QuietingtheBoom Ebook
QuietingtheBoom Ebook
Benson
Lawrence R. Benson
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Benson, Lawrence R. Quieting the boom : the shaped sonic boom demonstrator and the quest for quiet supersonic ight / Lawrence R. Benson. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Sonic boom--Research--United States--History. 2. Noise control-Research--United States--History. 3. Supersonic planes--Research--United States--History. 4. High-speed aeronautics--Research--United States-History. 5. Aerodynamics, Supersonic--Research--United States--History. I. Title. TL574.S55B36 2013 629.132304--dc23 2013004829
Copyright 2013 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The opinions expressed in this volume are those of the authors and do not necessarily reect the ocial positions of the United States Government or of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
ISBN 978-1-62683-004-2
90000>
9 781626 830042
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Chapter 1: Making Shock Waves: The Proliferation and Testing of Sonic Booms ............................. 1
Exceeding Mach 1 A Swelling Drumbeat of Sonic Booms Preparing for an American Supersonic Transport Early Flight Testing Enter the Valkyrie and the Blackbird The National Sonic Boom Evaluation Last of the Flight Tests
Chapter 5: The Quiet Supersonic Platform: Innovative Concepts and Advanced Technologies .......................121
Making the Case for a Supersonic Business Jet Previous SSBJ Studies and Proposals Birth of the QSP Program QSP Phase I: Dening Concepts and Technologies QSP Phase II: Rening Concepts and Technologies
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Chapter 8: Proof at Last: Making and Measuring Softer Sonic Booms .............................. 203
Functional Check Flights Preparations at Edwards Air Force Base Making Aviation History Preparing for the Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Conducting the SSBE: Twenty-One Flights in 10 Days Collecting and Analyzing the Data
Appendix A: Key SSBD and SSBE Personnel Appendix B: F-5 SSBD Flight Chronology Appendix C: F-5E SSBD Modications and Specications Appendix D: Key SSBD and SSBE Reports Selected Bibliography Acronyms List About the Author Index
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Quieting the Boom: The Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator and the Quest for Quiet Supersonic Flight follows up on a case study I was privileged to write in early 2009, Softening the Sonic Boom: 50 Years of NASA Research. That relatively short survey was published in volume I of NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics (NASA SP-2010-570). Although I was previously familiar with aviation history, initially, I was hesitant to take on what seemed to be such an esoteric and highly technical topic. Thankfully, some informative references on related supersonic programs of the past were already available to help get me started, most notably Erik M. Conways High-Speed Dreams: NASA and the Technopolitics of Supersonic Transportation, 19451999, which is cited frequently in Softening the Sonic Boom and the rst four chapters that follow. After a 2-year hiatus, I resumed sonic boom research in March 2011 on this new book. I greatly appreciate the opportunity aorded me to write about this fascinating subject by the eminent aviation historian Dr. Richard P. Hallion, editor of NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics and the new National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) book series of which this one is a part. While expanding, updating, and, hopefully, improving on my previous account, this books primary focus is on the breakthrough achieved by the Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) and a diverse team of Government and industry partners who proved that aircraft can be designed to signicantly lower the strength of sonic booms. My research into primary sources beneted immeasurably from the help given to me during visits to the Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC), Edwards, CA, in December 2008 and April 2011 and additional telephone and e-mail communications with DFRC personnel. Librarian Dr. Karl A. Bender introduced me to NASAs superb scientic and technical information resources and, assisted by Freddy Lockarno, helped me collect numerous essential documents. Aviation historian Peter W. Merlin found other sources for me in Drydens archival collection. Edward A. Haering, Drydens principal sonic boom investigator, provided valuable source materials, answered questions, and reviewed the chapters covering his projects. Fellow engineer Timothy R. Moes and test pilots James W. Smolka and Dana D. Purifoy helped with additional
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information and reviewed sections of the draft. Drydens superb online image gallery provided many of the photographs, and Tony R. Landis provided me with others from his les. Also at Edwards Air Force Base, CA, the long-time Flight Test Center Historian Dr. James O. Young provided me with additional photos and later reviewed and made helpful comments on the rst chapter. Writing a credible history about this subject would have been impossible without extensive help from two of the worlds top sonic boom experts Domenic J. Maglieri of Eagle Aeronautics and Dr. Kenneth J. Plotkin of Wyle Laboratoriesboth of whose names are scattered throughout the text and notes. In addition to reviewing and commenting on drafts of the chapters, they answered numerous questions and oered valuable suggestions both over the phone and via the Internet. The second and third chapters also benetted from being reviewed by one of the pioneers of sonic boom theory, professor Albert R. George of Cornell University. Dr. Christine M. Darden and Peter G. Coen, who in turn led NASAs sonic boom research eorts after the mid-1970s, also provided information and reviewed my original study. Peter Coen, who managed the Shaped Supersonic Boom Experiment and has been the principal investigator for NASAs Supersonics Project since 2006, continued to help on this book. His comments, corrections, and guidance were critical to completing chapter 9. Because this nal chapter attempts to bring various facets of the as yet unnished quest for civilian supersonic ight up to date through 2011, its discussion of recent events should be considered provisional pending the availability of more information and the historical perspective that will only come in future years. For transforming my manuscript into both a printed and electronic book, the author is indebted to the sta of the Communication Support Services Center at Headquarters NASA, especially the careful proofreading and editorial suggestions of Benjamin Weinstein and the attractive design of the nal product by Christopher Yates. Because many of the historically signicant diagrams, drawings, and other illustrations found in the source materials were of rather poor visual quality, I greatly appreciate the eorts of Chris and his graphics team in trying to make these gures as legible as possible. The Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator culminated four decades of study and research on mitigating the strength of sonic booms. Writing chapters 5 through 8which cover the origins, design, fabrication, and ight testing of this innovative modication of an F-5E ghter planewas made possible through the auspices of the Northrop Grumman Corporation. As is evident in the text and notes, the NGCs Joseph W. Pawlowski, David H. Graham, M.L. Roy Martin, and Charles W. Boccadoro generously provided informative interviews, detailed documentation, and valuable comments, and they patiently answered numerous questions as I researched, wrote, and coordinated
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these chapters. I would also like to thank Robert A. Robbie Cowart of Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation for his review of the section in chapter 9 on the companys Quiet Spike invention, which subsequently demonstrated another means of mitigating sonic booms. And for his careful review of the final manuscript, I am indebted to Dr. Michael H. Gorn, a former Dryden Chief Historian and colleague of mine in the Air Force History Office. This book is intended to be a general history of sonic boom research, emphasizing the people and organizations that have contributed, and not a technical study of the science and engineering involved. Any errors in fact or interpretation are those of the author. For more detailed information, interested readers may refer to primary sources referenced in the notes, many of which are available online from the NASA Technical Reports Server; through the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA); and in the other professional journals, periodicals, and books cited. I relied on graphs, charts, and drawings in some of these and other original sources for many of the gures presented in this book. Their quality and legibility was often not up to the visual standards desired in current NASA publications, but I believe including them was necessary to illustrate the evolution of knowledge about sonic booms and the related advances in aeronautical design and technology described in the text. In the near future, NASA will also publish what will undoubtedly become the denitive reference work on all aspects of sonic boom science and technology, tentatively titled Sonic Boom: A Compilation and Review of Six Decades of Research. Among its coauthors are some of the aforementioned experts who have been so helpful to me. LAWRENCE R. BENSON Albuquerque, NM January 14, 2012
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The F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator, piloted by Roy Martin, arriving over Palmdale, California, on July 29, 2003. (Mike Bryan)
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INTRODUCTION
On a hot and humid July day in 2003, a pair of small supersonic jet airplanes took o together from Cecil Field, a former naval air station on the eastern edge of Jacksonville, FL. Even though the Northrop Corporation had built both planes based on a common design, it was hard at rst glance to tell that the two aircraft ying side by side were so closely related. One was a sleek T-38 Talon, a two-seat aircraft that has served as the U.S. Air Forces (USAFs) advanced trainer since the early 1960s. The other was originally an F-5E Tiger II, one of more than 2,000 Northrop F-5s that had equipped air forces around the world with a low-cost, high-performance combat and reconnaissance aircraft. Because of the F-5Es agility and compact size, the U.S. military adopted it as an aggressor aircraft to hone the skills of its own ghter pilots. Both planes attested to the competence of Northrops design teams. Of all of the many supersonic jets developed for the Air Force and U.S. Navy in the 1950s, the T-38 and F-5 are the only ones still in general use. Although on loan from the Navys aggressor training squadron, this particular F-5E no longer looked much like a ghter jet. With what appeared to be a pouch hanging under its chin, the aircraft somewhat resembled an overgrown pelican. In addition to lettering identifying Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems, its white fuselage was decorated with sharply angled blue and red pinstripes along with emblems containing the acronyms NASA and DARPA while its tail bore an oval logo with the letters QSP. After gaining altitude, this odd couple turned west toward their ultimate destination of Palmdale, CA. Roy Martin, the chief test pilot at the Northrop Grumman Corporations facility in Palmdale, was at the controls of the F-5. Mike Bryan, a Boeing test pilot from Seattle, WA, was ying the T-38. Despite its enlarged nose section, the F-5 no longer had navigational equipment except for a hand-held Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver in the cockpit, so Martin had to stay near the T-38. Their rst refueling stop was Huntsville, AL, home of NASAs Marshall Space Flight Center. Next, it was on to the vast Tinker Air Force Base (AFB) in Oklahoma City, OK, where Martin and Bryan
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The T-38 and modied F-5E together at Cecil Field, FL, before ying to California. (NGC)
spent the night. The next morning, they stopped to refuel in Roswell, NM, at what had once been Walker Air Force Base, and then they stopped at the former Williams AFB, southeast of Phoenix, AZ, before ying on to California. At each of these stops, the planes attracted the attention of ight-line personnel and others nearby, most of whom could recognize the strange white jet as some kind of F-5. But many of them still had questions. Whats with the big nose? Why is Boeing helping a Northrop Grumman pilot y across the country? What do those jagged red and blue stripes signify? And why all the various logos? Unlike a lot of projects sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the one involving this F-5 was not classied. So the two pilots were happy to explain that the F-5 had been modied for a test to be conducted with the help of NASA called the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD). It was part of a DARPA program called Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP). Although Northrop Grumman had won the SSBD contract, Boeing and some other rival companies were also participating and would share in the data collected. The goal of the SSBD was to do something that had never before been accomplished: prove that it was possible to reduce the strength of sonic booms. This experimentation was being undertaken in the hope that civilian airplanes could someday y at supersonic speeds without disturbing
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people below. The SSBD team was going to perform this demonstration at Edwards AFB in the very same airspace where supersonic ight had its birth more than 50 years earlier. The pinstripes on the F-5 illustrated the shape of the pressure waves that the team had expected a normal F-5 and the modied F-5 to register on special recording devices. Since jet aircraft had been making sonic booms for more than half a century, why had this not been done already? Why had the United States, which could land men on the Moon and invent the Internet, never been able to build a supersonic airliner or business jet? With all the advances in science and technology, what is so complicated about the sonic boom that has so far deed solution? Would the SSBD be a signicant step toward nding a solution? The rest of this book will attempt to answer these questions.
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Bell XS-1 photographed on its way to becoming the rst aircraft to exceed Mach 1 in level ight. (USAF)
CHAPTER 1
Humans have long been familiar withand often frightened bynatural sonic booms in the form of thunder. Caused by sudden spikes in pressure when strokes of lightning instantaneously heat surrounding columns of air molecules, the sound of thunder varies from low-pitched rumbles to earsplitting bangs, depending on distance. Perhaps the most awesome of sonic booms, heard only rarely, are generated when certain large meteors speed through the atmosphere at just the right trajectories and altitudes. On an innitesimally smaller scale, the rst acoustical shock waves produced by human invention were the modest cracking noises caused by the snapping of a whip. With the perfection of high-powered explosive propellants in the latter half of the 19th century, the muzzle velocity of bullets and artillery shells began to routinely exceed the speed of sound (about 1,125 feet, or 343 meters, per second at sea level), producing noises that rearms specialists call ballistic cracks. These sharp noises result when air molecules cannot be pushed aside fast enough by objects moving at or faster than the speed of sound. The molecules are thereby compressed together into shock waves that surge away from the speeding object at a higher pressure than the atmosphere through which they travel.
Exceeding Mach 1
In the 1870s, an Austrian physicist-philosopher, Ernst Mach, was the rst to explain this sonic phenomenon, which he later displayed visually in the 1880s with cleverly made schlieren photographs (from the German word for streaks) showing shadow-like images of the acoustic shock waves formed by high-velocity projectiles. The specic speed of sound, he also determined, depends on the medium through which an object passes. In the gases that make up Earths atmosphere, sound waves move faster in warm temperatures than cold. In 1929, a Swiss scientist named this variable the Mach number in his honor.1 At 68 degrees Fahrenheit (F) at sea level in dry air, the speed of sound
1
is about 768 miles per hour (mph), or 1,236 kilometers per hour (kph); but at above 40,000 feet at about 70 F, it is only about 659 mph, or 1,060 kph.2 The shock waves produced by passing bullets and artillery rounds would be among the cacophony of fearsome sounds heard by millions of soldiers during the two world wars.3 On Friday evening, September 8, 1944, a sudden explosion blew out a large crater in Stavely Road, west of London. The rst German V-2 ballistic missile aimed at England had announced its arrival. After the explosion came a double thunderclap caused by the sonic boom catching up with the fallen rocket.4 For the next 7 months, millions of people would hear this new sound (which became known by the British as a sonic bang) from more than 3,000 V-2s launched at Britain as well as liberated portions of France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. These shock waves would always arrive too late to warn any of those unfortunate enough to be near the missiles points of impact.5 After the end of World War II, these strange noises faded into memory until the arrival of supersonic, turbojet-powered ghter planes in the 1950s. Jet airplanes were preceded in supersonic ight by experimental aircraft powered by rocket engines at Muroc Army Aireld in Californias Mojave Desert. Here, a small team of Air Force, National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA), and contractor personnel were secretly exploring the still largely unknown territory of transonic and supersonic ight. On October 14, 1947, more than 40,000 feet over the desert east of Rogers Dry Lake, Capt. Chuck Yeager broke the fabled sound barrier by ying at Mach 1.06 in a Bell XS-1 (later redesignated the X-1).6 Despite hazy memories and legend perpetuated by the best-selling book and hit movie The Right Stu, the shock waves from Yeagers little (31-foot-long) airplane did not reach the ground with a loud boom on that historic day.7 He ew only 20 seconds at what is considered aerodynamically just a transonic speed (less than Mach 1.15).8 Yeagers memoir states that NACA personnel in a tracking van heard a sound like distant thunder.9 This could only have resulted if there had been a strong tailwind and a layer of cooler air near the surface.10 However, a record of atmospheric soundings from Bakerseld, CA, indicates that a headwind of about 60 knots was more likely.11 Before long, however, the stronger acoustical signatures generated by faster-ying X-1s and other supersonic aircraft became a familiar sound at and around the isolated air base.
the Air Force renamed the installation Edwards Air Force Base after Capt. Glen Edwards, who had perished in the crash of a Northrop YB-49 ying wing the year before.12 By the early 1950s, the barren dry lakes and jagged mountains around Edwards reverberated with the sonic booms of experimental and prototype aircraft, as did other ight-test locations in the United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union. Scientists and engineers were familiar with the ballistic waves of axisymmetric projectiles such as artillery shells (shapes referred to scientically as bodies of revolution).13 This was a reason the fuselage of the XS-1 was shaped like a 50-caliber bullet, which was known to be stable at three times the speed of sound. But these new acoustic phenomenamany of which featured the double-boom soundhinted that they were more complex than conventional ballistic waves. In late 1952, the editors of the worlds oldest aeronautical weekly stated with some hyperbole that the supersonic bang phenomenon, if only by reason of its sudden incidence and the enormous public interest it has aroused, is probably the most spectacular and puzzling occurrence in the history of aerodynamics.14 A perceptive English graduate student, Gerald B. Whitham, accurately analyzed the abrupt rise in air pressure upon arrival of a supersonic objects bow wave, followed by a more gradual but deeper fall in pressure for a fraction of a second, and then a recompression with the passing of the vehicles tail wave.15 As shown in a simplied fashion in the upper left corner of gure 1-1, this can be illustrated graphically by an elongated capital N (the solid line) transecting a horizontal axis. The plot of this line represents ambient air pressure during a second or less of elapsed time along a short path, the distance of which depends on the length and altitude of the supersonic body. For Americans, the pressure change (p) is usually expressed in pounds per square foot (psfalso abbreviated as lb/ft2). The shock waves left behind by an aircraft ying faster than Mach 1 on a straight and level course will spread out in a cone-shaped pattern with the sector intersecting the ground being heard as a sonic boom.16 Even though the shock waves are being left behind by the speeding aircraft (where the pilot and any passengers do not hear their sound), the cones shock waves are moving forward in the form of acoustic rays, the nature of which would become the subject of future research. Because a supersonic aircraft is much longer than an artillery shell, the human ear can detect a double Figure 1-1.Sonic boom signature and shock boom (or double bang) if the shock cone. (NASA)
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wave from its tail area arrives a tenth of a second or more after the shock wave from its front portion (sometimes compared to the bow wave of a boat). In some respects, all the sound heard from a subsonic jet airplane as it approaches, ies overhead, and fades away is concentrated in this fraction of a second. Gerald Whitham was rst to systematically examine these multiple shock waves, which he called the F-function, generated by the complex nonaxisymmetrical congurations applicable to airplanes.17 The U.S. Air Force conducted its earliest sonic boom ight test at Edwards AFB in 1956 with an F-100 making in-ight measurements of another F-100 ying at Mach 1.05. Although the instrumentation used was relatively simple, the test found the decay of bow shock pressure and other results to be consistent with Whithams theory.18 Later in-ight pressure measurements near supersonic aircraft as well as wind tunnel experiments would reveal a jagged sawtooth pattern that only at much greater distances consolidated into the form of the double-boom-creating N-wave signature. (It would later be determined that the sound waves resulting from the abruptness of the pressure spikes, rather than the overall pressure dierential from the ambient level, is what people hear as noise.) The number of these double booms at Edwards AFB multiplied in the latter half of the 1950s as the Air Force Flight Test Center (AFFTC) at Edwards (assisted by the HSFRS) began putting a new generation of Air Force jet ghters and interceptors of various congurations, known as the Century Series, through their paces. The remarkably rapid advance in aviation technology and priorities of the Cold War arms race is evident in the sequence of their rst ights at Edwards (most as prototypes): the YF-100 Super Sabre, May 1953; YF-102 Delta Dagger, October 1953; XF-104 Starghter, February 1954; F-101 Voodoo, September 1954; YF-105 Thunderchief, October 1955; and F-106 Delta Dart, December 1956.19 With the sparse population living in Californias Mojave Desert region at the time, disturbances caused by the ight tests of new jet aircraft were not yet an issue, but the Air Force had already become concerned about their future impact. In November 1954, for example, its Aeronautical Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, submitted a study to the Air Force Board of top generals on early ndings regarding the still-puzzling nature of sonic booms. Although concluding that low-ying aircraft ying at supersonic speeds could cause considerable damage, the report hopefully predicted the possibility of supersonic ight without booms at altitudes over 35,000 feet.20 As the latest Air Force and Navy ghters went into full production and began ying from bases throughout the Nation, more of the American public was exposed to jet noise for the rst time. This included the thunderclap-like thuds characteristic of sonic boomsoften accompanied by rattling windowpanes. Under certain conditions, as the U.S. armed services and British
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Six Century Series ghters and interceptors at Edwards AFB. Clockwise from top right: F-100, F-101, F-102, F-104, F-105, F-106. (USAF)
Royal Air Force (RAF) had learned, even maneuvers below Mach 1 (e.g., accelerations, dives, and turns) could generate and focus transonic shock waves in such a manner as to cause localized but powerful sonic booms.21 Indeed, residents of Southern California began hearing such booms in the late 1940s when North American Aviation was ight testing its new F-86 Sabre. The rst civilian claim against the USAF for sonic boom damage was
apparently led at Eglin AFB, FL, in 1951, when only subsonic jet ghters were assigned there.22 Much of the rapid progress in supersonic ight was made possible by the famous area rule, discovered in 1951 by the legendary NACA engineer Richard Whitcomb. He subsequently showed how to reduce transonic drag by smoothing out the shock waves that developed along where the wings joined the fuselage of an aircraft approaching Mach 1. The basic solution was to reduce the cross section of the fuselage between the wings so that the combined cross section of the fuselage and wings would gradually increase and decrease in an ideal streamlined shape, allowing jet planes to achieve supersonic speeds much more easily.23 (Hence the pinched coke-bottle-shaped fuselages of the F-102, F-104, F-105, and F-106 in the photograph.) Adolf Busemann, a colleague at Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA (the NACAs oldest and largest lab), who had inspired Whitcomb to think of the area rule, also made major contributions to sonic boom theory. For his work as an engineer in Germany before World War II, Busemann is considered the father of supersonic aerodynamics; he is remembered especially for the concept of a swept wing, which he introduced in 1935. By, at the same time, exploring how to eliminate wave drag caused by aircraft volume, he could also be considered as the godfather of sonic boom minimization, even at a time when supersonic ight was only a distant dream. He later contributed more directly to the development of sonic boom theory in a 1955 paper titled The Relation Between Minimizing Drag and Noise at Supersonic Speeds, which showed the importance of lift eects in creating sonic booms.24 Both the area rule and ndings about lift during supersonic ight were critical to understanding the eects of wing-body congurations on sonic booms. In 1958, another bright, young English mathematician, Frank Walkden, showed in a series of insightful equations how the lift eect of airplane wings could magnify the strength of sonic booms more than previously estimated.25 The pioneering work of Whitham and Walkden laid the foundation for the systematic scientic study of sonic booms, especially the formation of N-wave signatures, and provided many of the algorithms and assumptions used in planning future ight tests and wind tunnel experiments.26 Sonic boom claims against the U.S. Air Force rst became statistically signicant in 1957, reecting the branchs growing inventory of Century ghters and the types of maneuvers they sometimes performed. Such actions could focus the acoustical rays projected by shock waves into what became called super booms. (It was found that these powerful but localized booms had a U-shaped signature with the tail shock as well as that from the nose of the airplane being above ambient air pressureunlike N-wave signatures, in which the tail shock causes pressure to return only to the ambient level.) Most claims
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Convair B-58 Hustler, the rst airplane capable of sustained supersonic ight and a major contributor to early sonic boom research. (USAF)
involved broken windows or cracked plaster, but some were truly bizarre, such as the death of pets or the insanity of livestock. In addition to these formal claims, Air Force bases, local police switchboards, and other agencies received an uncounted number of phone calls about booms, ranging from merely inquisitive to seriously irate.27 Complaints from constituents brought the issue to the attention of the U.S. Congress.28 Between 1956 and 1968, some 38,831 claims were submitted to the Air Force, which approved 14,006 in whole or in part65 percent for broken glass, 21 percent for cracked plaster (usually already weakened), 8 percent for fallen objects, and 6 percent for other reasons.29 The militarys problem with sonic boom complaints peaked in the 1960s. One reason for this peak was the sheer number of ghter-type aircraft stationed around the Nation (more than three times as many as today). Secondly, many of these aircraft had air defense as their mission. This often meant ying at high speed over populated areas to train for defending cities and other key targets from aerial attack, sometimes practicing against Strategic Air Command (SAC) bombers. The North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) conducted the largest such air exercises in historySkyshield I in 1960, Skyshield II in
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1961, and Skyshield III in 1962. The Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) shut down all civilian air trac while numerous ights of SAC bombers (augmented by some Vulcans from the RAF) attacked from the Arctic and o the coasts. Hundreds of NORADs interceptors ying thousands of sorties created a sporadic drum beat of sonic booms as F-101, F-102, F-104, and F-106 pilots lit their afterburners in pursuit of the intruders. (About three quarters of the bombers were able to reach their targets, a result kept secret for 35 years.)30 Although most ghters and interceptors deployed in the 1960s could readily y faster than sound, they could only do so for a short distance because of the rapid fuel consumption of jet-engine afterburners. Thus their sonic boom carpets (the term used to describe the areas aected on the surface) were relatively short. However, one supersonic American warplane that became operational in 1960 was designed to y faster than Mach 2 for more than a thousand miles, laying down a continuous sonic boom carpet all the way. This innovative but troublesome aircraft was SACs new Convair-built B-58 Hustler medium bomber. On March 5, 1962, the Air Force showed o the long-range speed of the B-58 by ying one from Los Angeles to New York in just over 2 hours at an average pace of 1,215 mph (despite having to slow down for an aerial refueling over Kansas). After another refueling over the Atlantic, the same Hustler outraced the sun (i.e., ew faster than Earths rotation) back to Los Angeles with one more refueling, completing the record-breaking round trip at an average speed of 1,044 mph.31 The accompanying photo shows one ying over a populated area (presumably at a subsonic speed). Capable of sustained Mach 2+ speeds, the four-engine, delta-winged Hustler (weighing up to 163,000 pounds) helped demonstrate the feasibility of a supersonic civilian transport. But the B-58s performance revealed at least one troubling omen. Almost wherever it ew supersonic over populated areas, the bomber left sonic boom complaints and claims in its wake. Indeed, on its record-shattering ight of March 1962, own mostly at an altitude of 50,000 feet (except when coming down to 30,000 feet for refueling), the jet dragged a sonic boom 20 to 40 miles wide back and forth across the countryfrightening residents, breaking windows, cracking plaster, and setting dogs to barking.32 As indicated by gure 1-2, the B-58 (despite Figure 1-2. Air Force pamphlet its small numbers) became a symbol for sonic for sonic boom claim investigaboom complaints. tors. (USAF)
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Most Americans, especially during times of increased Cold War tensions, tolerated occasional disruptions that were justied by national defense. But how would they react to constantly repeated sonic booms generated by civilian transports? Could a practical passenger-carrying supersonic airplane be designed to minimize its sonic signature enough to be acceptable to people below? Attempts to resolve these two questions occupy the remainder of this book.
