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HyCAUSE hits MACH 10

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  • HyCAUSE hits MACH 10

    Article....

    Scramjet hits Mach 10 over Australia

    A supersonic scramjet engine has been successfully launched from a test range in Australia. The Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisation (DSTO) said the scramjet achieved reached 10 times the speed of sound during the test.

    Scramjets are supersonic combustion engines that use oxygen from the atmosphere to burn onboard fuel. By contrast, conventional rockets carry their own oxygen to burn fuel. The hope is that scramjets can be made lighter and faster than oxygen-carrying rockets.

    But mixing oxygen with a fuel in a supersonic airflow and then igniting it is tricky. The tests involved accelerating the scramjet to several times the speed of sound and switching it on.

    A rocket carrying the HyCAUSE scramjet engine blasted off from the Woomera range in South Australia on Friday. It reached an altitude of 530 kilometres before re-entering the earth’s atmosphere where the scramjet engine was successfully ignited.
    Successful test

    HyCAUSE is the Hypersonic Collaborative Australia/United States Experiment – a collaboration between the DSTO and the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The ultimate goal of the tests is to design an engine that produces more thrust than drag.

    "It looks like we've been very successful," said Steve Butler, a spokesman for the DSTO. "We've got to go away and collate the data, that will take a few weeks, but it looks very promising."

    Aircraft flying at Mach 10 could cut travelling time between Sydney and London to as little as two hours.
    Increased payloads

    "This technology has the potential to put numerous defence and civilian aerospace applications within our reach during the next couple of decades," said Warren Harch, a scientist at the DSTO.

    Butler said they could also slash the cost of sending satellites into space, because the weight saved by not carrying oxygen could be used to increase the payload.

    Next year, the DSTO and the US Air Force begin a five-year programme testing scramjet technology at the Woomera range. A number of other countries including Italy and Japan are also developing scramjets.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    Piffle. We HAD SuperSonic Transports, and they GROUNDED THE ENTIRE F***ING FLEET. There's no way this has "consumer" applications.

    Nonetheless, it's cool technology!
    The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

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    If only life were as easy as you
    I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
    If only life were as easy as you
    I would still get screwed

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    • #3
      Mixing apples & oranges again, are we?

      Actually given the rapid movement towards point-to-point service using 3rd generation versions of 2nd generation craft like VSS Enterprise, RocketPlane and especially EADS Astrium (RocketPlane on steroids) there is a place for commercial scramjets as a high speed engine to extend their range.

      Most of the third-gens will very likely get to scramjet ignition speeds, basically MACH 5. Heck, the 2nd gens will likely do MACH 4 plus since even SS1 did Mach 3.09.

      Almost there.

      I've seen designs that used robotic fly-back jet/rocket "mothership" launch platforms to reduce the high altitude flight weight and small internal jets for landing.
      Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 17 June 2007, 11:23.
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

      Comment


      • #4
        Doc, do you really think that those SS1-like planes will end up beeing a viable means of travel?
        Apart from speed people want low price (which those services won't give?) or comfort (which pretty much means they want to have constant g onboard?)

        Comment


        • #5
          BTW, Mach is a unit named after an Austrian physicist, no need to write it in all caps, it's not an acronym
          There's an Opera in my macbook.

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          • #6
            az: Yes its a mans name, but it's also commonly written in caps when used as a unit.

            Nowhere: SS1 type planes, meaning 1st generation, no...of course not but you need to be aware that they are already planning the 3rd generation while building the 2nd; VSS Enterprise, Astrium etc. The 3rd generation is being designed for point-to-point service across the planet.

            IMO EADS entry into the 2nd generation market indicates more than just joyrides for them too.

            I wouldn't be a bit suprised to see other aerospace & airline companies partnering up with NewSpace companies. ULA (United Launch Alliance) has already partnered up with Bigelow (inflatable space stations) and RocketPlane-Kistler (NASA cargo-to-ISS competitor).

            Who is ULA? A joint venture of both Lockheed-Martin and Boeing.

            In short; this s**t is getting serious.

            Space.com article....

            The business plan is for 50,000 people to visit space over a ten year time period, explained Alex Tai, vice president, operations for Virgin Galactic. Tai is trained as a pilot in the Royal Air Force and started at Virgin as an airline pilot for Virgin Atlantic before embarking on special projects for Branson.

            Working on the Virgin Galactic project from its conception, Tai plans to fly the first commercial flight of the firm’s spaceship as one of the pilots. Among current tasks, he is supervising the design and construction of the new passenger-carrying SpaceShipTwo.
            >
            Beyond the New Mexico spaceport—once the case for safety and turnaround time is made with the SpaceShipTwo system—rhaps semi-permanent facilities, even local municipal airports, could handle space travel operations, Tai suggested.

            “It’s clearly a goal of Virgin Galactic of being a spaceline operator, not just for same-point-to-same-point space tourism,” Tai said. “We want to go point-to-point on the planet …with exceptional style and safety.”

            Getting cheap access to low Earth orbit, Tai continued, will be leveraged from the ability to globally hop about. “That’s where the real market is. It will be done off the back of point-to-point…not off going straight to low Earth orbit.”


            With that technology in hand, it’s onward to orbital destinations, space hotel stopovers, and to the Moon and beyond, Tai said. “That’s the big step, to break free of the surly bonds of Earth.”
            Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 17 June 2007, 19:27.
            Dr. Mordrid
            ----------------------------
            An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

            I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

            Comment


            • #7
              Many names that are ordinary words are erroneously written in caps (many people write MAC instead of Mac, for instance); doesn't make it any more right
              There's an Opera in my macbook.

              Comment


              • #8
                No, but it does make it traditional
                Dr. Mordrid
                ----------------------------
                An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

                I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

                Comment

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