manufacturing, they could just launch it right across the street from the factory.
Finally China is in a much better cash situation to fund long term programs like this. Foreign investment is at record levels, allowing China to do long term projects that would bankrupt any other nation.
On both flights, the rocket took the craft up to maximum speed and the craft merely sustained the speed.
Fuuuck...
so with some level of class. Yelling "GOATSE TROLL" isn't going to convince anyone.
But what would be the point? Except for getting to Russia in like an hour (which would be awesome because it currently takes 10 hours to get there :( )
~Ilyanep
To get message, take amount of carrier pigeons at each stage mod 2. Then decode binary.
But only if they're behind the shockwave.
NASA has scheduled a press conference at 4 PST. It's available at http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html
Not to be a flamebait BUT:
:)
:)
I hope this has been some lame attempt at sacasm, fo US is still in the lead, all it would need is a serious reorganisation of governmental and agency rescources, as well as a considerable downshift in the amount of inter and intra agency bueaucracy, and the problem would be essentially remedied. You sir are inept at comprehending this
BUURN KARMA buuurn
Currently looking gor a grammar nazi to apprentice for!
Nasa is doing these tests because they can't model conditions with their computers.
I wonder exactly what about the scramjet that they can't model with the resources they have including plasma wind tunnels ?
Moscow to Jerusalam = 1,660 miles = 14min 14 seconds
Seattle to Honolulu = 2,677 miles = 22min 57 seconds
New York to Paris = 3,815 miles = 32min 42seconds
Vancouver to Buenos Aires = 6,984 miles = 59min 52 seconds
Washington DC to Sydney = 9,760 miles = 1hr 23min 39 seconds
Cape Town to Juneau = 10,315 miles = 1hr 28min 25 seconds
Circumference of Earth at equator = 24,900 miles = 3 hours 33min 26 seconds
Sadly, most of this sexy hi-tech we love so much is for killing people. "Payloads into space"? I think it will find other uses too, eg: "US to deploy hyper-missiles" http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,135096 4,00.html describes mach 10 missiles capable of destroying stuff anywhere on earth in two hours. Just what we need. Yay nasa!!!
The article link doesn't have much in the way of interesting details, so, here are some slightly better links to hopefully raise the signal ratio:
The first one is an article with some details, the second is some artwork that explains the scramjet and the flight path.
From the looks of it, the scramjet engine doesn't appear to be a very sophisticated device. It's just a funnel that doesn't ignite the fuel until it has already reached supersonic speed.
The tricky part, if I'm guessing correctly, is building a vehicle that can withstand the 3600 degree heat of flying at Mach 10 in the upper atmosphere. It succeeded, but there was no human pilot inside of this one. I think that will be the next step: to build a craft, as small and light as possible, just to ferry crew into space, leaving cargo payloads to be sent up using a much cheaper but less safety constrained kind of lift capability.
I looked at the pdf that shows how the shock waves propagate inside the engine. However the angle of those shockwaves changes with the speed of the plane.
They had the same problems with the sr-71 so the engine cone moves back and forth until the appropiate shock wave would form inside the engine. If the shock wave is not in the appropriate position then the combustion inside the engine stops and I dont think is easy to restart an engine at mach 3.
Anyhow, can please somebody give me an insight of the inner workings of the engine? One solution is that the plane would fly at a constant speed so the angles are always the same but that does not seem very practical.
An USCS episode can be dramatic, depending on the Km/h value. At high Km/h values, the victim is running so fast that the bucket carriers cannot catch him. On top of that, the wind of his frantic run vents the fire, which of course burns even hotter, quickening his race. After a certain threshold, the poor guy's genitals burns to a crisp. The critical speed is called "Mach speed" (pronounced Mack), after an early victim.
So unless you are referring to these sad but uncomon accidents, the metric unit you want to use is km/h, with a small k meaning kilo, not the capital K of Kelvin.
--
Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/
Mach numbers are about as international as you can get.
"A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
The scramjet is an air-breathing engine. That is its advantage over chemical rockets which must loft both fuel AND oxidizer while the scramjet just carries fuel, thus hopefully providing a better thrust:weight ratio. The scramjet gets its oxidizer from the atmosphere so unless it can reach escape velocity while deep enough in the atmosphere to get out (and overcome the remaining air resistance) it will need a different type of motor to kick it into orbit.
$#!^ happens, but why does it always have to happen to me???
I suppose now NASA is kicking themselves for not entering the X-Prize competition.
...the air was about 1% as dense as the air on the surface where the craft departed from. The pressure was about .7% of the pressure at sea level. The temperature was about -45 Celsius.
The flight crew will either serve them during the hour you're taxiing from the terminal to the runway and waiting for clearance to take-off or during the two hours you're waiting for your gate to open up after you land.