in Cleveland, OH (later renamed in honor of astronaut and Senator John H. Glenn), specialized in the kind of advanced propulsion technologies needed for supersonic cruise. The strategy for developing SCAT depended heavily on leveraging technologies being developed for another Air Force bomberone much larger, faster, and more advanced than the B-58. This would be the revolutionary B-70, designed to cruise several thousand miles at speeds of Mach 3. NACA experts had been helping the Air Force plan this giant intercontinental bomber since the mid1950s (with aerodynamicist Alfred Eggers of the Ames Laboratory conceiving the innovative design for it to ride partially on compression lift created by its own supersonic shock waves). North American Aviation won the B-70 contract in 1958, but the projected expense of the program and advances in missile technology led President Dwight D. Eisenhower to cancel all but one prototype in 1959. The administration of President John F. Kennedy eventually approved production of two XB-70As. Their main purpose would be to serve as Mach 3 test beds for what was becoming known simply as the SST, for Supersonic Transport. NASA continued to refer to specic design concepts for the SST using the older acronym for Supersonic Commercial Air Transport. As shown by the 25 SCAT congurations in gure 1-3, the designers were very creative in exploring a wide variety of shapes for fuselages, wings, tails, engine nacelles, and other surfaces.34 By early 1963, about 40 concepts had been narrowed down to three Langley designs contributed by well-known Langley aerodynamicists, such as Richard Whitcomb and A. Warner Robins (SCAT-4, SCAT-15, and SCAT16), and one by a team from Ames (SCAT-17). These became the baselines for subsequent industry studies and proposals. SCAT-16, with variable sweep wings for improved low-speed handling, and SCAT-17, with a front canard and rear delta wing (based to some extent on the XB-70), were judged as the most promising concepts.35 But they were still only notional designs. In the judgment of two of the Langley Research Centers supersonic experts, William Alford and Cornelius Driver, It was obvious that ways would have to be found to obtain further major increases in ight eciency. It was clear that major attention would have to be paid to the sonic boom, which was shown to have become a dominant factor in aircraft design and operation.36 Whitcomb later withdrew from working on the SST because of his judgment that it would never be a practical commercial aircraft.37 Meanwhile, NASA continued research on SCAT concepts 15 through 19.38 Even though Department of Defense (DOD) resourcesespecially the Air Forceswould be important in supporting SST development, the aerospace industry made it clear that direct Federal funding and assistance would be essential. Thus, research and development (R&D) of the SST became a split responsibility between the Federal Aviation Agency and the National Aeronautics and
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Space Administrationwith NASA conducting and sponsoring the supersonic research and the FAA overseeing the SSTs overall development. The rst two leaders of the FAA, retired Lt. Gen. Elwood R. Pete Quesada (195861) and Najeeb E. Halaby (196165), were both staunch proponents of producing an SST, as to a slightly lesser degree was retired Gen. William F. Bozo McKee (196568). As heads of an independent agency that reported directly to the President, they were at the same level as NASA Administrators T. Keith Glennan (195861) and James Webb (196168). The FAA and NASA administrators, together with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara (somewhat of a skeptic on the SST program), provided interagency oversight and composed the Presidential Advisory Committee (PAC) for the SST established in April 1964. This arrangement lasted until 1967, when the Federal Aviation Agency became the Federal Aviation Administration under the new U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), whose secretary became responsible for the program.39 Much of NASAs SST-related research involved advancing the state of the art in such technologies as propulsion, fuels, materials, and aerodynamics. The last item included designing airframe congurations for sustained supersonic cruise at high altitudes, suitable subsonic maneuvering in civilian air-trac patterns at lower altitudes, safe takeos and landings at commercial airports, and acceptable noise levelsto include the still-puzzling matter of sonic booms.
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Although the NACA, especially at Langley and Ames, had been doing research on supersonic ight since World War II, none of its technical reports (and only one conference paper) published through 1957 dealt directly with sonic booms.40 That situation began to change when Langleys long-time manager and advocate of supersonic programs, John P. Stack, formalized the SCAT venture in 1958. During the next year, three Langley employees, whose names would become wellknown in the eld of sonic boom research, began publishing NASAs rst scientic papers on the subject. These were Harry W. Carlson, a versatile supersonic aerodynamicist; Harvey H. Hubbard, chief of the Acoustics and Noise Control Division; and Domenic J. Maglieri, a young engineer who became Hubbards top sonic boom specialist. Carlson would tend to focus on wind tunnel experiments and sonic boom theory while the two other men specialized in planning and monitoring eld tests and recording and analyzing the data collected. Within NASA, the Langley Research Center continued to be the focal point for sonic boom studies throughout the 1960s with the Flight Research Center (FRC) at Edwards AFB increasingly conducting most supersonic tests, often with Air Force support.41 (The High Speed prex was dropped from the FRCs name in 1959 to indicate a broadening of its experimental activities.) These research activities began to proliferate under the new pro-SST Kennedy administration in 1961. After the president formally approved development of the supersonic transport in June 1963, sonic boom research really took o. Langleys experts, augmented by NASA contractors and grantees, published 26 papers on sonic booms just 3 years later, with Ames also conducting related research.42 Dealing with the sonic boom demanded a multifaceted approach: (1) performing ight tests to better quantify the uid dynamics and atmospheric physics involved in generating and propagating shock waves as well as their physical eects on structures and people; (2) conducting community surveys to gather public opinion data from sample populations exposed to booms; (3) building and using acoustic simulators to further evaluate human and structural responses in controlled settings; (4) performing eld studies of possible eects on animals, both domestic and wild; (5) evaluating shock waves from various aerodynamic congurations in wind tunnel experiments; and (6) analyzing ight-test and wind tunnel data to rene theoretical constructs and create mathematical models for lowerLangley Research Centers boom aircraft designs. The remainder of this chapter rst sonic boom testers, focuses on the rst four activities with the nal two Harvey Hubbard and to be the main subject of the next chapter. Domenic Maglieri. (NASA)
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Despite 120-psf overpressures, the aircraft was only very slightly damaged when on the ground and there were no problems while it was in ight.46 Air Force ghters once again would test powerful sonic booms during 1965 in remote mountain and desert terrain near Tonopah, NV. This was where a special military testing organization from Sandia Base, NM, called Joint Task Force II, was evaluating the low-level penetration capabilities of various ghter aircraft for the Joint Chiefs of Sta. To learn more about possible eects from this kind of low-level training in remote areas, the USAF Aerospace Medical Divisions Biomedical Laboratory observed and analyzed the responses of people, structures, and animals to strong sonic booms. As in other tests, the damage to buildings (many in poor condition to begin with) consisted of cracked plaster, items falling from shelves, and broken windows. In some cases, glass fragments were propelled up to 12 feeta condition not recorded in previous testing. Some campers near the so-called starting gates to the three low-level corridors used for testing also experienced damage, probably from super booms as the ghters maneuvered into the tracks. Cattle and horses did not seem to react much to the noise. Test personnel located in a at area where the ghters ew at less than 100 feet above ground level and generated shock waves of more than 100 psf felt a jarring sensation against their bodies and were left with temporary ringing or feelings of fullness in their ears, but they experienced no real pain or ill eects. Most, however, could not help involuntarily inching in anticipation of the booms whenever the speeding jets passed
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overhead. An Air Force F-4C Phantom II ying Mach 1.26 at 95 feet during this test generated the strongest sonic boom yet recorded: 144 psf.47 (To put this in perspective, normal air pressure at sea level equates to 14.7 pounds per square inch, or about 2,116 pounds per square foot.) In late 1960 and early 1961, NASA and AFFTC followed up on Little Boom with Project Big Boom. B-58 bombers made 16 passes ying Mach 1.5 at altitudes of 30,000 feet to 50,000 feet over arrays of sensors, which measured a maximum overpressure of 2.1 psf. Varying the bombers weight from 82,000 pounds to 120,000 pounds provided the rst hard data on how an aircrafts weight and related lift produced higher overpressures than existing theories based on volume alone would indicate.48 Throughout the 1960s, Edwards Air Force Basewith its unequalled combination of Air Force and NASA expertise, facilities, instrumentation, airspace, emergency landing space, and types of aircrafthosted the largest number of sonic boom tests. NASA researchers from Langleys Acoustics Division spent much of their time there working with the Flight Research Center in a wide variety of ight experiments. The Air Force Flight Test Center usually participated as well. In an early test in 1961, Gareth Jordan of the FRC led an eort to collect measurements from F-104s and B-58s ying at speeds of Mach 1.2 to Mach 2.0 over sensors located along Edward AFBs supersonic corridor and at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, about 20 miles south. Most of the Palmdale measurements were under 1.0 psf, which the vast majority of people surveyed there and in adjacent Lancaster (where overpressures tended to be somewhat higher) considered no worse than distant thunder. But there were some exceptions.49 Other experiments at Edwards in 1961 conducted by Langley personnel with support from the FRC and AFFTC contributed a variety of new data. With help from the Goodyear blimp Mayower, hovering at 2,000 feet, they made the rst good measurements of atmospheric eects, such as how temperature variations can bend the paths of acoustic rays and how air turbulence in the lower atmosphere near the surface (known as the boundary layer) signicantly aected N-wave shape and overpressure.50 Testing at Edwards also gathered the rst data on booms from very high altitudes. Using an aggressive ight prole, AFFTCs B-58 crew managed to zoom up to 75,000 feet25,000 feet higher than the bombers normal cruising altitude and 15,000 feet over its design limit! The overpressures measured from this high altitude proved stronger than predicted (not a promising result for the planned SST). Much lower down, ghter aircraft performed accelerating and turning maneuvers to generate the kind of acoustical rays that amplied shock waves and produced multiple booms and super booms. The various experiments showed that a combination of atmospheric conditions, altitude,
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speed, ight path, aircraft conguration, and sensor location determined the shape and strength of the pressure signatures.51 Of major signicance for future boom minimization eorts, NASA also began taking in-ight shock wave measurements. The rst of these, at Edwards in 1960, had used an F-100 with a sensor probe to measure supersonic shock waves from the sides of an F-100, F-104, and B-58 as well as from F-100s speeding past with only 100 feet of separation. The data conrmed Whithams overall theory with some discrepancies. In early 1963, an F-106 equipped with a sophisticated new sensor probe designed at Langley ew seven sorties both above and below a B-58 at speeds of Mach 1.42 to Mach 1.69 and altitudes of approximately 40,000 feet to 50,000 feet. The data gathered conrmed Walkdens theory about how lift as well as volume increase peak shock wave pressures. As indicated by gure 1-4, analysis of the readings also found that the bow and tail shock waves spread farther apart as they owed from the B-58. Perhaps most signicant, the probing measurements revealed how the multiple, or saw tooth, shock waves (sudden increases in pressure) and expansions (regions of decreasing pressure) produced by the rest of an airplanes structure (canopy, wings, engine nacelles, weapons pod, etc.) merged with the stronger bow and tail waves untilat a distance of between 50 body lengths and 90 body lengthsthey began to coalesce into the classic N-shaped signature.52 This historic ight test, which hinted at how shock waves might be modied to reduce peak overpressures, marked a major milestone in sonic boom research. One of the most publicized and extended ight-test programs at Edwards had begun in 1959 with the rst launch from a B-52 of the fastest piloted aircraft ever own: the rocket-propelled X-15. Three of these legendary aerospace vehicles expanded the envelope and gathered data on supersonic and hypersonic ight for the next 8 years. Although the X-15 was not specically dedicated to sonic boom tests, the Flight Research Center did begin placing microphones and tape recorders under the X-15s ight tracks in the fall of 1961 to gather boom data. Much later, FRC researchers reported on the measurements of these sonic booms, which were made at speeds of Mach 3.5 and Mach 4.8.53 For the rst few years, NASAs Figure 1-4. Shock wave signature of a B-58 at sonic boom tests occurred in Mach 1.6. (NASA)
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relative isolation within military airspace in the desert Southwest or over Virginias rural Eastern Shore and adjacent waters. A future SST, however, would have to y over heavily populated areas. Thus, from July 1961 through January 1962, NASA, the FAA, and the Air Force carried out the Community and Structural Response Program at St. Louis, Missouri. In an operation nicknamed Bongo, the Air Force sent B-58 bombers on 76 supersonic training ights over Shock waves from an X-15 model in the city at altitudes from 31,000 to Langleys 4-by-4-foot Supersonic Pressure 41,000 feet, announcing them as Tunnel. (NASA) routine SAC radar bomb-scoring missions. F-106 interceptors ew 11 additional ights at 41,000 feet. Langley personnel installed sensors on the ground, which measured overpressures up to 3.1 psf. Investigators from Scott AFB, Illinois, or for a short time, a NASA-contracted engineering rm, responded to damage claims, nding some possibly legitimate minor damage in about 20 percent of the cases. Repeated interviews with more than 1,000 residents found 90 percent were at least somewhat aected by the booms and about 35 percent were annoyed. Scott AFB (a long distance phone call from St. Louis) received about 3,000 complaints during the test and another 2,000 in response to 74 sonic booms in the following three months. The Air Force eventually approved 825 claims for $58,648. These results served as a warning that repeated sonic booms could indeed pose an issue for SST operations.54 To obtain more denitive data on structural damage, NASA in December 1962 resumed tests at Wallops Island using various sample buildings. Air Force F-104s and B-58s and Navy F-4H Phantom IIs ew at altitudes from 32,000 feet to 62,000 feet, creating overpressures up to 3 psf. Sonic booms triggered cracks to plaster, tile, and other brittle materials in spots where the materials were already under stress (a nding that would be repeated in later, more comprehensive tests).55 In February 1963, NASA, the FAA, and the USAF conducted Project Littleman at Edwards AFB to measure the results of subjecting two specially instrumented light aircraft to sonic booms. F-104s made 23 supersonic passes as close as 560 feet from a small Piper Colt and a two-engine Beech C-45, creating overpressures up to 16 psf. Their responses were so small as to be insignicant, dismissing one possible concern about SST operations.56
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The St. Louis survey had left many unanswered questions about public opinion. To learn more, the FAAs Supersonic Transport Development Oce with support from NASA Langley and the USAF (including Tinker AFB) conducted the Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study from February through July 1964. This was a much more intensive and systematic test. In an operation named Bongo II, B-58s, F-101s, F-104s, and F-106s were called upon to deliver sonic booms eight times per day, 7 days a week for 26 weeks, with another 13 weeks of followup activities. The aircraft ew a total of 1,253 supersonic ights at Mach 1.2 to Mach 2.0 and altitudes between 21,000 feet and 50,000 feet. The FAA (which had the resources of a major eld organization available in Oklahoma City) instrumented nine control houses scattered throughout the metropolitan area with various sensors to measure structural eects while experts from Langley instrumented three houses and set up additional sensors throughout the area to record overpressures, wave patterns, and meteorological conditions. The National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago interviewed a sample of 3,000 adults three times during the study.57 By the end of the test, 73 percent of those surveyed felt that they could live with the number and strength of the booms experienced, but 40 percent believed they caused some structural damage (even though the control houses showed no signicant eects), and 27 percent would not accept indenite booms at the level tested. Analysis of the shock wave patterns by NASA Langley showed that a small number of overpressure measurements were signicantly higher than expected, indicating probable atmospheric inuences, including heat rising from urban landscapes.58 Sometimes, the eects of even moderate turbulence near the surface could be dramatic, as shown in gure 1-5 by the rapid change in pressure measurements from an F-104 ying Mach 1.4 at 28,000 feet recorded by an array of closely spaced microphones.59 The Oklahoma City study added to the growing knowledge of sonic booms and their acceptance or nonacceptance by the public at the cost of $1,039,657, seven lawsuits, and some negative publicity for the FAA. In view of the public and political reactions to the St. Louis and Oklahoma City tests, plans for another extended sonic boom test over a dierent city, including ights at night, never materialized.60 The FAA and Air Force conFigure 1-5. Effect of turbulence in just 800 feet of ducted the next series of tests from November 1964 into February an F-104s sonic boom carpet. (NASA)
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1965 in a much less populated place: the remote Oscura camp in the Armys vast White Sands Missile Range, NM. Here, 21 structures of various types and ages with a variety of plaster, windows, and furnishings were studied for possible damage. F-104s from nearby Holloman AFB and B-58s from Edwards AFB generated 1,494 booms, producing overpressures from 1.6 psf to 19 psf. The 680 sonic booms of up to 5.0 psf caused no real problems, but those above 7.9 psf caused varying degrees of damage to glass, plaster, tile, and stucco that were already in vulnerable condition. A parallel study of several thousand incubated chicken eggs showed no reduction in hatchability, and audiology tests on 20 personnel subjected daily to the booms showed no hearing impairment.61 Before the White Sands tests ended, NASA Langley personnel began collecting boom data from a highly urbanized setting in winter weather. During February 1965 and March 1965, they recorded data at ve ground stations as B-58 bombers ew 22 training missions in a corridor over downtown Chicago at speeds from Mach 1.2 to Mach 1.66 and altitudes from 38,000 feet to 48,000 feet. The results demonstrated further that amplitude and wave shape varied widely depending upon atmospheric conditions. These 22 ights and 27 others resulted in the Air Force approving 1,442 of 2,964 damage claims for a total of $114,763. Figure 1-6 shows how a gusty day in the Windy City greatly increased the strength of sonic booms (N-wave signatures, shown on the right) over those created by a B-58 ying at the same speed and altitude on a more tranquil day (left) as measured by microphones placed at 100-foot intervals in a cruciform pattern.62 The planned SST would, of course, encounter similar enhanced boom conditions. Also in March 1965, the FAA and NASA, in cooperation with the U.S. Forest Service, studied the eects of Air Force ghters creating boom overpressures up to 5.0 psf over hazardous mountain snow packs in the Colorado Rockies. Because of the stable snow conditions, these booms did not created any avalanches. Interestingly enough, in the early 1960s, the National Park Service tried to use newly deployed F-106s at Geiger Field, WA, to create controlled avalanches in Glacier National Park (known as Project Safe Slide), but, presumably, it found traditional methods Figure 1-6. Effect of winds on B-58 sonic boom such as artillery re more suitable.63 signatures. (NASA)
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XB-70 Valkyrie, the largest of the sonic boom test aircraft. (USAF)
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On June 8, however, the XB-70-2 crashed on its 47th ight as the result of a midair collision during an infamous publicity ight for General Electric (GE) to advertise its jet engines. Despite this tragic setback to the overall test program, the less capable XB-70-1 (which underwent modications until November) eventually proved useful for many purposes. After 6 months of joint AFFTC-FRC operations (with a total of 60 ights, including the boom testing described below), the Air Force turned the plane over full time to NASA in April 1967. The FRC, with a more limited budget, then used the Valkyrie for 23 more test missions until February 1969, when the unique aircraft was retired to the USAF Museum in Dayton, OH.68 All told, NASA acquired sonic boom measurements from 51 of the 129 total ights made by the XB-70s using two ground stations on Edwards AFB, one at nearby Boron, CA, and two in Nevada.69 These data would be of great value in the future. The loss of one XB-70 and retirement of the other from supersonic testing was made somewhat less painful by the availability of two smaller (107 feet long) but even faster products of advanced aviation technology: the Lockheed YF-12 and its cousin, the SR-71both nicknamed Blackbirds. On May 1, 1965, shortly after arriving at Edwards, a YF-12A set nine new world records, including a closed-course speed of 2,070 mph (Mach 3.14) and a sustained altitude of 80,257 feet. Four of that days ve ights also yielded sonic boom measurements. At speeds of Mach 2.6 to Mach 3.1 and altitudes of 60,000 feet to 76,500 feet above ground level, overpressures varied from 1.2 psf to 1.7 psf depending on distance from the ight path. During another series of ight tests at slower speeds and lower altitudes, overpressures up to 5.0 psf were measured during accelerations after having slowed down to refuel. These early results proved consistent with previous B-58 data.70 Data gathered from ground arrays measuring the sonic signatures from YF-12s, XB-70s, B-58s, and smaller aircraft ying at various altitudes also showed that the lateral spread of a boom carpet (without the inuence of atmospheric variables) could be roughly equated to 1 mile for every 1,000 feet of altitude with the N-signatures becoming more rounded with distance until degenerating into the approximate shape of a sine wave.71 In all cases, however, acoustic rays reected o the ground along with those that propagated above the aircraft could be refracted or bent by the conditions in the thermosphere and intersect the ground as a much weaker over-the-top or secondary boom carpet. Although grateful to benet from the ights of the AFFTCs Blackbirds, the FRC wanted its own YF-12 or SR-71 for supersonic research. It nally gained the use of two YF-12s through a NASA-USAF Memorandum of Understanding signed in June 1969, paying for operations with funding left over from the termination of the X-15 and XB-70 programs.72
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An Air Force YF-12, which provided valuable sonic boom data for NASA, taking off at Edwards AFB. (USAF)
on more than 1,500 sonic boom signatures created during 35 ights by the recently available SR-71s and YF-12s at speeds up to Mach 3.0 and altitudes up to 80,000 feet.77 Some of the ndings portended serious problems for planned SST operations. The program obtained responses from several hundred participating volunteers, both outdoors and inside houses, to sonic booms of dierent intensities produced by each of the supersonic aircraft. The time between the peak overpressure of the bow and tail shocks for aircraft at high altitudes ranged from about one-tenth of a second for the F-104, two-tenths of a second for the B-58, and three-tenths of a second for the XB-70. (See gure 1-7.) The respondents also compared sonic booms to the jet-engine noise of subsonic aircraft. Although data varied for each of the criteria measured, signicant minorities tended to nd the booms either just acceptable or unacceptable and the sharper N-wave signature from the lower ying F-104 more annoying outdoors than the more rounded signatures from the larger aircraft, which had to y at higher altitudes to create the same overpressure. Other factors included the frequency, time of day or night, and type of boom signature. Correlating how the subjects responded to jet noise (measured in decibels) and sonic booms (normally measured in psf ), the SRI researchers used a criterion called the
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perceived noise decibel (PNdB) level to assess how loud booms seemed to human ears.78 Employing sophisticated sensors, civil engineers measured the physical eects on houses and a building with a large interior space (the bases bowling alley) from varying degrees of booms created by the F-104s, B-58s, and XB-70. Of special concern for Figure 1-7. Variations in N-waves caused by the SSTs acceptability, the engiaircraft size and atmospheric conditions. (NASA) neers found the XB-70s elongated N-wave (although less bothersome to observers outdoors) created more of the ultralow frequencies that cause indoor vibrations, such as rattling windows, which many of the respondents considered objectionable. And although no signicant harm was detected to the instrumented structures, 57 complaints of damage were received from residents in the surrounding area, and three windows were broken on the base. Finally, monitoring by the U.S. Department of Agriculture detected no ill eects on farm animals in the area, although avian species (chickens, turkeys, etc.) reacted more than livestock.79 The National Sonic Boom Evaluation remains the most comprehensive test program of its kind ever conducted.80
previous human-response surveys. For example, after an initial dropo, the level of annoyance with the booms tended to increase over time, and almost all those who complained were worried about damage. Among 15 dierent adjectives supplied to describe the booms (e.g., disturbing, annoying, irritating), the word startling was chosen much more frequently than any other.81 The tendency of people to be startled by the suddenness of sonic booms was becoming recognized as their most problematic attribute in gaining public acceptance. Although the FRC and AFFTC continued their missions of supersonic ight testing and experimentation at Edwards, what might be called the heroic era of sonic boom testing was drawing to a close. The FAA and the Environmental Science Services Administration (a precursor of the Environmental Protection Agency) did some sophisticated testing of meteorological eects at Pendleton, OR, from September 1968 until May 1970, using a dense grid of recently invented, unattended transient data recorders to measure random booms from SR-71s. On the other side of the continent, NASA and the Navy studied sonic booms during Apollo missions in 1970 and 1971.82 The most signicant NASA testing in 1970 took place from August to October at the Atomic Energy Commissions Jackass Flats test site in Nevada. In conjunction with the FAA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NASA took advantage of the 1,527-foot tall Bare Reactor Experiment Nevada (BREN) Tower, which had been named for its original nuclear radiation tests in 1962. The researchers installed a vertical array of 15 microphones as well as meteorological sensors at various levels
Interagency team at the base of the BREN Tower. NASA personnel include Herbert Henderson, second from left; Domenic Maglieri, third from left; and David Hilton, far right. (Maglieri)
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along the tower. (Until then, a 250-foot tower at Wallops Island had been the highest used in sonic boom testing.83) During the summer and fall of 1970, the FRCs F-104s made 121 boom-generating ights from Edwards AFB to provide measurements of several still inadequately understood aspects of the sonic Figure 1-8. BREN Tower measurements of Mach cutoff signatures. (NASA) boom, especially the conditions known as caustics, in which acoustical rays can converge and focus in a nonlinear manner.84 Frequently caused by aircraft at transonic speeds or during acceleration, they can result in normal N-wave signatures being distorted as they pass through caustic regions into U-shaped signatures, sometimes with bow and tail wave overpressures strong enough to create super booms. Such signatures, however, are also sensitive to turbulence and prone to refracting before reaching the surface (rather than reecting o the ground as with N-waves). The BREN Tower allowed such measurements to be made in the vertical dimension for the rst time. This testing resulted in denitive data on the formation and nature of caustics as well as the Mach cutoinformation that would be valuable in planning boomless transonic ights and helping pilots to avoid making focused booms.85 Figure 1-8 illustrates the combined results of 3 days of testing by F-104s ying at about Mach 1.1 at 30,000 feet (with the solid lines representing shock waves and the dotted lines their reection).86 For all intents and purposes, the results of earlier testing and humanresponse surveys had already helped seal the fate of the SST before the reports on this latest test began coming in. Even so, the test results garnered from 1958 through 1970 during the SCAT and SST programs contributed tremendously to the international aeronautical and scientic communities understanding of one of the most baing and complicated aspects of supersonic ight. As Harry W. Carlson told the Nations top sonic-boom experts on the same day the last F-104 ew over Jackass Flats: The importance of ight-test programs cannot be overemphasized. These tests have provided an impressive amount of high-quality data.87 Unfortunately, however, learning about the nature of sonic booms did not yet translate into learning how to control them. As will be described in the next chapter, the American SST program proved to be too ambitious for the technology of its time despite a concerted eort by many of the best minds in aeronautical science and engineering. Yet for all
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its disappointments and controversies, the programs proliferation of data and scientic knowledge about supersonic ight, including sonic booms, would be indispensable for progress in the future.
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Endnotes
1. Paul Pojman, Ernst Mach, in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2011 Edition), ed. Edward N. Zalta, accessed ca. June 1, 2011, http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2011/entries/ ernst-mach/. 2. Because the eects of pressure and density on the speed of sound oset each other in most gases, temperature is the major variable. As a result, the speed of sound in Earths lower atmosphere (the troposphere) typically decreases as air cools with altitude until reaching the tropopause, which is a boundary layer of stable (isothermal) temperatures between the troposphere and the upper stratosphere. Although the altitude of the tropopause varies depending on season and latitude, the speed of sound usually travels at its uniformly slowest speed between about 36,000 feet and 85,000 feet. See Layers of the Earths Atmosphere, Windows to the Universe, accessed June 9, 2011, http://www.windows2universe.org/earth/Atmosphere/layers. html; Steven A. Brandt et al., Introduction to Aeronautics: A Design Perspective (Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics [AIAA], 2004), Appendix B, 449451. 3. J.W.M. Dumond et al., A Determination of the Wave Forms and Laws of Propagation and Dissipation of Ballistic Shock Waves, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (JASA) 18, no. 1 (January 1946): 97118. By the end of World War II, ballistic waves were well understood. 4. David Darling, The Complete Book of Spaceight: From Apollo 1 to Zero Gravity (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, 2003), 457. See also Airpower: Missiles and Rockets in Warfare, accessed December 21, 2009, http://www.centennialoight.gov/essay/ Air_Power/Missiles/AP29.htm; and Bob Ward, Dr. Space: The Life of Wernher von Braun (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute, 2005), 43. 5. The denitive biography, Michael J. Neufelds Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2007), 13336, leaves open the question of whether the Germans at Peenemnde heard the rst humanmade sonic booms in 1942 when their A-4 test rockets exceeded Mach 1 about 25 seconds after launch. 6. For its development and testing, see Richard P. Hallion, Supersonic Flight: Breaking the Sound Barrier and BeyondThe Story of the Bell X-1 and Douglas D-558 (New York: The Macmillan Co. in association with the Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum, 1972). For a detailed analysis of the XS-1s rst supersonic
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7.
8.
9. 10.
11. 12.
13.
14.
ight by a former NASA engineer, see Robert W. Kempel, The Conquest of the Sound Barrier (Beirut, Lebanon: HPM Publications, 2007), 3149. Tom Wolfe, The Right Stu (New York: Bantam Books, 1980), 47. Some personnel stationed at Muroc when Yeager broke the sound barrier would later recall hearing a full sonic boom, but these may have been memories of subsequent ights at higher speeds. One of NASAs top sonic boom experts, using a computer program called PCBoom4, has calculated that at Mach 1.06 and 43,000 feet in a standard atmosphere, refraction and absorption of the shock waves would almost certainly have dissipated the XS-1s sonic boom before it could reach the surface; Edward A. Haering, Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC), to Lawrence R. Benson, e-mail message, April 8, 2009. Chuck Yeager and Leo Janis, Yeager (New York: Bantam Books, 1985), 165. Domenic J. Maglieri to Christine M. Darden, NASA Dryden, January 13, 1993, with A Note on the Existence of Sonic Booms from Aircraft Flying at Speeds Less Than Mach 1, Eagle Engineering (January 1993). This analysis shows that it is physically possible that Bell test pilot Chalmers (Slick) Goodlin may have created a localized sonic boom when making an 8-g pull-up from a Mach 0.82 dive during an XS-1 envelope-expansion ight many months earlier. Domenic Maglieri to Lawrence Benson, e-mail message, September 22, 2011. For the authoritative history of the NACA-NASA mission at Edwards AFB, see Richard P. Hallion and Michael H. Gorn, On the Frontier: Experimental Flight at NASA Dryden (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2003). Kenneth J. Plotkin and Domenic J. Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research: History and Future, AIAA paper no. 2003-3575 (June 2003), 2. This publication is recommended for any reader who would like a succinct introduction to the subject. Maglieri and Percy J. Bobbitt also compiled a highly detailed, 372-page reference, History of Sonic Boom Technology Including Minimization (Hampton, VA: Eagle Aeronautics, November 1, 2001), a copy of which was kindly provided to the author in early 2009 for his reference. Introduction to The Battle of the Bangs, Flight and Aircraft Engineer 61, no. 2289 (December 5, 1952): 696, accessed
29
15.
16.
17.
18. 19.
20. 21.
22.
ca. January 15, 2009, http://www.ightglobal.com/pdfarchive/ view/1952/1952%20-%203468.html. G.B. Whitham, The Flow Pattern of a Supersonic Projectile, Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics 5, no. 3 (1952): 301348, accessed ca. January 30, 2009, http://www3.interscience. wiley.com/journal/113395160/issue. Whitham received his Ph.D. from the University of Manchester in 1953. Figure 1-1 copied from Peter Coen and Roy Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier: Three Generations of U.S. Research into Sonic Boom Reduction and What it Means to the Future, PowerPoint presentation presented at the Experimental Aircraft Association AirVenture Oshkosh, Oshkosh, WI, July 2004, slide no. 3, Sonic Boom Basics. G.B. Whitham, On the Propagation of Weak Shock Waves, Journal of Fluid Dynamics 1, no. 3 (September 1956): 290318, accessed ca. January 30, 2009, http://journals.cambridge.org/action/ displayJournal?jid=JFM. Both papers are described in Larry J. Runyan et al., Sonic Boom Literature Survey. Volume 2. Capsule Summaries, Boeing Commercial Airplane Co. for the FAA (September 1973), Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC) no. AD 771274, 6-8 and 59-60. Whitham later taught at both the Massachusetts and California Institutes of Technology. Marshall E. Mullens, A Flight Test Investigation of the Sonic Boom, AFFTC Technical Note (TN) no. 56-20 (May 1956), as summarized in Runyan, Sonic Boom Capsule Summaries, 4647. Air Force Flight Test Center History Oce, Ad Inexplorata: The Evolution of Flight Testing at Edwards Air Force Base (Edwards, CA: AFFTC, 1996), appendix B, 55. Photo provided courtesy of this oce. Most aircraft names are assigned in later stages of development or production. John G. Norris, AF Says Sonic Boom Can Peril Civilians, Washington Post and Times Herald, November 9, 1954, 1, 12. One of the rst studies on focused booms was G.M. Lilley et al., Some Aspects of Noise from Supersonic Aircraft, Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society 57 (June 1953): 396414, as described in Runyan, Sonic Boom Capsule Summaries, 54. History of the 3201 Air Base Group, Eglin AFB, JulySeptember 1951, abstract from Information Retrieval and Indexing System (IRIS), no. 438908, Air Force Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, AL.
30
23. F. Edward McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, Special Publication (SP)-472 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1985), 3132; Richard P. Hallion, Richard Whitcombs Triple Play, Air Force Magazine 93, no. 2 (February 2010): 7071. The following abbreviations are used for NASA publications cited in the notes: Conference Publication (CP), Contractor Report (CR), Reference Publication (RP), Special Publication (SP), Technical Memorandum (TM), formerly classied Tech Memo (TM-X), Technical Note (TN), Technical Paper (TP), and Technical Report (TR). Bibliographic information and, often, full-text copies can be accessed through the NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS), http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp. The NTRS is a publicly accessible database maintained by NASAs Center for AeroSpace Information (CASI). 24. Richard Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization, paper presented at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Research and Technology Organization Applied Vehicle Technology course Fluid Dynamics Research on Supersonic Aircraft, Rhode SaintGense, Belgium, May 2529, 1998; Robert T. Jones, Adolf Busemann, 19011986, in Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering 3 (Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 1989), 6267, accessed June 7, 2011, http://www.nap.edu/openbook. php?record_id=1384. 25. F. Walkden, The Shock Pattern of a Wing-Body Combination Far from the Flight Path, Aeronautical Quarterly 9, pt. 2 (May 1958): 16494; described in Runyan, Sonic Boom Capsule Summaries, 89. Both Walkden and Whitman did their inuential studies at the University of Manchester. 26. Plotkin and Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research, 2. 27. Fred Keefe and Grover Amen, Boom, New Yorker, May 16, 1962, 3334. 28. Albion B. Hailey, AF Expert Dodges Eorts to Detail Sonic Boom Loss, Washington Post, August 25, 1960, A15. 29. J.P. and E.G.R. Taylor, A Brief Legal History of the Sonic Boom in America, in Aircraft Engine Noise and Sonic Boom, Conference Proceedings (CP) no. 42, presented at the NATO Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development (AGARD), Neuilly sur Seine, France, 1969, 2-12-11. 30. Roger A. Mola, This Is Only a Test, Air & Space Magazine 21, no. 2 (MarchApril 2006), accessed ca. March 1, 2011, http://www. airspacemag.com/history-of-ight/this-is-only-a-test.html. For contemporary accounts, see Warplanes Fill Skies Over U.S. and Canada,
31
31. 32.
33.
34. 35.
Los Angeles Times, September 10, 1960, 4; Albion B. Halley and Warren Kornberg, U.S. Tests Air Defenses in 3000-Plane Battle, Washington Post, October 15, 1961, A1, B1; Richard Witkin, Civilian Planes Halted 12 Hours in Defense Test, New York Times, October 15, 1961, 1, 46. Marcelle S. Knaack, PostWorld War II Bombers, 19451973 2 of Encyclopedia of U.S. Air Force Aircraft and Missile Systems (Washington, DC: USAF, 1988), 394395. Jet Breaks 3 Recordsand Many Windows, Los Angeles Times, March 6, 1962, 1. In reality, most of the damage was done while accelerating after the refuelings. The Air Force pamphlet shown in gure 1-2 is in the Dryden Flight Research Centers archival collection. For the political and economic aspects of the SST, see Mel Horwitch, Clipped Wings: The American SST Conict (Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology [MIT] Press, 1982) and Erik M. Conways denitive account High-Speed Dreams: NASA and the Technopolitics of Supersonic Transportation, 19451999 (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), which also covers subsequent programs and includes many technical details. For an informative earlier study by an insider, see the previously cited McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology. M. Leroy Spearman, The Evolution of the High-Speed Civil Transport, NASA TM no. 109089 (February 1994), gure 1-3 extracted from 26. McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 3546; Joseph R, Chambers, Innovation in Flight: Research of the NASA Langley Research Center on Revolutionary Concepts for Aeronautics, SP-2005-4539 (Washington, DC: NASA, 2005), 2528. William J. Alford and Cornelius Driver, Recent Supersonic Transport Research, Astronautics & Aeronautics 2, no. 9 (September 1964): 26. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 55. Spearman, Evolution of the HSCT, 7. FAA Historical Chronology, 19261996, accessed February 15, 2009, http://www.faa.gov/about/media/b-chron.pdf. For Quesadas role, see Stuart I. Rochester, Takeo at Mid-Century: Federal Civil Aviation Policy in the Eisenhower Years, 19531961 (Washington, DC: FAA, 1976). For the activism of Halaby and the demise of the SST after his departure, see Richard J. Kent, Jr., Safe, Separated, and Soaring: A
32
40.
41.
42. 43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
History of Civil Aviation Policy, 19611972 (Washington, DC: FAA, 1980). Based on authors review of Section 7.4, Noise, Aircraft, in volumes of the Index of NACA Technical Publications (Washington DC: NACA Division of Research Information, n.d.) covering the years 19151957. For an overall summary of Langleys supersonic activities, see Chambers, Innovations in Flight, chapter 1, Supersonic Civil Aircraft: The Need for Speed, 770; Domenic Maglieri by Lawrence Benson, telephone interview, February 6, 2009. A.B. Fryer et al., Publications in Acoustics and Noise Control from the NASA Langley Research Center during 19401976, NASA TM-X-74042 (July 1977). For a chronological summary of selected projects during the rst decade of sonic boom research, see Johnny M. Sands, Sonic Boom Research (19581968), FAA, DTIC no. AD 684806, November 1968. Domenic J. Maglieri, Harvey H. Hubbard, and Donald L. Lansing, Ground Measurements of the Shock-Wave Noise from Airplanes in Level Flight at Mach Numbers to 1.4 and Altitudes to 45,000 Feet, NASA TN D-48 (September 1959); Lindsay J. Lina and Domenic J. Maglieri, Ground Measurements of Airplane Shock-Wave Noise at Mach Numbers to 2.0 and at Altitudes to 60,000 Feet, NASA TN D-235 (March 1960). Domenic J. Maglieri, Vera Huckel, and Tony L. Parrott, Ground Measurements of Shock-Wave Pressure for Fighter Airplanes Flying at Very Low Altitudes and Comments on Associated Response Phenomena, NASA TN D-3443 (July 1966) (which superseded classied TM-X-611 [1961]). Gareth H. Jordan, Flight Measurements of Sonic Booms and Eects of Shock Waves on Aircraft, in Society of Experimental Test Pilots Quarterly Review 5, no. 1 (1961): 117131, presented at the Society of Experimental Test Pilots (SETP) Supersonic Symposium, September 29, 1961. C.W. Nixon et al., Sonic Booms Resulting from Extremely LowAltitude Supersonic Flight: Measurements and Observations on Houses, Livestock, and People, Aerospace Medical Research Laboratories (AMRL) Technical Report (TR) 68-52 (October 1968), DTIC AD 680800; USAF Fact Sheet, Sonic Boom, February 23, 2011, http://www.af.mil/information/factsheets/factsheet.
33
48.
49. 50.
51. 52.
53.
54.
asp?id=184; Domenic Maglieri by Lawrence Benson, telephone interview, March 19, 2009. Domenic J. Maglieri and Harvey H. Hubbard, Ground Measurements of the Shock-Wave Noise from Supersonic Bomber Airplanes in the Altitude Range from 30,000 to 50,000 Feet, NASA TN D-880 (July 1961). Jordan, Flight Measurements of Sonic Booms. Domenic J. Maglieri and Donald L. Lansing, Sonic Booms from Aircraft in Maneuvers, NASA TN D-2370 (July 1964) (based on the tests in 1961); Domenic Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research: Some Eects of Airplane Operations and the Atmosphere on Sonic Boom Signature, NASA SP-147 (1967), 2548. D.J. Maglieri, J.O. Powers, and J.M. Sands, Survey of United States Sonic Boom Overight Experimentation, NASA TM-X-66339 (May 30, 1969), 1517. Harvey H. Hubbard et al., Ground Measurements of Sonic-Boom Pressures for the Altitude Range of 10,000 to 75,000 Feet, NASA TR R-198 (July 1964) (this report was based on testing in 1961). Harriet J. Smith, Experimental and Calculated Flow Fields Produced by Airplanes Flying at Supersonic Speeds, NASA TN D-621 (November 1960); D.J. Maglieri and V.S. Richie, In-Flight Shock-Wave Measurements Above and Below a Bomber Airplane at Mach Numbers from 1.42 to 1.69, NASA TN D-1968 (October 1963). Figure 1-4 extracted with permission from Domenic Maglieri and Percy Bobbitt from History of Sonic Boom Technology Including Minimization, Eagle Aeronautics (November 1, 2001), 145. NASA Flight Research Center, X-15 Program (monthly report), September 1961, Dryden archive, le LI-6-10A-13. (Peter Merlin assisted the author in nding this and other archival documents.); Karen S. Green and Terrill W. Putnam, Measurements of Sonic Booms Generated by an Airplane Flying at Mach 3.5 and 4.8, NASA TM-X-3126 (October 1974). (Since hypersonic speeds were not directly relevant for the SST, a formal report was delayed until NASA began planning re-entry ights by the Space Shuttle.) For the X-15 program, see Hallion and Gorn, On the Frontier, 101125. For a discussion of its shock wave propagation, see Wendell H. Stillwell, X-15 Research Results, SP-60 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1965), 4666. Charles W. Nixon and Harvey H. Hubbard, Results of the USAFNASA-FAA Flight Program to Study Community Response to Sonic Booms in the Greater St. Louis Area, NASA TN no. D-2705 (May
34
61. 62.
63.
64. 65.
66.
1965); Clark et al., Studies of Sonic Boom Damage, NASA CR 227 (May 1965). Sands, Sonic Boom Research (19581968), 3. Domenic J. Maglieri and Garland J. Morris, Measurement of Response of Two Light Airplanes to Sonic Booms, NASA TN D-1941 (August 1963). Paul M. Borsky, Community Reactions to Sonic Booms in the Oklahoma City AreaVolume II: Data on Community Reactions and Interpretations, USAF Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Wright-Patterson AFB (August 1965), accessed ca. February 15, 2009, http://www3.norc.org/NR/rdonlyres/255A2AA2-B953-43059AD0-B8ABCC824FA9/0/NORCRpt_101B.pdf. D.A. Hilton, D.J. Maglieri, and R. Steiner, Sonic-Boom Exposures during FAA Community Response Studies over a 6-Month Period in the Oklahoma City Area, NASA TN D-2539 (December 1964). Source for gure 1-5: Ibid., 68. D.J. Maglieri (NASA), D.J. Powers, and J.M. Sands (FAA), Survey of United States Sonic Boom Overight Experimentation, NASA TM-X-66339 (May 30, 1969), 3739; Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 121122. Thomas H. Higgins, Sonic Boom Research and Design Considerations in the Development of a Commercial Supersonic Transport, JASA 39, no. 5, pt. 2 (November 1966): 526531. David. A. Hilton, Vera Huckel, and Domenic J. Maglieri, Sonic Boom Measurements During Bomber Training Operations in the Chicago Area, NASA TN D-3655 (October 1966), gure 1-6 on N-wave signatures copied from 7. Histories of the 4700 Air Defense Wing, JanuaryMarch and AprilJune 1960, IRIS abstracts; History of the 84th Fighter Group, JanuaryDecember 1961, IRIS abstract; Benson, Maglieri interview, March 19, 2009. For a denitive history of this remarkable aircraft, see Dennis R. Jenkins and Tony R. Landis, Valkyrie: North Americas Mach 3 Superbomber (North Branch, MN: Specialty Press, 2004). William H. Andrews, Summary of Preliminary Data Derived from the XB-70 Airplanes, NASA TM-X-1240 (June 1966), 1112. Despite being more than three times heavier than the B-58, the XB-70s bow wave proved to be only slightly stronger, reecting its more tailored aerodynamic design and the benets of its large size. Domenic J. Maglieri et al., A Summary of XB-70 Sonic Boom Signature Data, Final Report, NASA CR 189630 (April 1992).
35
67.
74. 75.
76. 77.
Until this report, the 19651966 ndings were led away unpublished. The original oscillographs were also scanned and digitized at this time for use in the High-Speed Research (HSR) program. FRC, NASA XB-70 Flight Research Program, April 1966, Dryden archive, File L2-4-4D-3, 10 quoted. See also C.M. Plattner, XB-70A Flight Research: Phase 2 to Emphasize Operational Data, Aviation Week (June 13, 1966): 6062. NASA Dryden Fact Sheet, XB-70, accessed May 10, 2011, http:// www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/FactSheets/FS-084-DFRC.html; Hallion and Gorn, On the Frontier, 17685, 421. Maglieri, Summary of XB-70 Sonic Boom, 45. Photo of BREN Tower courtesy of Mr. Maglieri. R.T. Klinger, YF-12A Flight Test Sonic Boom Measurements, Lockheed Advanced Development Projects Report SP-815 (June 1, 1965), Dryden archive, File LI-4-10A-1. John O. Powers, Johnny M. Sands, and Domenic J. Maglieri, Survey of United States Sonic Boom Overight Experimentation, NASA TM-X-66339 (May 1969), 9, 1213. Peter W. Merlin, From Archangel to Senior Crown: Design and Development of the Blackbird (Reston, VA: AIAA, 2008), 106107, 116118, 179; Hallion and Gorn, On the Frontier, 187. NSBEO, Sonic Boom Experiments at Edwards Air Force Base; Interim Report (July 28, 1967), 12 (hereinafter cited as the Stanford Research Institute [SRI], Edwards AFB Report as it was prepared under contract by the SRI). For background on the NSBEO, see Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 122123. SRI, Edwards AFB Report, 9. D.A. Hilton, D.J. Maglieri, and N.J. McLeod, Summary of Variations of Sonic Boom Signatures Resulting from Atmospheric Eects, NASA TM-X-59633 (February 1967), and D.J. Maglieri, Preliminary Results of XB-70 Sonic Boom Field Tests During National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, March 1967, annexes C-1 and C-2, in SRI, Edwards AFB Report; H.H. Hubbard and D.J. Maglieri, Sonic Boom Signature Data from Cruciform Microphone Array Experiments during the 196667 EAFB National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, NASA TN D-6823 (May 1972). Maglieri and Bobbitt, History of Sonic Boom Technology, 6063. SRI, Edwards AFB Report, 1720, annexes CF; Domenic J. Maglieri et al., Sonic Boom Measurements for SR-71 Aircraft Operating at Mach Numbers to 3.0 and Altitudes to 24834 Meters, NASA TN D-6823 (September 1972).