I doubt if the airlines would cut back on the serving size. A bag with just one peanut in it probably isn't cost effective.
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
Ben
And, there is a $1500 per bag liability limit, but if you don't have your check-in stub you are out of luck.
This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
So you'd have a sequence something like: use rocket for take-off, switch to scramjet when fast enough, switch to rocket (likely a different one) when the O2 runs out. Is this really an improvement over, say, the space shuttle which only needs two rocket "stages".
I guess scramjets are potentially useful for high altitude aircraft, though they'd probably need rocket assisted take-off. If NASA is designing, I don't think I'm flying.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
I would think that they can and have modeled the conditions with their computers. Now that they have modeled the conditions they want to prove that they were correct in the real world. This is all about proof of concept.
I could be wrong on my math here, but mach 1 is 761 mph. So shouldn't mach 10 be up around 7600 mph?
That is history and has just been revised...Gore invented mach speed. Just ask him.
Don't you go back in time if you go that fast? I thought I saw that in Star Trev IV...
We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
And it cost less than one shuttle flight to test with 3 flights. This is money well spent.
It doesnt fly until its flown, yeah?
-
Parsecs per Millenium
The scram jet travels at a rate of 0.0035 parsecs per millenium. So to go 12 parsecs would take 3.4 Million Years.
Parsecs is a measure of distance, not speed. Han was just screwing with Luke. The Star Wars equivalent of headlight fluid, muffler bearings, knuter valves, and piston return springs.
So Mach number is related to air density (speed of sound). At 100,000 ft there's not a lot of air, so while the speed of sound is about 700 mph at sea level, it's not at 100,000 ft. Are they cookin' the books or am I missin' something?
What made it fail is not only that it was a total pain in the ass to change every clock and calendars and get use to it but also that weeks were now lasting 10 day but still with only 2 days of weekends and workers were really pissed off about that. They were almost about to start another revolution so the French government decided to drop the metric system on time and dates.
Oh yea and also about my "civilized" comment: It was meant to be told with a wink, so please to the ones that are taking that personally I say go buy yourself a sense of humor somewhere, jee I didn't know that people where now so touchy about something so meaningless and futile.
Yahh, hiii haaaaa! -Major Kong, from Dr. Strangelove
The scramjet may be used as an efficient booster, halfway between liftoff and full orbit.
Burt Rutan builds 12-seat scramjet for $1 million, breaks Mach 15 on first attempt.
Here's a snapshot I grabbed of CNN's page after the election. Kerry conceded the election before they called it. :)
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Congratulations on a rare good posting for this site.
It is a crazy world where killing people who are trying to kill you is a *bad thing*. While, if the bad person kills a innocent aid worker they are applauded.
Yep. Or as our namesake (Dryden) put it:
"..to separate the real from the imagined, and to make known the overlooked and the unexpected problems"
That's about as good a statement as there is on what real flight research is about. You don't do that in a computer (though you use a lot of computers in the process).
Hooray.
The Military application of this technology will be used many years before it is used for civilian things like transport.
Now unsuspecting populations can be blown to pieces even faster with new scramjet equipped cruise missiles.
RebateFX.com - Spread rebates for Forex traders
The SR71 uses one of the more complex methods of maintaining high mach travel, but it isn't the only one. The B70 Valkyrie experimental strategic bomber solved the problem using wings that folded down vertically to encompass the shockwave beneath the fusalage and literally ride it. It's supremely ironic that this aircraft can outrun today's B1-b Lancer by a full two times the speed of sound using 1950s technology.
Some history on this forgotten, stunning piece of aviation engineering.
You need a FREE iPod Nano
No, the airline industry isn't pushing this technology. Thry're pushing the technology that will allow an aircraft to create a quieter sonic boom over populated areas. A Mach airliner can be done. It can even be done affordably, if you can fly it over populated areas without a resounding 'thump!' everytime it passes overhead. The inability to use it's speed advantage over populations and subsequent lack of effecient route restrictions were key in killing the Concord, and it's one of the reasons why the industry hasn't taken off in the US. The cost to make the aircraft combined with the inability to use it effeciently makes it a money losing proposition everytime.
You need a FREE iPod Nano
In 3 hours, more correctly. You're dividing a two-significant figure number by a one-significant figure number. That yields one sigificant figure. To say 3.4285714285714285714285714285714 claims precision you lack.
How is this flamebait?
Redundent? Perhaps
Overrated? Could be
Flamebait? No way!
It's a fucking table of city and their distance to each other. It shows us that you can get to any point in the world in 1 hr and 45 min at mach 10. Some moderator is smoking crack.
The guy who designed the SR-71's engines ended up winning one of the most prestigious aviation prizes (no, I can't remember which) for the way that the movable engine inlets ended up being responsible for something like 80% of the thrust produced at high speeds. He later became director of the Lockheed Skunkworks in the era where they produced the F117A.