36
78. SRI, Edwards AFB Report, 1116, annex B; K.D. Kryter, Psychological Experiments on Sonic Booms Conducted at Edwards Air Force Base, Final Report, SRI (1968), summarized by Richard M. Roberds, Sonic Boom and the Supersonic Transport, Air University Review 22, no. 7 (JulyAugust 1971): 2533. 79. SRI, Edwards AFB Report, 2023, annexes G and H; David Homan, Sonic Boom Tests Fail to Win Any Boosters, Washington Post, August 3, 1967, A3; A.J. Bloom, G. Kost, J. Prouix, and R.L. Sharpe, Response of Structures to Sonic Booms Produced by XB-70, B-58, and F-104 Aircraft: Based on Sonic Boom Experiments at Edwards Air Force Base, Final Report, NSBEO 2-67, (October 1967); D.S. Findley et al., Vibration Responses of Test Structure No. 1 During the Edwards Air Force Base Phase of the National Sonic Boom Program, NASA TM-X-72706 (June 1975), and Vibration Responses of Test Structure No. 2 During the Edwards Air Force Base Phase of the National Sonic Boom Program, NASA TM-X-72704 (June 1975). 80. Source for gure 1-4: D.J. Maglieri (NASA), J.O. Powers, and J.M. Sands (FAA), Survey of United States Sonic Boom Overight Experimentation, NASA TM-X-66339 (May 30, 1969), 4. 81. TRACOR, Inc., Public Reactions to Sonic Booms, NASA CR 1665 (September 1970). 82. David A. Hilton and Herbert R. Henderson documented the sonic boom measurements from the Apollo 15, 16, and 17 missions in NASA TNs D-6950 (1972), D-7606 (1974), and D-7806 (1974). 83. Maglieri and Bobbitt, History of Sonic Boom Technology, 6972. 84. For the governing equations for the wave eld near a caustic, see J.P. Guiraud, Acoustique Gomtrique Bruit Ballistique des Avions Supersoniques et Focalisation, Journal Mcanique, 4 (1965): 215267, cited by Plotkin and Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research, 5. 85. George T. Haglund and Edward J. Kane, Flight Test Measurements and Analysis of Sonic Boom Phenomena Near the Shock Wave Extremity, NASA CR 2167 (February 1973); Benson, Maglieri, interview, March 19, 2009. 86. Domenic Maglieri et al., Measurement of Sonic Boom Signatures from Flights at Cuto Mach Number, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, October 2930, 1970, ed. Ira R. Schwartz, SP-255 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1971), 243254. Figure 1-7 extracted from 252. 87. Harry W. Carlson, Some Notes on the Present Status of Sonic Boom Prediction and Minimization Research, in Schwartz, Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 395.
37
Langleys Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, shown here upon completion in 1955, had two 4-by-4-by7-foot test sections and could generate speeds up to Mach 4.63. (NASA)
38
CHAPTER 2
The rapid progress made in understanding the nature and signicance of sonic booms during the 1960s stemmed from the synergy among ight testing, wind tunnel experiments, psychoacoustical studies, theoretical renements, and powerful new computing capabilities. Vital to this process was the largely free exchange of information by NASA, the FAA, the USAF, the airplane manufacturers, academia, and professional organizations such as the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and the Acoustical Society of America (ASA). The sharing of much of this information even extended to counterparts in Europe, where the rival Anglo-French Concorde supersonic airliner got o to a head start on the more ambitious American program. Designing commercial aircraft has long required a variety of tradeos involving cruising, landing, and takeo speeds; range; passenger or cargo capacity; weight, with and without payload; durability; comfort; safety; and, of course, costsboth for manufacturing and operations. Balancing such factors was especially challenging with an aircraft as revolutionary as the SST, which was expected to cruise at about Mach 3 while still being able to take o and land at existing airports. Unlike with previous supersonic military aircraft, NASAs scientists and engineers and their partners in industry increasingly had to also consider the environmental impacts of their designs, including engine noise around airports, the eects of high-altitude exhaust on the upper atmosphereespecially the little understood ozone layerand, of course, the inevitable sonic boom.1 As the program progressed, the FAA set a desired goal for the SSTs sonic boom level of 2.0 psf when accelerating and 1.5 psf during cruise in hopes that this would be acceptable to the average person exposed to the booms on the ground. At NASAs aeronautical centers, especially Langley, aerodynamicists tried to incorporate the growing knowledge about the physics of sonic booms into their equations, models, and wind tunnel experiments to meet or exceed this goaleven as the research described in the previous chapter revealed more about the psychoacoustics of human response.
39
obtain useful shock wave signatures: about 2 inches in length for measuring them at 8-body-lengths distance and only three-quarters of an inch for trying to measure them at 32 body lengths (as close as possible to the far eld). Compatible with Whithams theory, many of Carlsons models consisted of the better understood and easier to measure equivalent bodies of revolution. (This was the accepted technique for translating the complex shape of airframes with their wings and other surfaces using the area rule into standard aerodynamic principles governing simpler projectiles with rounder cross sections). Carlson determined these models to be suitable substitutes for more realistic, nonaxisymmetrical airplane-shaped models in obtaining theoretical estimates of far-eld bow shock pressures. Although his more realistic, airplane-shaped model could not reach far-eld conditions, the overall results correlated with existing theory, such as Whithams formulas on volume-induced overpressures and Walkdens on those caused by lift.4 Carlsons attempt to design one of the models to alleviate the strength of the bow shock was unsuccessful, but this can be considered NASAs rst experimental attempt at boom minimization. In April 1959, before the results of either Carlsons wind tunnel or those of the rst ight tests at Wallops Island were published, he and Domenic Maglieri advised about sonic boom implications early in the Supersonic Commercial Air Transport program. Based on existing theory, some USAF and British reports, and preliminary ndings in their own experiments, they concluded that for the proposed supersonic transport airplanes of the future, booms on the ground will most probably be experienced during the major portion of the ight plan. The boom pressures will be most severe during the climb and descent phases of the ight plan.5 Although they warned that sonic booms during cruise would extend laterally for many miles, it was hoped that special operating procedures and high altitudes could help alleviate both problems to some extent. The extreme precision demanded in making the tiny models needed for early sonic boom experiments, the disruptive eects of the sting assemblies needed to mount them (which inevitably distorted tail shocks), the vibration by the models, the extra sensitivity required of pressure-sensing devices, and the interactions with a tunnels walls all limited a wind tunnels ability to measure the type of shock waves that would reach the ground from a full-sized aircraft, especially one as large as the planned SST. Even so, substantial progress continued, and the data served as useful cross-checks on ight-test data and mathematical formulas.6 For example, in 1962 Harry Carlson used a 1-inch model of a B-58 to make the rst direct correlation of recent ight-test data (described in the previous chapter) with wind tunnel results and sonic boom theory. His ndings proved that wind tunnel readings, with appropriate analysis, could be used with some condence to estimate sonic boom signatures.7 Several months later, he concluded that locating the major portion of an SSTs
41
lift-generating surface aft of the maximum cross-sectional area could lower sonic boom overpressure, a principle thereafter considered in the design of most planned SST congurations.8 Exactly 5 years after publishing results of his rst wind tunnel sonic boom experiment, Harry Carlson was able to report, In recent years, intensive research eorts treating all phases of the problem have served to provide a basic understanding of this phenomenon. The theoretical studies [of Whitham and Walkden] have resulted in correlations with the wind tunnel dataand with the ight data.9 As for the prospect of minimizing the Examining a 1-inch model of the XB-70 in strength of sonic booms, wind tunnel 1961. (NASA) tests of SCAT models had revealed that some congurations (e.g., the arrow wing) produced lower overpressures.10 The challenge was to nd congurations that would reduce sonic booms without signicantly sacricing other needed attributes. In 1967, Ames researchers Raymond Hicks and Joel Mendoza greatly improved the ability of wind tunnels to predict sonic boom characteristics. Experimenting with a 12-inch model of the XB-70 in the Ames 7-by-9-foot supersonic wind tunnel at Mach 1.8, they applied Whithams near-eld F-function theory to compare pressure readings at one body length in the wind tunnel with actual ight-test data from 4.5 body lengths and 290 body lengths from a real XB-70. This resulted in a new, more reliable method for extrapolating near-eld F-function measurements to the far eld, allowing the use of much larger and therefore more accurate models for that purpose.11
At the very start of the decade, when the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC) was exploring options for a supersonic airliner, L.B. Jones, an aerodynamicist at English Electric Aviation (a BAC subsidiary), added to the fundamental understanding of sonic booms (or bangs) pioneered by Whitham and Walkden.12 Noting with some understatement that the sonic bangs caused by supersonic aircraft can be a nuisance [with] a level of noise...on the borderline of acceptable value, Jones introduced his theory by observing that it seems important to examine ways of reducing them at the aircraft design stage. He presented equations for ways of lowering shock waves in the far eld caused by lift, volume, and lift plus volume.13 Although these hypothetical designs were too blunt to be practical, his work marked the rst signicant theory on how supersonic aircraft might be designed to reduce boom intensity. Such possibilities were soon being explored by NASA aerodynamicists and a growing number of NASA partners in the American aerospace industry and university engineering departments. In addition to publishing results of their tests and experiments in technical reports and academic journals, researchers began presenting their ndings at special conferences and professional symposia dealing with supersonic ight. One of the earliest such gatherings took place from September 17 to September 19, 1963, when NASA Headquarters sponsored an SST feasibility studies review at the Langley Research Centerattended by Government, contractor, and airline personnelthat examined every aspect of the planned SST. In a session on noise, Harry Carlson warned that sonic boom considerations alone may dictate allowable minimum altitudes along most of the ight path and have indicated that in many cases the airframe sizing and engine selection depend directly on sonic boom.14 On top of that, Harvey Hubbard and Domenic Maglieri discussed how atmospheric eects and community response to building vibrations might pose problems with the current SST sonic boom objectives (2 psf during its acceleration and 1.5 psf while cruising).15 The conferees discussed various other technological challenges for the planned American SST, some indirectly related to the sonic boom issue. For example, because of frictional heating, an airframe covered largely with stainless steel (such as the XB-70) or with titanium (such as the still-top-secret A-12/YF-12) would cruise at Mach 2.7+ and over 60,000 feet, an altitude which many still hoped would allow the sonic boom to weaken by the time it reached the surface. Manufacturing such a plane, however, would be much more expensive than manufacturing a Mach 2.2 SST with aluminum skin, such as the design being planned for the British-French Concorde, which the United Kingdom and France had formally approved for joint development on November 29, 1962. (Interestingly, this agreement had no provision for either side to back out.)16
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Despite serious and potentially incurable problems raised at the NASA conference concerning cost and feasibility, the FAA, spurred on by the Concorde agreement, had already released the SST Request for Proposals (RFP) on August 15, 1963. Thereafter, as explained by Langleys long-time supersonic expert, F. Edward McLean, NASAs role changed from one of having its own concepts evaluated by the airplane industry to one of evaluating the SST concepts of the airplane industry.17 By January 1964, Boeing, Lockheed, North American, and their jet-engine partners had submitted initial proposals, with Boeing drawing upon NASAs swing-wing SCAT-16 concept and Lockheeds proposal resembling the SCAT-17 with its canard and delta-wing conguration. North Americans design, which relied heavily on its XB-70 but did not benet from NASAs concepts, was soon eliminated from the competition.18 In retrospect, the manufacturers and Government advocates of the SST were obviously hoping that technology would catch up with requirements before it went into production. The SST program schedule was too compressed, however, for many of the emerging concepts on controlling sonic booms to be incorporated or retrotted into the contractors designs. With the SST program now well under way, a growing awareness of the public response to booms became one factor among those that tri-agency (FAA-NASA-DOD) groups in the mid-1960s, including the PAC chaired by Robert McNamara, considered in evaluating the proposed SST designs. The sonic boom issue also became the focus of a rather skeptical committee of the National Academy of Sciences between 1964 and 1965 and attracted growing attention from the academic and scientic community at large, much of it increasingly negative.19 By 1965, NASA specialists at Langley had been studying possible ways to address the sonic boom problem for the past 5 years. In June, Ed McLean pointed out that, contrary to current asymptotic far-eld theory, the near-eld shock waves from a transonically accelerating SST do not necessarily have to evolve into the nal form of an N-wave. This opened the prospect for a properly designed, large supersonic aircraft ying at the right altitude to avoid projecting a full sonic boom to the surface.20 Of major signicance at the time and even more potentially for the future, improved data-reduction methods and numerical evaluations of sonic boom theory were being adapted for processing with new codes in the latest International Business Machines (IBM) computers. Langley used this capability for the rst application of high-speed computers on the aerodynamic design of supersonic aircraftwhich was considered a quantum leap in engineering analysis capability.21 Meanwhile, Boeing developed one of the most widely known of the early sonic boom computer programs to help in designing its SST candidate.22 Automated data processing allowed faster and more precise
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correlations between wind tunnel and ight-test data, leading to continued renements in sonic boom theory (although still mainly applicable to bow shocks during steady and level ight in a standard atmosphere).23 Applying these new capabilities, Carlson, McLean, A. Warner Robins, and their colleagues at Langley designed the SCAT-15F, an improved SST concept with a highly swept arrow wing optimized for highly ecient cruise (and, to some extent, a lower sonic boom).24 Solving resultant problems with stability and control at low speeds was more dicult and came too late for Boeing to adapt this design for its SST in the late 1960s, but the lessons learned from the SCAT15F would be of value in future supersonic transport studies.25 The Acoustical Society of America, made up of professionals from all elds involving sound (ranging from music to audiology, and from noise to vibration), sponsored its rst Sonic Boom Symposium on November 3, 1965, as part of its 70th meeting inappropriately enoughSt. Louis. McLean, Hubbard, Carlson, Maglieri, and other Langley experts presented papers on the background and techniques of sonic boom research as well as their latest ndings.26 The paper by McLean and Barrett L. Shrout included details on the potential breakthrough in using near-eld shock waves to evaluate wind tunnel models for boom minimizationin this case, a reduction in maximum overpressure
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in a climb prole from 2.2 psf to 1.1 psf. This technique also allowed for the use of 4-inch models, which were easier to fabricate to the close tolerances required for accurate shock wave measurements.27 Harry Carlson described how the Langley Research Centers latest high-speed computer programs for analyzing the lift and drag of aerodynamic congurations were being used by both NASA and the manufacturers to calculate F-function results and theoretical pressure signatures at various distances.28 In addition to the scientists and engineers employed by the aircraft manufactures, many eminent researchers in academia took on the challenge of discovering ways to minimize the sonic boom, usually with NASAs sponsorship and support. These included the inuential team of Albert R. George and A. Richard Seebass of Cornell University, which had one of the Nations premier aeronautical laboratories. Seebass, already prominent in the eld of aerospace engineering at 29 years old, edited the proceedings of NASAs rst sonic boom research conference, held on April 12, 1967. The meeting was chaired by Wallace D. Hayes of Princeton University, who was now devoting much of his attention to sonic boom mitigation. Hayes was well known for his groundbreaking work in supersonic and hypersonic aerodynamics, which began with his 1947 dissertation, Linearized Supersonic Flow, written while at the California Institute of Technology (which, in mathematical terms, foreshadowed Whitcombs area rule).29 The conference was attended by more than 60 other Government, industry, and university experts in aeronautics and related elds. In reviewing the area rule as it applied to supersonic ight, Hayes cautioned that the total equivalent source strength connected with the sonic boom cannot ever be zero. Thus the sonic boom below the aircraft is truly inescapable. The best we can hope for is that the boom is a minimum for given values of this parameter, with limits on the magnitude of the drag.30 Boeing had been selected over Lockheed as the SST prime contractor less than 4 months earlier, but public acceptance of even a somewhat reduced sonic boom was becoming recognized far and wide as a possibly fatal aw for its future production or at least for allowing it to y supersonically over land.31 The two most obvious theoretical ways to minimize sonic booms during supersonic cruiseying much higher with no increase in weight or building an airframe 50-percent longer at half the weightwere not considered realistic.32 Furthermore, as was made apparent from a presentation by Domenic Maglieri on ight-test ndings, such an airplane would still have to deal with the problem of the as-yet somewhat unpredictable, stronger booms caused by maneuvering, accelerating, and atmospheric conditions.33 The stated purpose of this conference was to determine whether or not all possible aerodynamic means of reducing sonic boom overpressure were being
46
explored.34 In that regard, Harry Carlson showed how the various computer programs being used at Langley (mentioned above) were complementing improved wind tunnel experiments for examining boom minimization concepts. As shown by gure 2-1, even minor changes in an aircrafts conguration could result in a signicant alterFigure 2-1. Wind tunnel verication of a atation of its shock waves. In this case, top signature. (NASA) a wind tunnel comparison of 4-inch models at Mach 1.4 conrmed that the shape on the right rendered a quieter attop signature for shock waves, albeit at a distance of only ve body lengths.35 Boeings sonic boom expert, Edward J. Kane, presented recent research on dealing with the tricky problems of atmospheric eects, while Albert George from Cornell explored the potential for reducing sonic boom overpressures reaching the surface by designing airframes that could disperse some portion of shock waves caused by volume o to the sides of the ightpath.36 Notable aeronautics pioneer Adolf Busemann (see chapter 1), now at the University of Colorado, expressed both frustration with the current situation and guarded hope for a solution. His outlook probably reected the feelings of many other SST proponents in both Government and industry. Since people are not satised with the sonic boom reduction which the reasonable altitude for supersonic ights provides naturally, further means for reductions must either be found or proved to be impossible. However, to call something impossible is dangerous. Our time is full of innovations in physics and technology, and although we have certain laws of conservation which we accept as being invariably valid, many scientists who declared that desirable eects were impossible have been proved wrong.37 After all the papers were read and discussed, many of the attendees agreed that additional avenues of research were promising enough to be explored, but they were still concerned whether low-enough sonic booms were possible using existing technologies. Accordingly, NASAs Oce of Advanced Research and Technology, which hosted the conference, established specialized research programs on seven aspects of sonic boom theory and mitigation at ve American universitiesColumbia, Colorado, Cornell, Princeton, and New York University (NYU)and the Aeronautical Research Institute of Sweden.38 This mobilization of aeronautical brainpower almost immediately began to pay dividends.
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Seebass and Hayes cochaired NASAs second sonic boom conference from May 9 to May 10, 1968. This came just a few weeks after Boeing replaced its variable-sweep 2707-200 SST design, which was found to be too heavy, with the 2707-300 (gure 2-2), a delta-wing conguration similar to the losing Lockheed proposal. The conference included 19 papers on the latest boomrelated testing, research, experimentation, and theory by specialists from NASA and participating universities. The advances made in 1 year were impressive. In the area of theory, for example, the fairly straightforward linear techniques for predicting the propagation of sonic booms from slender airplanes such as the SST had proven reliable, even for calculating some nonlinear (mathematically more complex and unpredictable) aspects of their signatures. Additional eld testing had improved understanding of the geometrical acoustics caused by atmospheric conditions. Many of the papersincluding those from Seebass, George, Hayes, McLean, and Carlsonpresented promising aerodynamic techniques for reducing the strength of sonic booms.39 One of the most celebrated aerodynamicists recruited by NASA to work on the sonic boom problem was Antonio Ferri of New York University. An Italian air force ocer and pioneer of supersonic research in prewar Italy, he had joined the anti-Nazi resistance movement after the collapse of the Mussolini regime and became a partisan leader before escaping in 1944 to the United States. There, he continued advancing high-speed research for the NACA at Langley for several years before entering the academic world. At the conference, he reported several innovative ideas on how to design a 300-foot SST airframe with reduced sonic booms by spreading lift along almost its entire length by means of suitable volume adjustments. Following these principles, he predicted, could yield maximum overpressures of about 1 psf while cruising at 60,000 feet (as compared to the 2 psf expected with existing SST designs) without seriously hurting their lift-to-drag ratio.40 In retrospect, two of the papers that would prove most signicant to future progress dealt with new computer processing capabilities. Representing Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton (ARAP), Wallace Hayes reported on what became known as the ARAP Program. Using the then-ubiquitous FORTRAN computer language, it consisted of a master program called SONIC with 19 subroutines. NASA had sponsored this project to clarify the confusion that existed among the various complex numerical techniques being used for calculating the propagation of sonic boom signatures and comparisons with ight-test measurements. Based on linear geometric acoustics, the ARAP Program used F-function eects from a supersonic airframe at various Mach numbers and lift coecients combined with acoustic-ray tracing and an age variable to dene (if not yet solve) the nonlinear eects that help shape sonic boom signatures. It was the rst computer program with an algorithm
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comprehensive enough to accurately calculate a full range of overpressure signatures in a standard, horizontally stratied atmosphere with windsa major advance.41 Using this, Hayes extended McLeans 1965 hypothesis on the persistence of near-eld pressure signatures by showing that eects in the real atmosphere would tend to freeze the signature from supersonic aircraft at cruise altitudes before it reached the surface.42 Harvard Lomax of Ames oered a sneak preview of a more distant digital future that would eventually be possible through the marriage of computational uid dynamics (CFD), which was being pioneered at Ames, with computer graphics. He reported preliminary results on using a cathode-ray tube monitor directly connected to the core processor of a mainframe computer to show in real time the results of three-dimensional, nonlinear ow-eld analyses of a dozen diverse aircraft congurations in a search for lower boom signatures. After describing the mathematical principles involved, Lomax presciently predicted that the ability to compute ow elds for airplanes traveling at supersonic speeds with the aid of an immediate visual display of the calculations as they proceed opens the possibility of devising new, or revising parts of old, numerical techniques.43 As will be shown in later chapters, the full realization of this capability with the development of super computers and massively parallel processors would eventually prove to be the key to the successful design of low-boom airplane congurations. Despite these signs of considerable progress made by 1968, several important theoretical problems remained unresolved, such as the prediction of sonic boom signatures near a caustic (a major objective of the 1970 Jackass Flats testing described in the previous chapter), the diraction of shock waves into shadow zones (areas normally skipped over between primary and secondary sonic boom carpets), nonlinear shock wave behavior near an aircraft, and the still somewhat mystifying eects of turbulence. Ira R. Schwartz of NASAs Oce of Advanced Research and Technology summed up the state of sonic boom minimization as follows: It is yet too early to predict whether any of these design techniques will lead the way to development of a domestic SST that will be allowed to y supersonic over land as well as over water.44 The challenge to the SST posed by the sonic boom became even more serious shortly after the conference. In July 1968, President Lyndon Johnson signed into law a bill requiring the Federal Aviation Administrator to prescribe and amend such rules and regulations as he may nd necessary to provide for the control and abatement of aircraft noise and sonic boom.45 Many expected this authority would eectively prohibit supersonic ight over land as several other nations were already considering. Rather than conduct another meeting the following year, NASA deferred to a conference hosted by the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations (NATOs)
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Advisory Group for Aerospace Research & Development (AGARD) on aircraft engine noise and sonic boom, which was held in Paris in May 1969. Experts from the United States and ve other nationsincluding the two facing similar issues with the Concordeattended this forum, which consisted of seven sessions. Three sessions and a roundtable dealt with the status of boom research and the challenges ahead.46 As reected in these conferences, the three-way partnership between NASA, Boeing, and the academic aeronautical community during the late 1960s continued to yield new knowledge about sonic booms as well as scientic and technological advances in exploring ways to deal with them. In addition to the ight-test and wind tunnel data described in the previous chapter, some of this progress came from new experimental techniques, some of them quite ingenious.
Langleys Low-Frequency Noise Facility, built originally for testing the extremely loud sounds of Apollo booster rockets. (NASA)
to produce multiple boom signatures of varying shapes, pressures, and durations as often as needed at a relatively low cost.50 Langleys Low-Frequency Noise Facilitybuilt earlier in the 1960s to generate the intense, chest-pounding, eardrum-splitting sounds of giant Saturn boosters during Apollo launchesalso performed informative sonic boom simulation experiments. As indicated by the photograph, it was a large, cylindrical test chamber 24 feet in diameter and 21 feet long that could accommodate people, small structures, and materials for testing. The facilitys electrohydraulically operated 14-foot piston was capable of producing low-frequency sound waves from 1 hertz (Hz) to 50 Hz (sort of a super subwoofer) and sonic boom N-waves from 0.5 psf to 20 psf at durations from 100 milliseconds to 500 milliseconds.51 To provide an even more versatile system designed specically for sonic boom research, NASA contracted with General Applied Sciences Laboratories (GASL) of Long Island, NY, to develop an ideal simulator using a quickaction valve and shock-tube design. (Antonio Ferri was the president of GASL, which he had cofounded with the illustrious Hungarian-born scientist and airpower visionary Theodore von Krmn in 1956). Completed in 1969, this new simulator consisted of a high-speed ow valve that sent pressure-wave bursts through a heavily reinforced, 100-foot long conical duct that expanded
51
into an 8-by-8-foot test section with an instrumentation and model room. It could generate overpressures up to 10 psf with durations from 50 milliseconds to 500 milliseconds. Able to operate at less than a 1-minute interval between bursts, its sonic boom signatures proved very accurate and easy to control.52 In the opinion of Ira Schwartz, the GASL/NASA facility represents the most advanced state of the art in sonic boom simulation.53
more limited agenda in Houston also included papers on the issues of human and animal response.57 Of future if not near-term signicance, NASA and its partners were making considerable progress in understanding how to design airplanes that could y faster than sound while leaving behind a gentler sonic footprint. As summarized by Ira Schwartz: In the area of boom minimization, the NASA program has utilized the combined talents of Messrs. E. McLean, H.L. Runyan, and H.R. Henderson at NASA Langley Research Center, Dr. W.D. Hayes at Princeton University, Drs. R. Seebass and A.R. George at Cornell University, and Dr. A. Ferri at New York University to determine the optimum equivalent bodies of rotation that minimize the overpressure, shock pressure rise, and impulse [i.e., the total amount of pressure variation] for given aircraft weight, length, Mach number, and altitude of operation. Simultaneously, research eorts of NASA and those of Dr. A. Ferri at New York University have provided indications of how real aircraft can be designed to provide values approaching these optimums. This research must be continued or even expanded if practical supersonic transports with minimum and acceptable sonic boom characteristics are to be built.58 Any consensus among the attendees about the progress they were making on the sonic boom issue was tempered by their awareness of the nancial problems now plaguing the Boeing Company and the political diculties facing the administration of President Richard M. Nixon in continuing to subsidize the American SST. Many attendees also seemed resigned to the reality that Boeings nal 2707-300 design (gure 2-2), with its 306-foot length and 64,000-foot cruising altitude, would never come close to passing the overland sonic boom criteria for civil aircraft being proposed by the FAA.59 Although the noise level ultimately deemed acceptable by the public was still uncertain, the consensus was that the N-wave signature of an acceptable SST must be reduced to at least 1 psf to allow cruising at supersonic speeds over the United States. As Antonio Figure 2-2. Boeing 2707-300 SST, nal Ferri lamented, programs for the rst design. (NASA)
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generation of these airplanes have been initiated without a complete understanding of the eects of the sonic boom on the population and their reaction against it.60 For designing the next generation of large supersonic transports, he oered several concepts developed since the last conference (including an imaginative biplane conguration) as well as operational techniques and ight proles to reduce overpressures to a suitable level.61 The shock waves from cruising at a low supersonic speed (up to about 840 mph) and the right altitude, a condition known as Mach cuto (see gure 1-8), would under the proper conditions either refract away from the surface or not coalesce enough to cause a full sonic boom. In view of this, there was some hope that carefully planned operations while over land might still make the SST economically practical. This, however, would require solutions to issues associated with such variables as meteorological conditions, topographical eects, building vibrations, caustics, and super boomssome of which were being claried by the BREN Tower tests described at the end of the previous chapter.62 On related issues, Albert George and one of his graduate students, Kenneth Plotkin, substantiated much about the complex relationship between turbulence and shock wave scattering as well as N-wave distortions,63 phenomena that were further rened by an examination of multiple scattering of shock waves in a turbulent atmosphere by two researchers at Columbia University, W.J. Cole and M.B. Freidman.64 George had reported earlier on how ways of lowering tail shock as well as bow shock and other factors could reduce the lower bounds for sonic booms well below the accepted levels calculated by L.B. Jones and at shorter distances.65 For his part, Jones continued to extend his earlier results on lower bounds for bow-pressure shocks to the mideld and far eld, although only in a homogenous atmosphere.66 Thanks to new computer capabilities, Richard Seebass reported on progress in using linear equations to study the nonlinear characteristics of shock waves at a caustic by means of automated numerical analysis and graphical representation.67 Figure 2-3, representing acoustic rays interacting to create a caustic, shows this early computer-generated graphing capability (which can be compared with the increasingly detailed and sophisticated CFD images illustrated in later chapters).68 Much more study and testing would be needed, however, to make the necessary quantitative predictions of sonic boom intensities needed for even transonic civilian ight. In view of such unresolved technical issues as well as overriding political and economic factors, Seebass generally echoed Ferris opinion, noting, We should adopt the view that the rst few generations of supersonic transport (SST) aircraft, if they are built at all, will be limited to supersonic ight over oceanic and polar regions.69 In view of such concerns, some of the attendees were
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even looking toward a more distant future when hypersonic aerospace vehicles might be able to cruise high enough to leave only an acceptable boom carpet down at the surface. As for the ongoing and future technological challenges of quieter supersonic ight, Lynn Hunton of the Ames Research Center warned that with regard to experimental problems in sonic boom research, it is essential that the techniques and assumptions used be continuously Figure 2-3. An early computer-generated questioned as a requisite for assur- depiction of a simple shock wave (shaded area) ing the maximum in reliability.70 among acoustic rays at a caustic, by Richard Harry Carlson probably expressed Seebass, 1970. (NASA) the general opinion of NASAs aerodynamicists when he cautioned that the problem of sonic boom minimization through airplane shaping is inseparable from the problems of optimization of aerodynamic eciency, propulsion eciency, and structural weight. In fact, if great care is not taken in the application of sonic boom design principles, the whole purpose can be defeated by performance degradation, weight penalties, and a myriad of other practical considerations.71 In view of the SSTs other technical, operational, political, and economic hurdles, lowering its sonic boom in time for the nal design of the Boeing 2707-300 would probably not have been enough to save the program. In any case, after both the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate voted in March 1971 to discontinue SST funding, a joint conference committee conrmed its termination in May.72
based on previous SST-related research and testing.) This literature, graphically depicted in gure 2-4, would be of enduring value in the future.73 Thanks mostly to the SST program, great progress had been made in the understanding and application of sonic boom theory at speeds up to Mach 3.0. Using the latest algorithms and geometric techniques, experts could now predict the evolution of a sonic boom signature from its shock pattern near an aircraft conguration to the surface either by extrapolating measurements from several body lengths away in a supersonic wind tunnel model or by using Whithams F-function as calculated from the volume and lift distribution of the aircraft. By using acoustic-ray tracing and other techniques, sonic boom theory could also account for the eects of variations of temperature, humidity, winds, and turbulence on sonic boom strength and behavior, and it could even predict the approximate location of focused super booms.74 As for the need to mitigate sonic booms, the research of the SST era pointed toward the avenues to be followed in the future. Flying careful proles at speeds of about Mach 1.15 could avoid creating sonic booms on the surface,75 but this probably would not provide enough of a speed advantage over conventional airliners, unless most of a supersonic airplanes route could be own at much faster speeds. (Some would later consider such low-Mach speeds as appropriate on overland routes for small passenger airplanes.) For cruising at higher Mach numbers, it had become apparent that lowering sonic booms to acceptable levels would require either a reduction in a bow shocks overpressure or an increase in its rise time (i.e., lessening the steepness
56
of the initial spike in pressure). The latter solution was deemed impractical since extending and smoothing out the N-wave to lengthen the rise time and make the initial shock wave less shocking would require an extremely long airplane. Also, as indicated by the XB-70 tests and other human-response data, this proposed solution would not necessarily help to reduce annoying indoor vibrations caused by sonic booms, which some experts (such as George and Seebass) proposed were the result of a sonic booms impulse. That impulse was a measure of the total momentum that a sonic boom signature could impart, for example, on a building, which tends to vibrate at low frequencies. (The rapid pressure changes heard during an N-waves double boom will produce sound waves at a rate of 30 Hz to 300 Hz, but the relatively gradual drop in pressure between the bow shock and rear shock will produce vibrations between 3 Hz to 8 Hz, which is far below the range of human hearing.76) The impulse of a simplied signature is depicted along with an N-waves initial rise time in gure 2-5.77 To help alleviate sonic booms, one futuristic idea that received some attention at the time was the projection of a heat or force eld to create a long phantom body in the front and rear of the fuselage Figure 2-5. Simplied illustration of impulse and for eliminating troublesome shock rise time. (NASA) waves. Although not quite impossible (assuming new inventions and ideal conditions), aerodynamic issues as well as enormous power requirements (not to mention the additional weight) made this proposal exceedingly unrealistic.78 Reducing overpressurewhich could be predicted based on an aircrafts Mach number, length, weight, altitude, and equivalent area distribution therefore seemed to be the most feasible solution. As pointed out in numerous studies, the two basic ways of doing so were to lighten aircraft weight, thereby decreasing its need for boom-producing lift, and specially shaping an airframe to modify its shock waves, such as by creating a attop signature.79 The challenges lay in knowing exactly how to design such an airframe and knowing what level of overpressure would be acceptable to the general public. In May 1971, the same month that the House-Senate conference committee put the last nails in the con of an American SST, Albert George and Richard Seebass completed a short but extremely inuential treatise on sonic boom minimization theory that culminated their past several years of collaborative NASA-sponsored research. Published in the AIAA Journal that October under the descriptive title Sonic Boom Minimization Including Both Front and Rear Shocks, its compact presentation of equations and graphs analyzed the
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parametric relations of shock waves to lift and area distribution as they aect the full sonic boom signature. Their ndings oered the prospect of designing aircraft not only for controlling abrupt pressure rises to achieve what they referred to as a bangless boom but also for possibly reducing the vibrations that annoy people indoors.80 Future psychoacoustical studies would show that this outcome indeed would seem signicantly quieter than the normal N-wave signature. Eorts during the coming decades to design supersonic aircraft that could reshape the sonic boom would cite the George and Seebass minimization theory as a cornerstone.81
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Endnotes
1. The previously cited McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, provides an overview of these challenges from the perspective of a designer and program manager. 2. Robert G. Ferguson, Evolution of Aeronautics Research at NASA, in NASAs First 50 Years: Historical Perspectives, ed. Steven J. Dick, SP-2010-4704 (Washington, DC: NASA, 2010), 208209. For an earlier summary, see Donald D. Baals and William R. Corliss, Wind Tunnels of NASA, SP-440 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1981). 3. Named after Osborne Reynolds of the University of Manchester in the 1880s. See Jeremy Kinney, NASA and the Evolution of the Wind Tunnel, in, NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics 2, ed. Richard P. Hallion (Washington, DC: NASA, 2011), 313. 4. Harry W. Carlson, An Investigation of Some Aspects of the Sonic Boom by Means of Wind-Tunnel Measurements of Pressures About Several Bodies at a Mach Number of 2.01, NASA TN D-161 (December 1959). Carlson used Langleys 4-by-4-foot Supersonic Pressure Tunnel, completed in 1948, for most of his experiments. 5. Domenic J. Maglieri and Harry W. Carlson, The Shock-Wave Noise Problem of Supersonic Aircraft in Steady Flight, NASA Memo 3-4-59L (April 1959), 9. 6. For numerous examples of these wind tunnel experiments, see Runyan, Sonic Boom Capsule Summaries as well as the NTRS bibliographical database. 7. Harry W. Carlson, Wind Tunnel Measurements of the Sonic-Boom Characteristics of a Supersonic Bomber Model and a Correlation with Flight-Test Ground Measurements, NASA TM-X-700 (July 1962). 8. Harry W. Carlson, The Lower Bound of Attainable Sonic-Boom Overpressure and Design Methods of Approaching This Limit, NASA TN D-1494 (October 1962). 9. Harry W. Carlson, Correlation of Sonic-Boom Theory with Wind Tunnel and Flight Measurements, NASA TR R-213 (December 1964), 1. 10. Evert Clark, Reduced Sonic Boom Foreseen for New High-Speed Airliner, New York Times, January 14, 1965, 7, 12 (based on a visit to NASA Langley). 11. Raymond M. Hicks and Joel P. Mendoza, Prediction of Sonic Boom Characteristics from Experimental Near Field Results, NASA TM-X-1477 (November 1967).
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12. As research progressed, some experts began to dene the sharp noise accompanying the sudden spikes in pressure as a sonic bang and the overall sound and vibrations of an extended N-wave as a sonic boom. 13. L.B. Jones, Lower Bounds for Sonic Bangs, Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society 65, no. 606 (June 1961): 433436; sentences quoted are on page 433. 14. Harry W. Carlson, Conguration Eects on Sonic Boom, in Proceedings of NASA Conference on Supersonic-Transport Feasibility Studies and Supporting Research, September 1719, 1963, Hampton, Virginia, NASA TM-X-905 (December 1963), 381. 15. Harvey H. Hubbard and Domenic J. Maglieri, Factors Aecting Community Acceptance of the Sonic Boom, in Proceedings of NASA Conference on Supersonic-Transport Feasibility Studies and Supporting Research, 399412. 16. Anglo-French Agreement, London, UK, November 29, 1962, accessed ca. February 1, 2009, http://www.concordesst.com/history/ docs/agreement.html. 17. McLean, Supersonic Transport Technology, 46. 18. M. Leroy Spearman, The Evolution of the High-Speed Civil Transport, NASA TM no. 109089 (February 2004), 67. 19. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 122124. 20. F. Edward McLean, Some Nonasymptotic Eects of the Sonic Boom of Large Airplanes, NASA TN D-2877 (June 1965). 21. Chambers, Innovations in Flight, 32. 22. M.P. Friedman, E.J. Kane, and A. Sigalla, Eects of Atmosphere and Aircraft Motion on the Location and Intensity of a Sonic Boom, AIAA Journal 1, no. 6 (June 1963): 13271335. 23. Ibid.; Carlson, Correlation of Sonic-Boom Theory, 223. 24. For a status report on supersonic work at Langley and some at Ames, see William J. Alford and Cornelius Driver, Recent Supersonic Transport Research, Astronautics and Aeronautics 2, no. 9 (September 1964): 2637. 25. Chambers, Innovation in Flight, 3235. 26. JASA 39, no. 5, pt. 2 (November 1966). 27. F. Edward McLean and Barrett L. Shrout, Design Methods for Minimization of Sonic Boom Pressure-Field Disturbances, JASA 39, no. 5, pt. 2 (November 1966): 519525. See also Harry W. Carlson, F. Edward McLean, and Barrett L. Shrout, A Wind Tunnel Study of Sonic-Boom Characteristics for Basic and Modied Models
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28. 29.
30. 31.
32.
33.
37. 38.
of a Supersonic Transport Conguration, NASA TM-X-1236 (May 1966). Harry W. Carlson, Robert J. Mack, and Odell A. Morris, Sonic Boom Pressure-Field Estimation Techniques, JASA 39, no. 5, pt. 2 (November 1966): 510518. Lane E. Wallace, The Whitcomb Area Rule: NACA Aerodynamics Research and Innovation, chapter 5 in From Engineering Science to Big Science, ed. Pamela E. Mack, NASA SP-4219 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1998), 8, available online at http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4219/ Chapter5.html. Wallace Hayes, Brief Review of the Basic Theory, JASA 39, no. 5, pt. 2 (Nov. 1966): 6. Evert Clark, Sonic Boom to Limit Speed of Superjets Across U.S., New York Times, October 31, 1966, 1, 71; George Gardner, Overland Flights by SST Still in Doubt, Washington Post, July 10, 1967, A7. A.R. Seebass, ed., Preface, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference Held at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC, April 12, 1967, SP-147 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1967), iv. Domenic J. Maglieri, Sonic Boom Flight ResearchSome Eects of Airplane Operations and the Atmosphere on Sonic Boom Signatures, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 2548. Seebass, Preface, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, iii. Harry Carlson, Experimental and Analytic Research on Sonic Boom Generation at NASA, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 923. Figure 2-1 is extracted from page 21. Harry W. Carlson, Experimental and Analytical Research on Sonic Boom Generation at NASA, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 923; Edward J. Kane, Some Eects of the Atmosphere on Sonic Boom, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 4964; A.R. George, The Possibilities for Reducing Sonic Booms by Lateral Redistribution, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 8393. Adolf Busemann, Sonic Boom Reduction, in Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference, 79. Among Busemanns later accomplishments was suggesting the use of ceramic tiles for the Space Shuttle. Ira R. Schwartz, ed., Preface, Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference Held at the National Aeronautics
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39. 40.
41.
48.
and Space Administration, Washington, DC, May 910, 1968, SP-180 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1968), ivv. Ibid., vi. Antonio Ferri and Ahmed Ismail, Analysis of Congurations, in Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 7388. See also Percy J. Bobbitt and Domenic Maglieri, Dr. Antonio Ferris Contribution to Supersonic Transport Sonic-Boom Technology, Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets 40, no. 4 (JulyAugust 2003): 459466. Wallace D. Hayes and Rudolph C. Haefeli, The ARAP Sonic Boom Computer Program, in Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 151158. For a more complete description, see Wallace D. Hayes, Sonic Boom Propagation in a Stratied Atmosphere with Computer Program, NASA CR 1299 (April 1969). Wallace Hayes, State of the Art of Sonic Boom Theory, in Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 182. Harvard Lomax, Preliminary Investigation of Flow Field Analysis on Digital Computers with Graphic Display, in Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 72. Schwartz, Preface, Second Conference on Sonic Boom Research, vii. Ibid., iii. Aircraft Engine Noise and Sonic Boom, Conference Proceedings (CP) no. 42, Paris, France, May 1969 (Neuilly Sur Seine, France: NATO AGARD, 1969). W.D. Beasley, J.D. Brooks, and R.L. Barger, A Laboratory Investigation of N-Wave Focusing, NASA TN D-5306 (July 1969); R.L. Barger, W.D. Beasley, and J.D. Brooks, Laboratory Investigation of Diraction and Reection of Sonic Booms by Buildings, NASA TN D-5830 (June 1970). Phillip M. Edge and Harvey H. Hubbard, Review of Sonic Boom Simulation Devices and Techniques, JASA 51, no. 2, pt. 3 (February 1972): 724728; Hugo E. Dahlke et al., The ShockExpansion Tube and its Application as a Sonic Boom Simulator, NASA CR-1055 (June 1968); R.T. Sturgielski et al., The Development of a Sonic Boom Simulator with Detonable Gases, NASA CR 1844 (November 1971). David Homan, Report Sees Need for Study on Sonic Boom Tolerance, Washington Post, June 26, 1968, A3. Ira R. Schwartz, Sonic Boom Simulation Facilities, AGARD, Aircraft Engine Noise and Sonic Boom, 29-1. Philip M. Edge and William H. Mayes, Description of Langley Low-Frequency Noise Facility and Study of Human Response to
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52.
64. 65.
Noise Frequencies below 50 cps, NASA TN D-3204 (January 1966). Roger Tomboulian, Research and Development of a Sonic Boom Simulation Device, NASA CR-1378 (July 1969); Stacy V. Jones, Sonic Boom Researchers Use Simulator, New York Times, May 10, 1969, 37, 41. Ira R. Schwartz, Sonic Boom Simulation Facilities, 29-6. B.K.O. Lundberg, Aviation Safety and the SST, Astronautics and Aeronautics 3, no. 1 (January 1966), 28. Lundberg, a distinguished Swedish engineer, was a very eective critic of SSTs. See Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 118156. The Shattering Boom, New York Times, June 8, 1968, 30. Ira R. Schwartz, ed., Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research: Proceedings of a Conference Held at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC, Oct. 2930, 1970, SP-255 (Washington, DC: NASA, 1971). The papers from the ASAs Houston symposium were published in JASA 51, no. 2, pt. 2 (February 1972). Ira Schwartz, Preface, Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, iv. Civil Aircraft Sonic Boom, Federal Register 35, no. 4 (April 16, 1970): 61896190. Source for gure 2-3: Spearman, Evolution of the HSCT, 36. Antonio Ferri, Airplane Congurations for Low Sonic Boom, Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 255. Ibid., 255256. Domenic Maglieri et al., Measurements of Sonic Boom Signatures from Flights at Cuto Mach Number, Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 243254. Albert George, The Eects of Atmospheric Inhomogeneities on Sonic Boom, and Kenneth J. Plotkin, Perturbations Behind Thickened Shock Waves, both in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 3366. M.J. Cole and M.B. Freeman, Analysis of Multiple Scattering of Shock Waves by a Turbulent Atmosphere, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 6774. A.R. George, Lower Bounds for Sonic Booms in the Mideld, AIAA Journal 7, no. 8 (August 1969): 15421545. Plotkin recalled George receiving the draft of this article back from the publisher with a comment by an anonymous reviewer: This paper must be published! They deduced that Wallace Hayes must have been the reviewer.
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66. L.B. Jones, Lower Bounds for Sonic Bang in the Far Field, Aeronautical Quarterly 18, pt. 1 (February 1967): 121; L.B. Jones, Lower Bounds for the Pressure Jump of the Bow Shock of a Supersonic Transport, Aeronautical Quarterly, 21 (February 1970): 117. 67. A.R. Seebass, Nonlinear Acoustic Behavior at a Caustic, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 87122, with gure 2-3 extracted from page 100. 68. Although sonic boom shock waves expand behind a moving supersonic body in a three-dimensional, cone-shaped band (gure 1-1), their energy is disseminated outward and thereby forward as acoustic rays. Aircraft maneuvers, atmospheric conditions, and other factors determine the paths they follow, which can take the form of discrete ray tubes. 69. A.R. Seebass, Comments on Sonic Boom Research, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 411. 70. Lynn W. Hunton, Comments on Low Sonic Boom Conguration Research, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 417. 71. Harry W. Carlson, Some Notes on the Status of Sonic Boom Prediction and Minimization Research, in Third Conference on Sonic Boom Research, 397. 72. For a detailed postmortem, see Edward Wenk, SSTImplications of a Political Decision, Astronautics and Aeronautics 9, no. 10 (October 1971): 4049. 73. Compiled by screening B.A. Fryer, Publications in Acoustics and Noise Control from the NASA Langley Research Center During 19401976, NASA TM-X-7402 (July 1977). Five reports for 1967 that Domenic Maglieri (in reviewing the draft of this chapter) found to be missing from Fryers compilation have been added to that column. 74. Comments by Herbert Ribner in The Proceedings of the Second Sonic Boom Symposium of the Acoustical Society of America, Houston, TX, November 1970, cited by Christine M. Darden, Aordable/ Acceptable Supersonic Flight: Is It Near? 40th Aircraft Symposium, Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences, Yokohama, Japan, October 911, 1973, 2. 75. This cuto speed is based on a standard atmosphere without winds. 76. John Morgenstern, Fixing the Sonic Boom, a presentation at the FAA Workshop on Advanced Technologies and Supersonics, Palm Springs, CA, March 1, 2009, slide no. 3.
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77. Figure 2-5 extracted from Peter G. Coen and Roy Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier: The DARPA/NASA/Northrop-Grumman Shaped Sonic Boom Flight Demonstration, PowerPoint presentation, July 2004, slide no. 3. Later analysis by civil engineers determined that impulse is only an approximate parameter for assessing structural response; e-mail, Kenneth Plotkin, Wyle Laboratories, to Lawrence Benson, June 5, 2011. 78. David S. Miller and Harry W. Carlson, A Study of the Application of Heat or Force Fields to the Sonic-Boom-Minimization Problem, NASA TN D-5582 (December 1969). 79. Domenic J. Maglieri, Harry L. Carlson, and Norman J. McLeod, Status of Studies of Sonic Boom, in NASA Aircraft Safety and Operating Problems (Washington, DC: GPO, 1971), 439456. 80. A.R. George and R. Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization Including Both Front and Rear Shocks, AIAA Journal 9, no. 10 (October 1971): 20912093. They published a more detailed description, Sonic-Boom Minimization, in JASA 51, no. 2, pt. 3 (February 1972): 686694. See also next chapter. 81. Plotkin and Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research, 5.