The guy's name is Ben Rich, IIRC. He went on to write a very good book about his time at Lockheed-Martin. The book is called "Skunk Works." The title originates from the name of Lockheed's top-secret, advanced developments team...
Mr. Anderson: What? I mean - do you use the mix or do you use the real stuff? ....uhhh...We have vanilla, cholocate, and strawberry.
Butthead:
What I don't understand is why you spend so much money in fuel and oxidiser to get the external tank nearly into orbit, then for the additional cost of presumably not very much (in the scheme of things), let the thing fall back to earth and burn up?
Would it not make more sense to take the tank into orbit and use it for something? It's got to be (at least nearly!) air-tight, why not add it to the Space Station as another module for something? Use it for spare parts - got a leak, hack a suitable sized bit off the old tank and stick it over the hole. Just stack them up in orbit somewhere for raw material to build a interplanetary space ship?
Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
handmadehands.co.uk
This makes Kallahar trip from Los Angeles to Oregon at Mach 9 look like a walk in the park...
--
By my understanding, a scram jet is the same as a ram jet but with a different internal shape.
What are the chances of coming up with a ram jet with a changable internal shape? (same kind of idea as swept wings on fighter planes I guess)
Excess speed is needed in order to overcome engine inefficiency and/or inability to overcome gravity... Speed is necessary because the engines are wrong. A true gravity-overcoming engine wouldn't need excess speed or wings... which are both cheats. Cheats that work are still cheats, ultimately prevent us from designing a REAL engine. We have become accustomed to building BIGGER HAMMERS. What we really need is a smarter engine not bigger, harder, faster, flying hammers. Even if the hammer does get us into Space, over to Mars, it still runs out of fuel. Presently we are playing with toys, and settling for playing with toys. Flight should not be addressed in the same manner as a ground vehicle, yet that is what we have done. We transferred the Salt Flats into the air. It's all lots of fun of course. Anything to get a girl to drop her pants at the hint of excess testosterone (Mach 20 screaming phallus). A correctly designed space engine would not need testosterone, and would therefor kick ass. All wasted energies that are now being expelled out the ass end of our rockets, planes, jets, are energies that should be used somehow... unless we want our space travel to be little more than a big coal shoveler. Propulsion is not the answer. It's a great toy. It's also a great waste of money but gee, who cares about that?! The people shoving us down this technological cattle chute are braindead. They still think like WWII destroyer personnel. They think in terms of sending out space explorers but if they run out of fuel we'll just send out a refueling tanker. This would be ludicrous if it didn't belie a "don't give-a-damn- attitude toward the lives of the astronauts... who are supposed to get all giddy at the opportunity to Die for the Cause. An engine that wastes fuel out the ass (PROPULSION) is damned, as are its pilots.
...instead you'd have your house, garden and neighbourhood replaced with a huge crater with a squashed packet from amazon in the centre?
And your point is?
I look forward to seeing your... well whatever it is that you plan to actually do. I'm a little unclear on the details of exactly what this plan of your is and how you are going to accomplish it. Anyway, whatever it is, I'm sure impressed. Go get 'em cowboy.
That's the same combination I use on my luggage!
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
Wouldn't a terrorist love to modify the flight program of the unmanned craft to turn it into a cruise missile. No payload required, hitting something at Mach 10 will be quite catastrophic enough. The coexistence of terrorism and increasingly powerful commercial technology is scary.
What do that means? I don't know what did you learn but you seems kind of confuse and unable to express your opinions. You should use other material than MaxNews and Rush "OxyContin" Limbaugh as source of information. Me one thing that I remember is that the US dollar went down right after the election. Draw your own conclusions.
See, but we're Americans, so we don't give a shit about you.
Correction YOU are American, Slashdot have a great amount of American members but also a large international base. I don't know why you speak in the name of all Americans or all slashdoters for what I know you are not oficialy elected to represent anybody (maybe you are president of your local club of IBWHSAHA; Ignorant, Bigots, World-Haters, Sociopath Assholes Association). I also want to say that in the contrary to you I don't hate entire nations I only hate the small asshole like you who lives in them, so yes me I give a shit about the rest of the world.
you're all 3rd world socialist pansies.
What did you accomplish in life to think you are superior as an individual? You're country is indeed powerful but you as an individual are nothing for what I know! Only a small inconsequential clown. You are probably working at an unrewarding job (if you work at all) with people giving you shit all day or something like that... Well I have a secret for you: "You are a failure kid, stop hiding behind your country because you are probably a big time loser"
Enjoy your insignificant unfulfilling life.
Yahh, hiii haaaaa! -Major Kong, from Dr. Strangelove
just have it delivered you your neighbors house