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Vincent R. Mascitti, F. Edward McLean, and Cornelius Driver in the mid-1970s with a Lockheed AST model. (NASA)
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CHAPTER 3
The number one technological tragedy of our time.1 That was how President Nixon characterized the votes by Congress to stop funding an American supersonic transport. Despite the SSTs cancellation, the White House, the Department of Transportation and its Federal Aviation Administration, and NASAwith help from some members of Congressdid not allow the SSTs progress in supersonic technologies to completely dissipate. During 1971 and 1972, the DOT and NASA allocated funds for completing some of the research and experiments that were under way when the program was terminated. The administration then added line-item funding to NASAs scal year (FY) 1973 budget for scaled-down supersonic research, especially as related to environmental issues raised during the SST program. In response, NASA established the Advanced Supersonic Technology (AST) program in July 1972. Thus resumed what became a half-century pattern of on-again, o-again eorts to solve the problems of faster-than-sound civilian ight, with the sonic boom remaining one of the most dicult challenges of all.
while advancing related technologies. As with the SST (albeit more modestly), NASAs aeronautical centers, most of the major airframe manufactures, and many research organizations and universities participated.3 From Washington, NASAs Oce of Aeronautics and Space Technology (OAST) provided overall supervision but delegated day-to-day management to the Langley Research Center, which established an AST Project Oce in its Directorate of Aeronautics (soon placed under a new Aeronautical Systems Division). The AST program was organized into several major elements: propulsion; structure and materials; stability and control; aerodynamic performance; and airframe-propulsion integration. NASA spun o propulsion work on a variable cycle engine (VCE) as a separate program in 1976. (A variable cycle engine is similar to a conventional mixed-ow turbofan except that it has an additional secondary outer duct to increase the overall bypass ratio and, thus, the airow handling capability desirable at very high speeds.) Sonic boom research, which fell under aerodynamic performance, was but one of 16 AST subelements.4 At Langleys Aeronautical Systems Division, Cornelius Neil Driver, who headed the Vehicle Integration Branch, and F. Edward McLean, as chief of the AST Project Oce, were key ocials in planning and managing the AST/ SCAR eort. After McLean retired in 1978, the AST Project Oce passed on to a fellow aerodynamicist, Vincent R. Mascitti, while Driver took over the Aeronautical Systems Division. (All three are shown in the accompanying photo.) One year later, Domenic Maglieri replaced Mascitti in the AST Project Oce.5 Despite Maglieris sonic boom expertise, the goal of minimizing the ASTs sonic boom for overland cruise had by then long since ceased being an SCR objective. As later explained by McLean: The basic approach of the SCR program was to search for the solution of supersonic problems through disciplinary research. Most of these problems were well known, but no satisfactory solution had been found. When the new SCR research suggested a potential solution the applicability of the suggested solution was assessed by determining if it could be integrated into a practical commercial supersonic airplane and mission. If the potential solution could not be integrated, it was discarded.6 To meet the practicality standard for integration into a supersonic airplane, the scientists and engineers trying to solve the sonic boom problem had to clear a new and almost insurmountable hurdle less than a year into the AST eort. In April 1973, responding to concerns raised since the SST program, the FAA announced a new rule, eective on September 30, banning commercial or civil aircraft from supersonic ight over the landmass or territorial waters of the United States if measurable overpressure would reach the surface.7 One of the initial objectives of ASTs sonic boom research had been to establish a metric for public acceptability of sonic boom signatures for use in the aerodynamic
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design process. The FAAs stringent new regulation seemed to rule out any such exibility. As a result, when Congress cut FY 1974 funding for the AST program from $40 million to about $10 million, the subelement for sonic boom research went on NASAs chopping block. The design criteria for the SCAR program became a 300-foot-long, 270-passenger airplane that could y as eectively as possible over land at subsonic (or possibly low-transonic) speeds yet still cruise eciently at 60,000 feet and Mach 2.2 over water. To meet these less ambitious criteria, Langley aerodynamicists modied their SCAT-15F design from the late 1960s into a notional concept with better low-speed performance (but higher sonic boom potential) called the ATF-100. This served as a baseline for three industry teams in coming up with their own designs.8
temperature and density change with altitude), and premised on the supersonic area rule, they examined how we can shape the equivalent body of revolution for the vertical plane to minimize a given signature parameter below the aircraft.14 In addition to the obvious ways of reducing overpressure and impulse by lowering aircraft weight and improving eciency (e.g., ratios of lift to drag and thrust to weight), they looked at specic aerodynamic design principles, citing key ndings from the growing literature on the topic while presenting their own remedies. By way of creating general rules to be considered, George and Seebass showed mathematically and graphically the relationships and tradeos between various aircraft-design features and sonic boom characteristics. For example, higher Mach numbers can somewhat lower impulse but not overpressure. They calculated and described how the proper combinations of shape, weight, length, and altitude (lower than previously thought) can practically eliminate the explosive sound of the bow shock wave (but not the signatures total overpressure). Thus, for example, a Mach 2.7, 600,000 lb., 300-foot aircraft can have a shock-free [but not silent] signature at altitudes below 30,000 ft.15 They also mathematically examined various operational techniques, such as the transonic speeds that could prevent sonic booms from reaching the ground. At the other extreme, they predicted that hypersonic speeds might help with lowered shock waves but would not solve other problemsespecially impulse. They concluded that aircraft could be designed that would achieve overpressure levels just below 1/lb/ft2 (for both positive and negative phases of the pressure signature) and impulses of about 1/10 lb/sec/ft2. These numbers are not too different from the sonic boom generated by the SR-71, and experience with SR-71 overights should give some indication of whether or not overpressures and impulses of this magnitude will prove acceptable.16 Unfortunately for the future of supersonic transports, the publics apparent tolerance of occasional sonic booms from the Air Forces small eet of SR-71s did not transfer to the more frequent Albert George in 1978 booms that scheduled supersonic airline trac (Cornell) and Richard would generate along their routes. Although most Seebass in the early 1980s. of Seebasss and Georges work at the time applied to (University of Colorado)
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large transports, their analysis of various types of airframe shaping to alter the formation and evolution of shock wavessuch as slightly blunting the nose without signicantly penalizing performancewould be relevant to smaller supersonic aircraft as well. Based on their insightful analyses, George and Seebass are considered the fathers of sonic boom minimization. Meanwhile, other researchers under contract to NASA also continued to advance the state of the art. For example, Antonio Ferri of New York University in partnership with Hans Sorensen of the Aeronautical Research Institute of Sweden used new three-dimensional measuring techniques in Swedens trisonic wind tunnel to more accurately correlate near-eld eects with linear theory. Testing NYUs model of a 300-foot-long SST cruising at Mach 2.7 at 60,000 feet projected sonic booms of less than 1.0 psf.17 Ferris death in 1975 at the age of 63 left a big void in the eld of supersonic aerodynamics, including sonic boom research.18 In addition to theoretical renements and wind tunnel techniques, important new computer-modeling capabilities continued to appear in the early 1970s. In June 1972, Charles Thomas of the Ames Research Center published details on a computer program he called the waveform parameter method, which used new algorithms to extrapolate the evolution of far-eld N-waves. This oered an alternative to using the F-function (the pattern of near-eld shock waves emanating from an airframe) as required by the previously discussed program developed by Wallace Hayes and colleagues at Princetons ARAP. Although both methods accounted for acoustical-ray tracing and would arrive at almost identical results, Thomass code allowed for easier inputs of wind tunnel pressure measurements as well as such variables as Mach number, altitude, ightpath angle, acceleration, and atmospheric conditions for automated data processing.19 Both Thomass waveform parameter program and Hayess ARAP program remain relevant well into the 21st century. As explained 30 years after Thomas released his program by an expert in sonic boom modeling, Both are full implementations of fundamental theory, accounting for arbitrarily maneuvering aircraft in horizontally stratied atmospheres with wind.... Moreover, virtually every full ray trace sonic boom program in use today is evolved in one way or another from one of these two programs.20 In June 1973, at the end of the AST programs rst year, Harry Carlson, Raymond Barger, and Robert Mack of the Langley Research Center published a study on the applicability of sonic boom minimization concepts for an overland supersonic transport based on the airplane design philosophy, most eectively presented by Ferri, in which sonic-boom considerations play a dominant role.21 They examined two baseline AST designs and two reduced-boom concepts. The objective for all four was a commercially viable Mach 2.7 supersonic
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transport with a range of 2,500 nautical miles (nm) (the coast-to-coast distance across the United States). Applying the experimentally veried minimization concepts of George, Seebass, Hayes, Ferri, Barger, and L.B. Jones, and using the ARAP computer program, Carlsons team explored various ways to manipulate the F-function to project a quieter sonic boom signature. As with similar previous eorts, their options were limited by the lack of established signature characteristics (combinations of initial rise time, shock strength, peak overpressure, and duration) that people would best tolerate, both outdoors and especially indoors. Also, the complexity of aircraft geometry made measuring eects on tail shocks dicult. They therefore settled on lowering peak overpressure, with the goal being a plateau or attopped signature.22 Considering this objective along with numerous other parameters deemed necessary for a practical airliner, their study conrmed the advantages of highly swept wings located toward the rear of the fuselage with carefully designed twist and camber for sonic boom shaping. It also conrmed the use of canards (small airfoils used as horizontal stabilizers near the nose Figure 3-1. Aft arrow-wing conguration for low peak overpressure. (NASA) of rear-winged aircraft) and positive dihedral (angled up) wings to optimize lift distribution for sonic boom benets. Although two designs (one with a delta wing and another with an arrow wing) showed bow shocks of less than 1.0 psf at an optimum cruising altitude of 53,000 feet to 59,000 feet, their report noted that there can be no assurance at this time that [their] shock-strength values if attainable, would permit unrestricted overland operations of supersonic transports.23 In October 1973, Edward J. Kane of Boeing, who had been a key sonic boom specialist during the SST program, released the results of a similar NASA-sponsored study on the feasibility of a commercially viable low-boom transport using technologies projected to be available in 1985. Applying the latest theories (including the just-discussed Langley study), Boeing explored two longer range concepts: a high-speed (Mach 2.7) arrow-wing design that would produce a sonic boom of 1.0 psf or less at 55,000 feet and a mediumspeed (Mach 1.5) highly swept wing design with a signature of 0.5 psf or less at 45,000 feet.24 Ironically, these results were published just as the new FAA rule rendered them largely irrelevant. In retrospect, this study represented a nal industry perspective on the prospects for boom minimization before the SCAR program dropped plans for supersonic cruise over land.
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Obviously, the FAAs virtual ban on civilian supersonic ight in the United States dampened any enthusiasm by the major aircraft manufacturers to continue investing much capital in sonic boom research. Within NASA, funding for academic studies slowed to a trickle and many of its own employees with experience in sonic boom research redirected their eorts into other areas of expertise. Of the approximately 1,000 technical reports, conference papers, and articles by NASA and its contractors listed in bibliographies of the SCR program from 1972 to 1980, only eight dealt directly with the sonic boom.25
as the Navier-Stokes equations. During the late 19th century, advances in the eld of thermodynamics would lead to an energy equation for the high-speed uid ows that also would be needed later in aerodynamics. Unfortunately, the Euler and Navier-Stokes equations had no general analytical solutions when applied to practical problems (such as airow over a wing) without simplifying selected factors to permit linear solutions. Future progress in computational uid dynamics, however, would allow the partial derivatives or integrals in these equations to be replaced by discrete algebraic forms. Eventually, the data-processing capability of high-speed computers could repeatedly generate ow-eld values for each variable at specic points in space and time, known as grid points, with results improving with each iteration. The end products, although not classic stand-alone mathematical solutions, would be of great practical use for aerodynamic design purposes, including (as will be seen) shock wave calculations.28 Although the revolutionary potential of CFD was still some years in the future, 2 of the 52 papers presented at this 1975 conference presented two evolutionary computer programs of value for sonic boom minimization. A NASA-sponsored paper by Richard Seebass and three others at Cornell reported on several recent advances in sonic boom theory and introduced an easy-to-use computer program for aerodynamic minimization calculations written by Joseph Liu Lung as his masters thesis.29 The other paper by H. Harris Hamilton of Langley and Frank Marconi and Larry Yeager of the Grumman Aerospace Corporation reported a new technique for accurately and eciently computing high-speed inviscid (frictionless) ows in three dimensions around real airframe congurations. Although this research was prompted by NASAs need to learn more about the aerodynamics of the Space Shuttle orbiter during return ights, their innovation could be applied to all supersonic and hypersonic vehicles.30 NASA published full details on the procedure and its related computer code the following year.31
accurate equivalent area distribution calculations, such as for ying at low Mach numbers and for designing better aerodynamics in the nose area (a goal she would continue to pursue).32 Darden, who had earned a mathematics degree with highest honors from the Hampton Institute in 1962, taught high school before beginning her career at Langley in 1967. Even as she became NASAs top sonic boom expert, Darden continued her educationearning a masters in mathematics from Virginia State College in Petersburg in 1978 and a doctorate in mechanical engineering (specializing in uid mechanics) from George Washington University in 1983.33 Christine Darden and Robert Mack presented a paper on current sonic boom research at the rst SCAR conference, held at Langley from November 9 to 12, 1976. The conference took place after both the Concorde and the Soviet Tu-144 began scheduled supersonic ights that, because of their sonic booms, were restricted to routes over oceans and sparsely populated land areas.34 Theirs was the only paper on the sonic boom issue among the 47 presentations at the conference.35 In other areas, NASA and its industry partners were making signicant advances over the Concorde and Tu-144 in the areas of engine noise, fuel consumption, lift-to-drag (L/D) ratio, airframe structure (using new titanium fabrication processes), and direct operating costs (estimated at 50-percent lower than the Concordes). The major problem left unsolved for any second-generation supersonic transport was the sonic boom.36 One of the main obstacles to progress in sonic boom minimization was what Darden and Mack called the low-boom, high-drag paradox (gure 3-2). Contrary to earlier beliefs, they explained, it has now been found that improved eciency and lower sonic boom characteristics do not always go hand in hand.37 Both theory and experiments had shown that (as would be expected) an aerodynamically ecient sharp-nosed supersonic airframe generates a weaker bow shock than one with a less streamlined nose. Yet with a blunt-nose section, there is less propensity for the strong shock Figure 3-2. Low-boom, high-drag paradox. (NASA) waves generated along the rest of an airframe to merge with the bow shock and create the typical N-wave sonic boom at the surface. Unfortunately, the excess drag of a truly blunt-nosed supersonic aircraft would make it aerodynamically unacceptable.38 The two Langley researchers were exploring ways to deal with this dilemma, a full solution of which they said would require extensive tradeo studies by engineering design teams. Meanwhile, they reported on preliminary results
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of their ongoing experiments using Dardens revision of the George-Seebass methodology to design lower-boom wind tunnel models that did not pay too great a penalty in aerodynamic eciency. As for any progress on the still-critical question of what would be an acceptable sonic boom, the only research being done in North America was by the University of Toronto. Its Institute for Aerospace Studies was testing humans, animals, and materials with various sonic boom simulators. Other research there included focused booms, eects of turbulence, and signatures in the shadow zone.39 Another NASA contribution to understanding sonic booms came in early 1978 with the publication of Harry Carlsons Simplied Sonic-Boom Prediction, a how-to guide on a relatively quick and easy method to determine sonic boom characteristics in a standard atmosphere. It could be applied to a wide variety of supersonic aircraft congurations as well as spacecraft at altitudes up to 76 kilometers (km) and cover the entire width of a boom carpet. Although his clever series of graphs and equations did not provide the accuracy needed for predicting booms from maneuvering aircraft or in designing airframe congurations, Carlson explained that for many purposes (including the conduct of preliminary engineering studies or environmental impact statements), sonic-boom predictions of sucient accuracy can be obtained by using a simplied method that does not require a wind tunnel or elaborate computing equipment. Computational requirements can in fact be met by hand-held scientic calculators, or even slide rules.40 This procedure would be especially helpful to the armed services in preparing recently required environmental studies for areas where military aircraft ew supersonically. Although it was drawing funds away from aeronautics, one aspect of NASAs Space Transportation System (STS) led to additional sonic boom research involving the full range of shock wavesfrom hypersonic speeds at the top of the atmosphere down to transonic speeds near the surface. In April 1978, NASA headquarters released its nal environmental impact statement (EIS) for the Space Shuttle. It beneted greatly from the Agencys previous research on sonic booms, including the X-15 and Apollo programs as well as the adaptations of Charles Thomass waveform-based computer program.41 While the entire STS was ascending, the EIS estimated maximum overpressures of 6 psf (possibly up to 30 psf with focusing eects) about 40 miles downrange over open water. This would be caused by both its long exhaust plumes (which acted somewhat as a phantom body) and its curving ight prole while accelerating toward orbit. During reentry of the orbiter, the sonic boom was estimated at a more modest 2.1 psf (comparable to the Concorde), which would aect about 500,000 people as it crossed the Florida peninsula or 50,000 people when landing at Edwards.42 In the following decades, as populations in those
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areas boomed, millions more would be hearing the sonic booms of returning Shuttles, more than 120 of which would be monitored for their signatures.43 Some other limited experimental and theoretical work on sonic booms continued in the late 1970seven if it was no longer based on an American supersonic transport. For example, Richard Seebass delved deeper into the tricky phenomena of caustics and focused booms, an area on which French researcher John Pierre Guiraud had written the governing equations and derived a related scaling law.44 After a numeric solution of Seebasss ideas by one of his graduate students,45 Kenneth Plotkin (who began working for Wyle Laboratories in 1972 after receiving his Ph.D. from Cornell) applied these techniques to analyzing predicted focused booms from the Shuttle for the Marshall Space Flight Center as part of the studies described in the previous paragraph.46 At the end of the decade, Langleys Raymond Barger published a study on the relationship of caustics to the shape and curvature of acoustical wave fronts caused by aircraft maneuvers. To display these eects graphically, he programmed a computer to Figure 3-3. Acoustic wave front above a draw simulated three-dimensional maneuvering aircraft. (NASA) line plots of acoustical rays in the wave fronts. Figure 3-3 shows how even a simple decelerating turnin this case, from Mach 2.4 to Mach 1.5 in a radius of 23 km (14.3 miles)can merge the rays into the kind of caustic that might cause a super boom.47 Unlike in the 1960s, there was little if any NASA sonic boom ight testing during the 1970s. As a case in point, NASAs YF-12 Blackbirds at Edwards AFB (where the Flight Research Center was renamed the Dryden Flight Research Center in 1976) ew numerous productive supersonic missions in support of the AST/SCAR/SCR program, but none of them were dedicated to sonic boom issues.48 On the other hand, ight testing of the Concorde provided some new sonic boom data from a real supersonic transport. For example, an Anglo-American aeronautical conference in London in early June 1973 (just a few weeks after the FAAs new rule prohibited civilian supersonic ight in the United States) included an informative paper on sonic boom measurements and their eects on people, buildings, and wildlife during Concorde test ights along Great Britains west coast.49 Once these swift new airliners became operational, however, most of their supersonic ying was done over the open ocean, where there was presumably only limited opportunity for gathering sonic boom data.
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One strange and unexpected discovery about secondary booms came after British Airways and Air France began regular Concorde service to the United States, rst to Dulles International Airport near Washington, DC, in May 1976 and then (after much local opposition due mainly to jet-engine noise) to New Yorks Kennedy International Airport in November 1977.50 Although the Concordes slowed to subsonic speeds while well o shore, residents along the Atlantic seaboard began hearing what were called the East Coast mystery booms. These were detected all the way from Nova Scotia to South Carolina, some of them measurable on seismographs.51 Although a signicant number of the sounds deed explanation, studies by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), the Federation of American Scientists, a committee of the DODs JASON scientic advisory group, and the FAA eventually determined that most of the low rumbles heard in Nova Scotia and New England were secondary booms from the Concorde. These sounds were caused by distorted shock waves that were being bent or reected by temperature variations high up in the thermosphere while Concordes were still about 75 miles to 150 miles oshore.52 In July 1978, the FAA issued new rules prohibiting the Concord from creating sonic booms that could be heard in the United States. Although the FAA did not consider that this applied to secondary booms because of their low intensity, the aair apparently made the FAA even more sensitive to the sonic boom potential inherent in AST designs.53 (As part of the NRL investigation, Harvey Hubbard and Domenic Maglieri determined that Aerospace Defense Command F-106s, scrambled from Langley AFB to intercept Soviet Tu-20 Bear long-range bombers ying along the Atlantic coast on their regular ights to or from Cuba, created many of the sonic booms heard farther south to the Carolinas.)54 At Langley, Christine Darden and Robert Mack continued to pursue their research on sonic boom minimization during the late 1970s. Using the SeebassGeorge procedure as modied for a stratied atmosphere, they followed up on the previously described studies by Kanes team at Boeing and, in particular, the studies by Carlsons team at Langley. They used wing analysis and wave-drag area rule computer programs, including viscous eects, to help design three specially shaped wing-body models with low-boom characteristics for comparison with two of Carlsons models that had been designed mainly for aerodynamic eciency (gure 3-4). One of their models was congured for cruise at Mach 1.5 (the lowest speed for a truly supersonic transport) and two for cruise at Mach 2.7 (which approached the upper limit for applying near-eld sonic boom theory). At 6 inches in length, these were the largest yet tested for sonic boom propagation within the connes of the Langley 4-foot-by-4-foot Unitary Plan Wind Tunnelan improvement made possible by continued progress in applying the ARAP code to extrapolate near-eld pressure signatures to the
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far eld. These low-boom models showed much more reduced overpressure than the standard (unconstrained) delta-wing model and signicantly lower overpressures than the unconstrained arrow-wing design, especially at Mach 1.5, where the tail shocks were softened as well. The low-boom models pressure signatures also showed denite attop characteristics. Darden and Mack rst presented their ndings at an AIAA conference in March 1979 and published them in a NASA technical paper that October as well as in an article in the Journal of Aircraft in March 1980.55 To Christine Darden, it had become obvious that because extreme nose bluntness produces large drag, a method of relaxing the bluntness is needed to oer the opportunity for compromise between blunt-nose low-boom and sharp-nose low-drag congurations.56 She wrote about this Figure 3-4. Models used in sonic boom minimizaattempt in another NASA techni- tion study. (NASA) cal paper published in 1979 titled Sonic Boom Minimization with Nose-Bluntness Relaxation. It focused on ndings that because the shape of the aircraft does inuence the shape of a mid-eld pressure signature, aircraft shaping has now become a powerful tool in reducing the sonic boom.57 Using numerous equations and the previously mentioned NASA-sponsored computer code developed by Grumman for calculating supersonic and hypersonic inviscid ow around various congurations, she explored theoretical options for eliminating the bow shock, allowing unrestricted tail shock, and eliminating both shocks. Her calculations showed how to relax a blunt nose into a more conical shape to reduce drag. Thus, she concluded, the boom levels could be reduced signicantly without prohibitive drag penalties by dening the proper ratio [of ] yf / l.58 (In area distribution terms, this was the width of the shock wave spike along the front of the fuselage relative to the entire equivalent length of the airplane.) Although premised on airliner-sized supersonic aircraft, Darden and Macks rather lonesome work in the late 1970s on how carefully designed airframe shaping could in turn shape the signature of a sonic boom would help set the stage for future research on various-sized supersonic aircraft. Because of funding limitations, however, this promising approach could not be sustained beyond 1979.59 It was apparently the last signicant NASA experimentation on sonic boom minimization for almost another decade. Yet by validating the Seebass-George minimization theory and verifying design approaches for sonic boom reductions, their ndings would serve as a point of departure
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when such research nally did resume. (Figure 3-5 illustrates the aerodynamic design characteristics for boom minimization conrmed by Darden and Macks studies.60) The second conference on Supersonic Cruise Research, held at Langley in November Figure 3-5. Features of low-boom models. (NASA) 1979, was the rst and last under its new name. More than 140 people from NASA, other Government agencies, and the aerospace industry attended. This time, there were no presentations on the sonic boom, but Robert Kelly from North American Rockwell did put forth the concept of a Mach 2.7 business jet for 8 to 10 passengers or possibly a military airFigure 3-6. North American Rockwell SSBJ concept. craft that could generate a sonic (NASA) boom of only 0.5 psf. Because of the diculty of developing a big supersonic airliner in one step, he proposed an alternate course: to validate the critical supersonic technologies in a small research vehicle prior to the building of a full-size supersonic vehicle.... But, he asked, would the research vehicle have only one use? Why not have the additional capability for military use or as a supersonic business jet?61 The concept he presented was a blended-variable camber arrow-wing/body design using ber-reinforced titanium structures with superplastic forming and diffusion bonding (SPF/DB) and either of two dierent propulsion systems. The basic conguration is shown in gure 3-6.62 Although it was not proposed as a business jet per se, Boeing had also submitted a study in 1977 on building a subscale (93-foot-long) Mach 2.4 SCAR demonstrator to test numerous characteristics and capabilities, including sonic boom acceptability and possible boom reducing modications.63 It would take another 20 years for ideas about either a low-boom demonstrator or a supersonic business jet (SSBJ) to go anywhere beyond paper studies. Despite SCRs relatively modest cost versus its signicant technological accomplishments, the program suered a premature death in 1981. Reasons for this included the discouragingly high cost of Concorde operations, opposition
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to civilian R&D spending by some key ocials in the new administration of President Ronald Reagan, and the growing Federal decit. These factors, combined with cost overruns for the Space Shuttle, forced NASA to abruptly cancel Supersonic Cruise Research without even funding completion of many nal reports.64 As regards sonic boom studies, an exception to this was a compilation of useful charts for estimating minimum sonic boom levels for various combinations of aircraft length, weight, altitude, and Mach numbers by Christine Darden published in 1981.65
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Endnotes
1. Stephen D. Ambrose, Nixon: Triumph of a Politician 2 (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989), 433, cited in Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 153. For the background of the AST program, see Conway, 153158. 2. F. Edward McLean, SCAR Program Overview, in Proceedings of the SCAR Conference Held at Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, November 912, 1976, pt. 1, NASA CP-001 (1976), 13; McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 101102. 3. Marvin Miles, Hopes for SST are Dim but R&D ContinuesJust in Case, Los Angeles Times, November 23, 1973, G-1, 11. 4. McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 104108; Sherwood Homan, Bibliography of Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research (SCAR), NASA RP-1003 (November 1977), 15. 5. Chambers, Innovation in Flight, 3940. 6. McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 103. NASA photo of McLean with Driver and Mascitti provided courtesy of Joseph Chambers. Based on a drawing on page 38 in Spearman, Evolution of the HSCT, NASA TM-109089, the model in the photo appears to be Lockheeds Mach 2.2 AST, no later than 1975. 7. FAA, April 27, 1973, FAA Historical Chronology, 19261996, section 1973. The rule was included as Federal Aviation Regulation (FAR) section 91.817, Civil Aircraft Sonic Boom, eective September 30, 1973. 8. Miles, Hopes for SST Are Dim, G1, 11; McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 117118; Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 176180. 9. F. Edward McLean, Some Non-Asymptotic Eects on the Sonic Boom of Large Airplanes, NASA TN D-2877 (June 1965). 10. Rudolph J. Swigart, An Experimental Study in the Validity of the Heat-Field Concept for Sonic Boom Alleviation, NASA CR 2381 (March 1974). 11. For example, A.R. George and R. Seebass, Sonic-Boom Minimization, JASA 51, no. 2, pt. 3 (February 1972): 686694; A.R. Seebass and A.R. George, Sonic Boom Minimization through Aircraft Design and Operation, AIAA paper no. 73-241 (January 1973). 12. A.R. Seebass and A.R. George, Design and Operation of Aircraft to Minimize their Sonic Boom, Journal of Aircraft 11, no. 9 (September 1974): 509517. 13. Ibid., 509.
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Ibid., 510. Ibid., 513. Ibid., 516. Antonio Ferri, Huai-Chu Wang, and Hans Sorensen, Experimental Verication of Low Sonic Boom Conguration, NASA CR 2070 (June 1973). For a retrospective, see Percy J. Bobbitt and Domenic J. Maglieri, Dr. Antonio Ferris Contribution to Supersonic Transport SonicBoom Technology, Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets 40, no. 4 (July August 2003): 459466. Charles L. Thomas, Extrapolation of Sonic Boom Pressure Signatures by the Waveform Parameter Method, NASA TN D-6823 (June 1972). Kenneth J. Plotkin, State of the Art of Sonic Boom Modeling, JASA 111, no. 1, pt. 2 (January 2002): 532. Harry W. Carlson, Raymond L. Barger, and Robert J. Mack, Application of Sonic-Boom Minimization Concepts in Supersonic Transport Design, NASA TN D-7218 (June 1973), 2. Ibid., 6-16, with gure 3-1 extracted from 15. Ibid., 28. Edward J. Kane, A Study To Determine the Feasibility of a Low Sonic Boom Supersonic Transport, AIAA paper no. 73-1035 (October 1973); see also NASA CR 2332 (December 1973). Sherwood Homan, Bibliography of Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research (SCAR) Program from 1972 to Mid-1977, NASA RP-1003 (November 1977); Bibliography of Supersonic Cruise Research (SCR) Program from 1977 to Mid-1980, NASA RP-1063 (December 1980). Langley Research Center, Aerodynamic Analysis Requiring Advanced Computers, pt. 1, NASA SP-347 (Washington, DC: National Technical Information Service, 1975), 3. Ibid., 5. For a laypersons introduction to this topic, see John D. Anderson, Jr., NASA and the Evolution of Computational Fluid Dynamics, in Hallion, ed., NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics 1, 431434. J.L. Lung, B. Tiegerman, N.J. Yu, and A.R. Seebass, Advances in Sonic Boom Theory, in Aerodynamic Analysis Requiring Advanced Computers, pt. 2, 10331047. Frank Marconi, Larry Yeager, and H. Harris Hamilton, Computation of High-Speed Inviscid Flows About Real
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31.
32. 33.
34. 35.
40. 41.
Congurations, in Aerodynamic Analysis Requiring Advanced Computers, pt. 2, 14111453. Frank Marconi, Manuel Salas, and Larry Yeager, Development of Computer Code for Calculating the Steady Super/Hypersonic Inviscid Flow Around Real Congurations, 1: Computational Technique, NASA CR 2675 (April 1976); 2: Computer Code, NASA CR 2676 (May 1976). Christine M. Darden, Minimization of Sonic-Boom Parameters in Real and Isothermal Atmospheres, NASA TN D-7842 (March 1975). Dr. Christine Mann Darden, accessed January 8, 2009, http:// www.rbc.edu/library/specialcollections/women_history_ resources/vfwposter2002_darden.pdf; Dr. Christine M. Darden, accessed January 8, 2009, http://blackhistorypages.net/pages/cdarden. php. Darden, who was valedictorian of her graduating class at Allen High School in Asheville, NC, taught high school mathematics in Hampton for several years before being hired by NASA. In January 1976, British Overseas Airways Corporation initiated Concorde ights between London and Bahrain, and Air France initiated Concorde service between Paris and Rio de Janeiro. Christine M. Darden and Robert J. Mack, Current Research in Sonic-Boom Minimization, in Proceedings of the SCAR Conference (1976), pt. 1, 525541. Darden had discussed some of these topics in Sonic Boom TheoryIts Status in Prediction and Minimization, AIAA paper no. 76-1, presented at the AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Washington, DC, January 2628, 1976. Craig Covault, NASA Advances Supersonic Technology, Aviation Week (January 10, 1977): 1618. Darden and Mack, Current Research in Sonic Boom Minimization, 526. Ibid., 528529. Figure 3-3 extracted from page 44. Ibid., 530532; J.J. Gottlieb, Sonic Boom Research at UTIAS, Canadian Aeronautics and Space Journal 20, no. 3 (May 1974): 199222, cited in Harvey H. Hubbard, Domenic J. Maglieri, and David G. Stephens, Sonic Boom ResearchSelected Bibliography with Annotation, NASA TM 87685 (September 1, 1986), 1. Harry W. Carlson, Simplied Sonic-Boom Prediction, NASA TP 1122 (March 1978), page 1 quoted. Paul Holloway of Langley and colleagues from the Ames, Marshall, and Johnson Centers presented an early analysis in Shuttle Sonic
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42. 43.
44.
49.
50.
BoomTechnology and Predictions, AIAA paper no. 73-1039 (October 1973). Myron S. Malkin, Environmental Impact Statement: Space Shuttle Program (Final) NASA Headquarters (HQ) (April 1978), 106116. Including measurements in Hawaii with the Shuttle entering the atmosphere at 253,000 feet and decelerating from Mach 23; telephone interview, Domenic Maglieri by Lawrence Benson, March 18, 2009. Plotkin and Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research, AIAA paper no. 2003-3575, 56. For a description of Guirauds ndings in English, see J.P. Guiraud, Focalization in Short Non-Linear Waves, NASA Technical Translation F-12,442 (September 1969); See also his previously cited Acoustique gomtrique bruit ballistique des avions supersoniques et focalisation, 215267. Peter M. Gill, Nonlinear Acoustic Behavior at a Caustic, Ph.D. thesis, Cornell University, June 1974. K.J. Plotkin and J.M. Cantril, Prediction of Sonic Boom at a Focus, AIAA paper no. 76-2 (January 1976). Raymond L. Barger, Sonic-Boom Wave-Front Shapes and Curvatures Associated with Maneuvering Flight, NASA TP 1611 (December 1979). Figure 3-3 is from page 23. James and Associates, ed., YF-12 Experiments Symposium: A Conference Held at Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, September 1315, 1978, NASA CP-2054 (1978); Hallion and Gorn, On the Frontier, appendix P (YF-12 Flight Chronology, 19691978), 423429. Dryden tested an oblique wing aircraft, the AD-1, from 1979 to 1982. Although this conguration might have sonic boom benets at mid-Mach speeds, it was not a consideration in this experimental program. The AD-1 program is the subject of another study in this NASA book series by Bruce Larrimer. C.H.E. Warren, Sonic Bang Investigations Associated with the Concordes Test Flying, paper presented at the 13th Royal Aeronautical Society (RAeS), AIAA, and Center for AeroSpace Information (CASI) Anglo-American Aeronautical Conference, London, June 48, 1973, AIAA paper no. 73-41174, cited in Hubbard et al., Sonic Boom ResearchSelected Bibliography, 1. John L. McLucas et al., Reections of a Technocrat: Managing Defense, Air, and Space Programs During the Cold War (Montgomery, AL: Air University Press, 2006), 265. McLucas was FAA administrator at the time.
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51. Second Concorde Noise Report for Dulles Shows Consistency, Aviation Week (July 19, 1976): 235; William Claiborne, Mystery Booms Defy Expert Explanation, Washington Post, December 24, 1977, A1. 52. Recall that sound travels faster in warmer gases, as prevalent in the ozone layer. 53. Deborah Shapely, East Coast Mystery Booms: A Scientic Suspense Tale, Science 199, no. 4336 (March 31, 1978): 14161417; Concordes Exempted from Noise Rules, Aviation Week (July 3, 1978): 33; G.J. MacDonald et al., Jason 1978 Sonic Boom Report, JSR-78-09 (Arlington, VA: SRI International, November 1978); Richard Kerr, East Coast Mystery Booms: Mystery Gone but Booms Linger On, Science 203, no. 4337 (January 19, 1979): 256; John H. Gardner and Peter H. Rogers, Thermospheric Propagation of Sonic Booms from the Concorde Supersonic Transport, Naval Research Laboratory Memo Report 3904 (February 14, 1979) (DTIC AD A067201). 54. Maglieri to Benson, e-mail message, August 18, 2011. 55. Robert J. Mack and Christine M. Darden, Wind-Tunnel Investigation of the Validity of a Sonic-Boom-Minimization Concept, NASA TP-1421 (October 1979), with gure 3-4 extracted from page 22. The earlier paper was presented at an AIAA conference in Seattle on March 1214, 1979, as Some Eects of Applying Sonic Boom Minimization to Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Design, AIAA paper no. 79-0652, and later published in Journal of Aircraft 17, no. 3 (March 1980): 182186. 56. Christine M. Darden, Sonic Boom Minimization with NoseBluntness Relaxation, NASA TP 1348 (January 1979), 1. 57. Ibid., 4. 58. Ibid., 12. 59. Christine M. Darden, Aordable/Acceptable Supersonic Flight: Is It Near? 40th Aircraft Symposium, Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences (JSASS), Yokohama, October 911, 2002, 2. 60. Figure 3-5 extracted from Mack and Darden, Wind-Tunnel Investigation of...Sonic-Boom-Minimization Concept, NASA TP-1421, 26. 61. Robert Kelly, Supersonic Cruise Vehicle Research/Business Jet, in Supersonic Cruise Research 79: Proceedings of a Conference Held at the Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, November 1316, 1979, NASA CP 2108, pt. 2, 935944, quotation from page 935. 62. Ibid. Figure 3-6 extracted from page 945.
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63. The Boeing Company, Supersonic Cruise Research Airplane Study, NASA CR 145212 (September 1977). This report does not appear in the NTRS database, but it is summarized by Domenic J. Maglieri in Compilation and Review of Supersonic Business Jet Studies from 1963 through 1995, NASA CR 2011-217144 (May 2011). The proposal is also mentioned and illustrated in Spearman, Evolution of the HSCT, NASA TM 109089, 8, 4142. 64. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 180188; Chambers, Innovations in Flight, 48. 65. Christine M. Darden, Charts for Determining Potential Minimum Sonic-Boom Overpressures for Supersonic Cruise Aircraft, NASA TP 1820 (May 1981).
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F-16XL and SR-71 during in-ight shock wave measurements in 1995. (NASA)
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CHAPTER 4
For much of the next decade, the most active sonic boom research took place as part of the U.S. Air Forces Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology (NSBIT) program. This was a comprehensive eort begun in 1981 to study the noise resulting from military training and operations, especially those involving environmental impact statements and similar assessments. Although NASA was not intimately involved with NSBIT, Domenic Maglieri (just before his retirement from Langley) and the recently retired Harvey Hubbard compiled a comprehensive annotated bibliography of sonic boom research, organized into 10 major subject areas, to help inform NSBIT participants of the most relevant sources of information.1 One of the noteworthy achievements of the NSBIT program was building a detailed sonic boom database (known as Boomle) on U.S. supersonic aircraft, rst by ying them over a large array of newly developed sensors at Edwards AFB in the summer of 1987.2 Called Boom Event Analyzer Recorders (BEARs), these unattended devices captured the full sonic boom waveform in digital format.3 Other contributions of NSBIT were the long-term sonic boom monitoring of air combat training areas, continued assessment of structures exposed to sonic booms, studies on the eects of sonic booms on livestock and wildlife, and intensied research on focused booms (long an issue with maneuvering ghter aircraft).4 Although Harry Carlsons simplied boom prediction program worked well for straight and level ights, the Air Force Human Systems Division at Wright-Patterson AFB attempted to supplement it in 1987 with a companion program called PCBoom to predict these focused booms. Its ray-tracing routines were adapted from a proposed mainframe computer program called BOOMAP2 to run on the basic desktop computers of the late 1980s.5 Both programs were based on Albion D. Taylors Tracing Rays and Aging Pressure Signatures (TRAPS) program, which adapted the ARAP code to account for caustics and focused booms.6 Kenneth Plotkin later achieved this goal using the waveform parameter code of the Ames Research Centers Charles Thomas (described in the previous chapter) to create the widely used
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PCBoom3. In one interesting application of sonic boom focusing that was rst envisioned in the 1950s, ghter pilots were successfully trained to lay down super booms at specied locations.7
as many passengers. For its part, the high-risk, single-stage-to-orbit NASP survived until 1994 as a NASA-DOD experimental program (designated the X-30), with its sonic boom potential studied by current and former NASA and Air Force specialists.12 The contractual studies on the HSCT emphasized the need to resolve environmental issues, especially the restrictions on cruising over land because of sonic booms, before it could meet the goal of economically viable longdistance supersonic passenger service. As a rst step toward this objective, Langley hosted a workshop on the status of sonic boom physics, methodology, and understanding on January 19 and January 20, 1988. Coordinated by Christine Darden, 60 representatives from Government, academia, and industry attendedincluding many who had been involved in the SST and SCR eorts and several from the Air Forces NSBIT program. Princetons Wallace Hayes led a working group on theory, Cornells Albert George led one on minimization, Pennsylvania State Universitys Allan D. Pierce led one on atmospheric eects, and Langleys Clemans A. Powell led a group on human response. Panels of experts from each of the working groups determined that the following areas most needed more research: boom carpets, focused booms, high-Mach predictions, atmospheric eects, acceptability metrics, signature prediction, and low-boom airframe designs. The report from this workshop served as a baseline on the latest knowledge about sonic booms and some of the challenges that lay ahead. As regards aerodynamics, it was recognized that the high-drag paradox (gure 3-2) would have to be resolved before a supersonic transport could be both quiet and ecient.13
Because solving environmental issues would be a prerequisite to developing the HSCT, NASA structured the HSR program into two phases. Phase I focusing on engine emissions, noise around airports, and sonic booms as well as preliminary design workwas scheduled for 1990 to 1995. Among the objectives of Phase I were predicting HSCT sonic boom signatures, determining feasible reduction levels, and nding a scientic basis on which to set acceptability criteria. After, ideally, making sucient progress on the environmental problems, Phase II would begin ramping up in 1994. With more industry participation and greater funding, it would focus on economically realistic airframe and propulsion technologies and, it was hoped, extend until 2001.15 NASA convened its rst workshop for the entire High-Speed Research program in Williamsburg, VA, from May 14 to May 16, 1991. Because of the sensitivity and proprietary nature of much of the information, attendance was by invitation only. Thirteen separate sessions covered every aspect of high-speed ight with 86 of the papers presented published subsequently with limited distribution. Robert Anderson of NASAs Aeronautics Directorate opened the meeting by noting that the market for an environmentally acceptable, technically feasible, and economically viable HSCT might be as high as 300,000 passengers per day by 2000. But as a cautionary reminder on the challenges that lay ahead, he quoted from Ed McLeans portrayal of previous programs:16 Past experience indicates that there will be little room for design compromises in the development of a successful SST. To meet the stringent environmental constraints of noise, sonic boom, and pollution in a safe, economically competitive SST will require the best possible combination of aerodynamic, structural, and propulsion technologies...integrated into a congruent airplane that meets all mission requirements. A NASA Headquarters status report specically warned that the importance of reducing sonic boom cannot be overstated.17 The stakes for the HSCT were high. One of the Douglas studies had projected that even by 2010, overwater-only routes would account for just 28 percent of long-range air trac; but with supersonic overland cruise, the proposed HSCT could capture up to 70 percent of all such travel. Yet despite widespread agreement on the inherent advantages of a low-boom airliner, NASAs detailed programmanagement owcharts included periodic decision points on whether or not to continue including sonic boom minimization as an essential criterion for the HSR designs. Based on previous eorts, the study admitted that research on low-boom designs is viewed with some skepticism as to its practical application. Therefore an early assessment is warranted.18
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As it is made evident by 15 of the presentations, NASA, its contractors, academic grantees, and the manufactures were already busy conducting a wide range of sonic boom research and minimization projects, including the longpostponed issue of human response. The main goals were to demonstrate a waveform shape that would be acceptable to the general public, to prove that a viable airplane could be built to generate such a waveform, to determine that such a shape would not be too badly disrupted during its propagation through the atmosphere, and to estimate that the economic benet of overland supersonic ight would make up for any performance penalties imposed by a low-boom design.19 During the next 3 years, NASA and its partners went into a full-court press against the sonic boom.20 They began several dozen major experiments and studies, results of which were published in reports and presented at several workshops dealing solely with the sonic boom. These were held at the Langley Research Center in February 1992,21 the Ames Research Center in May 1993,22 Langley in June 1994,23 and again at Langley in September 1995.24 These meetings, like the HSRs sonic boom eort itself, were organized into three major areas of research: (1) conguration design and operations (managed by Langleys Advanced Vehicles Division), (2) atmospheric propagation, and (3) human acceptability (both managed by Langleys Acoustics Division). The reports from these workshops were well over 500 pages long and included dozens of papers on the progress or completion of various projects, experiments, and research topics.25 The HSR program precipitated major advances in the design of supersonic congurations even for reduced sonic boom signatures. Many of these advances were made possible by the rapidly expanding eld of computational uid dynamics. With CFD, engineers and researchers were now able to use complex
Figure 4-1. Structure and scope of HSR sonic boom studies. (NASA)
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Christine Darden (second from left) and Robert Mack (right) examining a 12-inch low-boom HSCT model with Matthew Overholt and Kathy Needleman. (NASA)
computational algorithms processed by supercomputers and parallel computers to calculate the nonlinear aspects of near-eld shock waves, including the Navier-Stokes equations, even at high Mach numbers and angles of attack. Results could be graphically displayed in mesh and grid formats that emulated three dimensions. (In simple terms: before CFD, the nonlinear characteristics of shock waves generated by a realistic airframe had involved far too many variables and permutations to calculate by conventional means.) The great progress that had been made in recent years was already evident at the 1991 HSR Workshops session on Sonic Boom and Aerodynamic Performance, which included minimization strategies. At Langley, Christine Darden, Robert Mack, and Raymond Bargeramong the few to remain actively involved in sonic boom minimization ever since the demise of the SCR programhad recently been joined by talented new researchers, such as Peter G. Coen. With the help of a new computer program for predicting sonic booms devised by Coen,26 Langleys 11-person design team applied two theoretical approaches and an iterative process of modications to build two 12-inch wind tunnel models of HSCT-size airframes, including engine nacelles, intended to combine reduced sonic boom signatures with aerodynamic eciency. One was designed for Mach 3 cruising at 65,000 feet and the other for cruising at Mach 2 and 55,000 feet.27
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The nished models were rst tested during October 1990 in the 9-foot-by7-foot and 8-foot-by-7-foot supersonic sections of the Ames Research Centers very busy Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, which allowed pressure measurements out to between ve and six body lengths. With extrapolations conrmed for closer distances, they were then able to use the much tighter connes of Langleys 4-foot-by-4-foot Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel for additional experiments during the next 3 months with a specially made sting (the connecting device upon which a wind tunnel model is axed) and angle-of-attack mounting mechanism. The tests found excellent agreement between the forward part of the extrapolated wind tunnel measurements and the predicted sonic boom signatures, and they validated the theory-derived design process, especially for the Mach 2 model. There were some disappointments. For example, even using 12-inch models, the openings to the nacelles proved too small to allow a sucient airow to pass through them at Ames, so they were removed for the testing at Langley.28
CFD paves the way to much more rapid progress in boom minimization. Furthermore, CFD oers fast turnaround and low cost, so high-risk concepts and perturbations to existing geometries can be investigated quickly.31 The Ames researchers started o by using three previously tested supersonic models (a cone cylinder, a rectangular wing section, and a delta-winged airframe) to validate their new CFD codes for sonic boom predictions as well as those of several existing CFD programs. After obtaining good correlation of CFD and wind tunnel data, the Ames researchers concluded that at this point it can be said without reservation that CFD can be used in conjunction with quasi-linear extrapolation methods to predict sonic booms in the near and far eld accurately.32 The experimentation showed the importance of using precise airframe geometry and adequate grid resolution. Results also indicated that inviscid Euler ow analysis (i.e., without the need to account for laminar ow) was sucient for accurate sonic boom predictions. After validating their CFD codes, they next began applying them to the two Langley models tested in the Ames 9-foot-by-7-foot wind tunnel (see above), work that was still ongoing at the time of the HSR workshop. Both Ames and Langley would use the HSCT as a demonstration project for analyses on massively parallel computers under NASAs High Performance Computing and Communications Program (HPCCP).33 In a project sponsored by Christine Darden, Michael Siclari of the Grumman Corporate Research Center at Bethpage, NY, presented the results of applying a three-dimensional Euler code for multigrid-implicit marching, as modied to predict sonic boom signatures, from the two Langley HSCT models. (This new code accordingly was referred to as MIM3D-SB, or Multigrid Implicit Marching in Three Dimensions for Sonic Booms.) Stated as simply as possible, the code used a simple wave-drag geometry to input data, from which the computer calculated the propagation of shock waves from digitized replications of the models (with dierent length stings attached) in a series of more than 100 steps, with each new step calculated from the results of prior steps. The program recorded the propagation of shock waves on three-dimensional adaptive mesh grids, featuring denser grid points near the aircraft and (for faster processing) a coarser adaptive grid pattern farther out on which additional data points were progressively marched a specied distance from the airframe. From there, a waveform parameter code (derived from that of Charles Thomas) extrapolated the near-eld signatures through atmospheric conditions to the ground. Figure 4-2 depicts a side view of one of the grid patterns used for Langleys Mach 3 model (just visible in the front apex of the grid system), swept back at the approximate angle of the shock waves to save computer time compared to a more complete grid system. Figure 4-3 shows the shock waves calculated on this grid network as pressure contours (something like they would appear in a wind
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tunnel shadowgraph). For visualizing the complex three-dimensional, coneshaped expansion of the shock waves on paper, this early CFD application could also display slices of Figure 4-2. Side view of Figure 4-3. Pressure the pressure waves. Figure MIM3DSB grid topology for contours from Mach 3 HSCT 4-4 shows the computed Mach 3 HSCT model. (NASA) model. (NASA) isobars in two vertical planes aft of the Mach 2 model, clearly indicating the complexity of its ow patternsomething not really possible with a wind tunnel. To achieve signatures at three body lengths from the aircraft axis (which at supersonic speeds meant 12 to 15 body lengths downstream of the aircraft) required Figure 4-4. Isobars showing propagation of mideld pressure approximately 2 million patterns downstream from Mach 2 HSCT model. (NASA) data points.34 At the 1992 sonic boom workshop, Darden and Mack admitted how recent experiments at Langley had revealed limitations in using near-eld wind tunnel data for extrapolating sonic boom signatures.35 During this and the two subsequent sonic boom workshops and at other venues, experts from Ames, Langley, and their contractors reported optimistically on the potential of new CFD computer codes to help design congurations optimized for constrained sonic booms and aerodynamic eciency. In another potential application of CFD, former Langley researcher Percy Bud Bobbitt, who had joined Domenic Maglieri at Eagle Engineering, pointed out the potential of hybrid laminar ow control (HLFC) for both aerodynamic and low-boom purposes.36 Even the numbers-crunching capabilities of the supercomputers of that era were not yet powerful enough for CFD codes and the grids they produced to accurately depict eects much beyond the near eld, but the use of massively parallel computing held the promise of eventually being able to do so. It was becoming apparent that, for most aerodynamic purposes, CFD was the design tool of the future, with wind tunnel models becoming more a means of verication. As predicted by Ames researchers in 1991, the role of the wind tunnel in
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low-boom model design is to benchmark progress at signicant intermediate stages and at the nal design point of numerical model development.37 By the second sonic boom workshop in February 1992, there were already signs of progress in applying CFD methods for predicting sonic boom signatures. Both Susan Cli of Ames and Michael Siclari of Grumman included the eects of engine nacelles in analyses of the Langley Mach 2 and Mach 3 congurations and a Boeing Mach 1.7 design. Cli described lessons learned doing analyses with the Three-dimensional Euler/Navier-Stokes Aerodynamic Method (TEAM) and a faster Euler code-based program called AIRPLANE that relied on an unstructured tetrahedral mesh to calculate pressure signatures, including those from the nacelles that had deed wind tunnel measurements.38 Siclari followed up on his earlier work using the ecient multiblock Euler marching code (MIM3D-SB) with Grummans innovative mesh technology. It was able to calculate accurate three-dimensional pressure footprints at one body length (using 1.9 million grid points) and extrapolate them to the ground by using a linear waveform parameter method (derived from that of Charles Thomas). Besides the nacelles themselves, his modeling included an engine exhaust simulation to predict the eects of the plumes on the sonic boom signatures. As can be seen from the graphics printed out from one of these exercises in gure 4-5, the state of the art in CFD during the early 1990s was advancing rapidly.39 Unfortunately, it would not yet progress enough to design a low-boom but also aerodynamically ecient supersonic transport. Among a dozen other aerodynamic papers at the 1992 workshop, the work by Samson Cheung and Thomas Edwards reported on progress in their CFD modeling using the UPS3D parabolized (simplied) Navier-Stokes code and a hyperbolic (curved in three dimensions) grid-generation scheme for minimization purposes. They were able to improve the lift-to-drag ratio for a simplied model of Boeings baseline low-boom HSCT conguration (without nacelles or a complete tail assembly) by almost 4 percent while at the same time extrapolating a quieter attop signature. To save expensive computer time, they relied on a course grid for their design work and only ran the Figure 4-5. Computational end result on a ne grid to check for discrepancies.40 grid and resulting pressure Despite the signs of rapid progress with CFD, contours from the wings and designing low-boom characteristics into a practinacelles on Langleys Mach 3 HSCT conguration. (NASA) cal airliner would not be easy. John Morgenstern
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described McDonnell Douglass strategy, after exploring numerous congurations, to optimize its HSCT for ecient Mach 2.4 cruising over water while slowing down to Mach 1.8 for reduced sonic boom over land.41 In something of a reality check, veteran sonic boom specialist George Haglund and a Boeing colleague described analyses of their companys two low-boom designs: Since L/D alone is not a good measure of airplane performance, each airplane was evaluated in sucient depth to determine an operating empty weight...and maximum takeo weight...for a 5000 n mi. mission [to allow] a meaningful performance comparison to a conventional baseline conguration. Although meeting some objectives, they found that achieving a practical HSCT lowboom conguration with low drag, high payload, and good performance is a formidable design problem.42 Documentation of the work on conguration design and analysis presented at the Ames sonic boom workshop in 1993 is not publicly available; therefore, the papers presented at the Langley workshop in 1994 represent 2 years worth of progress, especially in applying CFD techniques. By then, results were in from an Ames experiment comparing computational uid dynamics with traditional, modied linear theory for predicting sonic boom signatures, something that would be essential for designing HSCTs that could shape such signatures in the near, mid, and far elds. Although modied linear theory was well established, fast, and ecient, with an inverse design capability, it had trouble modeling the eects of complex geometries on pressure signatures. The limitations of CFD were not yet fully understood, but it did have the capability to do complex geometrical modelingat the cost of expensive computer time. To compare CFD with MLT, the Ames Computational Aerospace Branch selected a modied Boeing arrow-wing, low-boom conguration as a test case. They then evaluated several CFD techniquesUPS3D, AIRPLANE, and HFL03 (a Euler time-relaxation code)along with results contributed by Grumman with its very ecient MIM3D-SB code and Boeings MLT techniques and ARAP-based extrapolations. Although calibration problems limited the use of wind tunnel data, the analysis found that all the CFD methods, although not consistent in their far-eld pressure signatures, could more accurately predict the eects of lift and pitching as well as sonic booms as measured by perceived loudness (in decibels) at ground level. Measuring the eects of drag, however, was highly dependent on dense grid resolution. The results indicated that CFD predictions would continue to improve with experience.43 Eight more of the papers at the 1994 workshop described projects related to sonic boom minimization, most using CFD as well as wind tunnel analyses. As an example of the latter, Robert Mack reported some success in preventing the inlet shocks that had stymied previous experiments so as to obtain pressure signatures from four nacelles on a low-boom wind model in Langleys
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Design Optimization Code NPSOL New Geometric Design Variables Generate New Wave Drug Geometry Data Set Replaces Specied Part of Geometry with Cubic Spline Fit Evaluate Sonic Boom Objective Function/Gradient for Each Design Variable Ground Extrapolation Sonic Boom Signature Thomas ANET Code
CFD Code/MIM3DSB Analysis Near-Field Signatures Aerodynamic Coefcients Figure. 4-6. CFD design process for sonic boom minimization. (NASA)
4-foot-by-4-foot Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel.44 Meanwhile, Ames and Princeton researchers reported on using CFD to design an airframe that generated a type of multishock signature that might reach the ground with a quieter sonic boom than either the ramp or attop wave forms that were a goal of traditional minimization theories.45 (Although not part of the HSCT eort, Ames and its contractors also used CFD to continue exploring the possible advantages of oblique-wing aircraft, including sonic boom minimization.)46 As an excellent case in point of how CFD was becoming more practical, Grummans Michael Siclari described how his NASA-sponsored MIM3D-SB code and numerical optimization techniques, coupled with an aerodynamic code (in this case, one called NPSOL), could now analyze wing-body congurations in a matter of minutes rather than hours of supercomputer time, making it ecient and economical enough to be practical as a design tool. As examples, he showed results of this automated process (depicted in gure 4-6) with four HSCT congurations.47 Even with the advances being made in designing airframes for lower sonic booms, the issue of overall performance was still a critical concern for the HighSpeed Research program. To get a better perspective on the relationship between sonic boom acceptability and other performance requirements, an eight-person team that included Donald Baize and Peter Coen from NASA Langley and former NASA intern Kathy Needleman from Lockheed Engineering & Sciences Company assessed eight of the current low-boom HSCT congurations against an unconstrained reference conguration. Predicated on some technologies
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projected to be available in 2005 (e.g., advanced composite materials, aeroelastic tailoring, mixed-ow turbofan engines, and multipurpose displays), the team evaluated such factors as L/D ratios, fuel capacity and consumption, passenger payload, takeo distance, gross weight, and mission block time. Under these Figure 4-7. Eight low-boom HSCT conguracriteria, all of the designs achieved tions in the early 1990s. (NASA) a total gross weight per passenger only slightly higher than the reference conguration, but all were heavier than originally assumed and would require at least another design cycle to ensure successful low-boom shaping. As with studies dating back to the SST, the most highly swept wing planforms did not have enough lift at low speeds. Reinforcing previous aircraft company projections, being able to y supersonic over land areaseven on relatively short segments of routesoered better block time and therefore economic advantages. Figure 4-7, showing the lowboom HSCT congurations studied in this project, oers an excellent idea of the various design options being explored during the rst phase of the HighSpeed Research program.48
Figure 4-8. Proposed modications and signatures of BQM-34E Firebee II. (NASA)
Meanwhile, a similar but more ambitious plan at the Dryden Flight Research Center led to NASAs rst signicant sonic boom testing there since 1970. SR-71 program manager David Lux, atmospheric specialist L.J. Ehernberger, aerodynamicist Timothy R. Moes, and principal investigator Edward A. Haering came up with a proposal to demonstrate CFD design concepts by having one of Drydens SR-71s modied with a low-boom conguration. As well as being much larger, faster, and higher ying than the little Firebee (thereby more closely emulating the HSCT), an SR-71 would also allow easier acquisition of near-eld measurements for direct comparison with CFD predictions.51 To lay the groundwork for this modication, Dryden personnel gathered baseline data from a standard SR-71 using one of its distinctive cranked arrow (double angle delta-winged) F-16XL aircraft (shown in a photograph preceding this chapter). Built by General Dynamics in the early 1980s for evaluation by the Air Force as a long-range strike version of the short-range F-16 ghter, the elegant F-16XL had lost out to the rival McDonnell Douglas F-15E Strike Eagle, which had even greater range and payload capability. In tests at Edwards during July 1993, the F-16XL, own by Dryden test pilot Dana Purifoy, probed as close as 40 feet below and behind an SR-71 cruising at Mach 1.8 to collect near-eld pressure measurements.52 Langley and McDonnell Douglas analyzed this data, which had been gathered using a standard ight-test nose boom. Both reached generally favorable conclusions about the ability of high-order CFD and McDonnell Douglass proprietary MDBOOM program to serve as design tools.53 Kenneth Plotkin and Juliet Page of Wyle Labs had developed MDBOOM from a focus version of the Thomas code that Plotkin and a colleague developed in 1976.54 (This focus code was also adapted for PCBoom3, which replaced the original TRAPS-based PCBoom.)55
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Based on these results, a team led by low-boom aerodynamicist John Morgenstern at McDonnell Douglas Aerospace West designed modications to alter the bow and middle shock waves of the SR-71 by reshaping the front of the airframe with a nose glove and adding to the midfuselage cross section as partially illustrated in gure 4-9. (In this gure, M denotes Mach number and denotes angle of attack.) An assessment of these modications by Lockheed Engineering & Sciences Company found them feasible.56 The next stepa big onewould be to obtain the considerable funding Figure 4-9. Proposed SR-71 low-boom modication. (NASA) that would be needed for the modications and testing. In May 1994, Dryden used two of its eet of F/A-18 Hornets to measure how near-eld shock waves merged to assess the feasibility of a similar low-cost experiment in waveform shaping using two SR-71s. Flying at Mach 1.2 with one aircraft below and slightly behind the other, the rst experiment positioned the canopy of the lower F/A-18 in the tail shock extending down from the upper F/A-18 (called a tail-canopy formation). The second experiment had the lower F/A-18 y with its canopy in the inlet shock of the upper F/A-18 (an inlet-canopy formation). Ground sensor recordings revealed that the tailcanopy formation caused two separate N-wave signatures, but the inlet-canopy formation yielded a single modied signature, which two of the recorders measured as a attop waveform. This low-cost technique, however, presented safety issues. Even with the excellent visibility from the F/A-18s bubble canopy (one pilot used the inlet shock wave as a visual cue for positioning the aircraft) and its responsive ight controls, maintaining such precise positions was still not easy. The pilots recommended against doing the same with SR-71s considering their larger size, slower response, and limited cockpit visibility.57 Atmospheric eects had long posed many uncertainties in understanding sonic booms, but advances in acoustics and atmospheric science since the SCR program promised better results. Not only did the way air molecules absorb sound waves need to be better understood but so did the old issue of turbulence. In addition to using the Air Forces Boomle and other available material, Langleys Acoustics Division had Eagle Engineering, in a project led by Domenic Maglieri, restore and digitize data from the irreplaceable XB-70 records.58
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Historic schlieren photograph of shock waves from a T-38 ying Mach 1.1 at 13,000 feet. (NASA)
The Acoustics Division, assisted by Lockheed Engineering & Sciences Company, also took advantage of the NATO Joint Acoustic Propagation Experiment (JAPE) at the White Sands Missile Range in August 1991 to do some new ight testing. The researchers arranged for Air Force F-15, F-111, and T-38 aircraft and one of Drydens SR-71s to make 59 supersonic passes over an extensive array of BEAR and other recording systems as well as meteorological sensorsboth early in the morning (when the air was still) and during the afternoon (when there was usually more turbulence).59 Although meteorological data was incomplete, results later showed the eects of molecular relaxation and turbulence on both the rise time and overpressure of bow shocks.60 Henry Bass of the University of Mississippi, a key participant in the JAPE, was an important researcher on the acoustics of turbulence. Another academic researcher, David Blackstock of the University of Texas, and his graduate students also discovered more new eects of turbulence as well as other atmospheric instabilities on sonic booms, some of these by using innovative laboratory experiments.61 Starting with the rst HSR workshop, NASA and NASA-sponsored researchers, such as Allan D. Pierce of Penn State University, began producing a variety of papers on waveform freezing (persistence), measuring diraction and distortion of sound waves,
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and trying to ascertain the complex relationship among molecular relaxation, turbulence, humidity, and other weather conditions.62 For better visualizing sonic booms, Leonard Weinstein of Langley even developed a way to capture stunning images of actual shock waves in the real atmosphere. He did this using a ground-based schlieren imaging system (a specially masked and ltered tracking camera with the sun providing backlighting). As shown in the accompanying photo, this was rst demonstrated in December 1993 with a T-38 ying just over Mach 1 at Wallops Island.63 All of the research into the theoretical, aerodynamic, and atmospheric aspects of sonic boomsno matter how successfulwould not protect the High-Speed Research program from the Achilles heel of previous eorts: the subjective responses of human beings. As a result, Langley, led by Kevin Shepherd of the Acoustics Division with researchers such as Brenda Sullivan, Jack Leatherwood, and David McCurdy, began a systematic eort to measure human responses to dierent strengths and shapes of sonic booms to help determine acceptable levels. As an early step, the division built an airtight, foam-lined sonic boom simulator booth (known as the boom box) derived from a similar apparatus at the University of Toronto. Using the latest in computer-generated digital-amplication and loudspeaker technology, it was capable of generating shaped waveforms up to 4 psf and 140 decibels (dB). Based on responses from subjects, researchers selected the perceived-level decibel (PLdB) as the preferred metric. For responses outside a laboratory setting, the NASA Langley team planned several additional acceptance studies.64 By 1994, early results had become available from two of these human-response projects. Langley and Wyle Laboratories had developed mobile boom-simulator equipment for what was called the In-Home Noise Generation/Response System (IHONORS). Depicted in gure 4-10, it consisted of computerized sound systems installed in 33 houses for 8 weeks at a time in a network connected by modems to a monitor at Langley. From February 1993 to December 1993, these households were subjected to almost 58,500 randomly timed sonic booms of various signatures for 14 hours a day. Although denitive analyses were not available until the following year, the initial results conrmed how the level of annoyance increased whenever subjects were startled or trying to rest.65 Figure 4-10. Schematic of the In-Home Noise
Generation/Response System. (NASA)
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Preliminary results were also in from the rst phase of the Western USA Sonic Boom Survey of civilians who had been exposed to such sounds for many years. This part of the survey took place in remote desert towns and settlements located around the Air Forces vast Nellis combat training range complex in Nevada. Unlike previous community surveys, it correlated citizen responses to accurately measured sonic boom signatures (using BEAR devices) in places where booms were a regular occurrence yet where the subjects did not live on or near a military installation (where the economic benets of the base to the local economy might inuence their opinions). Although ndings were not yet denitive, these 1,042 interviews proved more decisive than any of the many other research projects in determining the future direction of the HSCT eort. Based on a metric called day-night average noise level, the respondents found the booms much more annoying than previous studies on other types of aircraft noise even at the levels projected for low-boom designs. Their negative responses, in eect, dashed hopes that the HSR program might lead to an acceptable overland supersonic transport.66
methods to predict inlet shocks, increased use of nonlinear corrections for modied linear theory techniques, minimization theories for cambered wing bodies, measurements of ow-through nacelles on wind tunnel models, and improving some performance criteria of low-boom concepts to within 3 percent of unconstrained baseline congurations.69 While the lower-boom design eorts had shown outstanding progress, management of this eort had not been ideal. Dispersal of the work among two NASA centers and two major aircraft manufacturers had resulted in communication problems as well as a certain amount of unhelpful competition (presumably among the contractors as well as between Langley and Ames). The milestone-driven HSR eort required concurrent progress in various technical and scientic areas, which is inherently dicult to coordinate and manage. And even if low-boom airplane designs had been improved enough to meet acoustic criteria, they would have been heavier and performed more poorly at slow speeds than unconstrained designs.70 Under the new HSR strategy, any continued minimization research was now aimed at lowering the sonic boom of the baseline overwater design while propagation studies would concentrate on predicting boom carpets, focused booms, secondary booms, and ground disturbances. In view of the HSCTs overwater mission, new environmental studies would devote more attention to the potential penetration of shock waves into water and the eects of sonic booms on the marine mammals and birds that might be aected.71 Concorde operations had revealed no such problems, but since the HSCT would be about twice the weight but only 50 percent longer, the sonic boom overpressures generated by the baseline designs would tend to be about 50 percent higher. As a result, aerodynamicists such as Robert Mack of Langley, John Morgenstern of McDonnell Douglas, George Haglund of Boeing, and Michael Siclari of Grumman (which merged with Northrop Corporation in April 1994) turned their attention to minor modications that could reduce this level with only minimal performance penalties.72 Although the preliminary results of the rst phase of the Western USA Survey had already had a decisive impact, Wyle Laboratories completed the second phase with a similar polling of civilians in Mojave Desert communities exposed regularly to sonic booms, mostly from Edwards AFB and China Lake Naval Air Station. Surprisingly, this phase of the survey found the Californians there much more amenable to sonic booms than the less tolerant desert dwellers in Nevada, but they were still more annoyed by booms than by other aircraft noise of comparable perceived loudness.73 With the decision to end work on a low-boom HSCT, the proposed modications of the Firebee RPVs and SR-71 had of course been canceled (postponing for another decade the rst live demonstrations of boom shaping).
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Nevertheless, some ight testing that would prove of future value continued to be conducted. From February 1995 through April 1995, the Dryden Flight Research Center conducted more SR-71 and F-16XL sonic boom ight tests. Led by Ed Haering, this experiment included an instrumented YO-3A light aircraft from Ames, an extensive array of various ground sensors, a network of new dierential Global Positioning System receivers accurate to within 12 inches, and installation of a sophisticated new nose boom with four pressure sensors on the F-16XL.74 On eight long missions, one of Drydens SR-71s ew at speeds between Mach 1.25 and Mach 1.6 at 31,000 feet to 48,000 feet while the F-16XL (kept aloft by in-ight refuelings) made numerous near- and mideld measurements of bow, canopy, inlet, wing, and tail shock waves at distances from 80 feet to 8,000 feet. Some of these showed that the canopy shock waves were still distinct from the bow shock after 4,000 feet to 6,000 feet. Comparisons of far-eld measurements obtained by the YO-3A ying at 10,000 feet above ground level and the recording devices on the surface revealed eects of atmospheric turbulence. Analysis of the data validated two existing sonic boom propagation codes used Figure 4-11. Measuring the evolution of shock for predicting far-eld signatures waves from an SR-71. (NASA) (ZEPHYRUS and SHOCKN) and clearly showed how variations in the SR-71s gross weight, speed, and altitude and atmospheric phenomena such as molecular absorption caused dierences in shock wave patterns and their coalescence into N-shaped waveforms. 75 Figure 4-11 depicts the participants and basic structure of these ight tests, which would serve as a precedent for others in the future.76 This innovative and successful experiment marked the end of dedicated sonic boom ight testing during the HSR program. Phase II testing focused on the many other issues involved in designing a practical, 320-foot-long, 300-passenger, Mach 2.4 HSCT with a range of 5,000 nm that would y only subsonically over land. For example, NASAs creative partnership with Russia in using a Tu-144 as a supersonic laboratory from 1996 to 1999 did not include sonic boom measurements as originally planned.77 The last of the sonic boom workshops, held at Langley in September 1995, no doubt seemed rather anticlimactic for the 46 attendees in view of the new, less ambitious HSR goals for a high-speed civil transport. As with the SST and
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SCR programs, however, their researchthe latest of which would be published in a two-volume compendiumadded greatly to the scientic knowledge and engineering skills that would be needed if and when another eort to develop a civilian supersonic airplane might be initiated.78 Several papers indicated that the behavior of shock waves and acoustic rays under a wide range of atmospheric conditions were now well understood.79 Yet the challenges in designing a practical airplane that could exploit this knowledge to control sonic boom signatures, especially in view of the disturbing new evidence collected on the sensitivity of human responses to them, were still daunting.80 Even with the rapid progress with computational uid dynamics, results so far indicated the need for much more computing power and new techniques. As Kenneth Plotkin explained, due to a combination of computational costs and numerical algorithms losing resolution after many steps, CFD cannot be brought all the way to the ground or even very many body lengths away from the aircraft.81 Developing a high-speed civil transport ran into other barriers besides the sonic boom. By late 1998, the HSR program confronted a combination of economic, technological, political, and budgetary problems (including cost overruns for the International Space Station). The Boeing Company, now estimating that development of the HSCT would take $13 billion, cut its support, and the administration of President William J. Clinton, with the backing of NASA administrator Daniel S. Goldin, decided to terminate the HSR program at the end of FY 1999. Although other research programs picked up elements of the HSR, having to end it and a similar program for an Advanced Subsonic Transport deprived NASA of the focus these programs helped give to its aeronautical research.82 Ironically, NASAs success in helping the aircraft industry develop quieter subsonic aircraft, which had the eect of moving the goal post for acceptable airport noise, was one of the factors convincing Boeing to drop plans for a supersonic airliner. Nevertheless, the High-Speed Research program was responsible for truly signicant advances in technologies, techniques, and scientic knowledge, including a better understand of the sonic boom and ways to diminish it.83 To help identify areas for future research that might overcome the barriers to supersonic ight encountered by the HSR program, NASA in 2000 asked the National Research Council to conduct a comprehensive investigation of the relevant technologies that would be needed. The Councils Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board formed an expert 14-person committee on breakthrough technologies to perform this task. Released in 2001, its in-depth study focused on high-risk, high-payo technologies where NASA research could make a dierence over the next 25 years.84 While advising that NASA should have its eye on the grand prizesupersonic commercial transports, the committee deemed it quiet appropriate for NASA to conduct sonic boom research
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related to supersonic business jets, which were increasingly seen as having a more realistic chance of meeting sonic boom requirements.85 Their study concluded with the following admonition: If the United States intends to maintain its supremacy in the commercial aerospace sector, it has to take a long-term perspective and channel adequate resources into research and technology development. The technological challenges to commercial supersonic ight can be overcome, as long as the development of key technologies is continued. Without continued eort, an economically viable, environmentally acceptable, commercial supersonic aircraft is likely to languish.86
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Endnotes
1. Harvey H. Hubbard, Domenic J. Maglieri, and David G. Stephens, Sonic-Boom ResearchSelected Bibliography with Annotation, NASA TM-87685 (September 1986). 2. Including F-4, F-14, F-15, F-16, F/A-18, F-111, T-38, and SR-71 aircraft. 3. J. Micah Downing, Lateral Spread of Sonic Boom Measurements from U.S. Air Force Boomle Flight Tests, in High-Speed Research: Sonic BoomProceedings of a Conference Held at Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, February 2527, 1992 1, NASA CR 3172, 117129. For a description, see Robert E. Lee and J. Micah Downing, Boom Event Analyzer Recorder: The USAF Unmanned Sonic Boom Monitor, AIAA paper no. 93-4431 (October 1993). 4. For example, see Kenneth J. Plotkin et al., Sonic Boom Environment Under a Supersonic Military Operating Area, Journal of Aircraft 29, no. 6 (NovemberDecember 1992): 10691072. (Study conducted at White Sands Missile Range, NM.) 5. Dwight E. Bishop, Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology: PCBOOM Computer Program for Sonic Boom Research Technical Report, 1, USAF, HSD-TR-88-014 (October 1988) (Defense Technical Information Center [DTIC] AD-A206290), 23; Plotkin and Maglieri, Sonic Boom Research, 6. 6. Albion D. Taylor, The TRAPS Sonic Boom Program, NOAA Technical Memorandum ERL ARL-87 (July 1980). In reviewing this chapter, Kenneth Plotkin pointed out Taylors contribution. 7. Micah Downing, Kenneth Plotkin, Domenic Maglieri et al., Measurement of Controlled Focused Sonic Booms from Maneuvering Aircraft, JASA 104, no. 1 (July 1998): 112121. 8. Judy A. Rumerman, NASA Historical Data Book Volume VI: NASA Space Applications, Aeronautics, and Space Research and Technology, Tracking and Data Acquisition/Space Operations, Commercial Programs, and Resources, 19791988, NASA SP-2000-4012 (Washington, DC: NASA, 2000), 177178. 9. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 201215; Paul Proctor, Conference [sponsored by Battelle] Cites Potential Demand for Mach 5 Transports by Year 2000, Aviation Week (November 10), 1986, 4246. Another potential use for a hypersonic transport was to economically deliver components of Reagans Space Defense Initiative into low orbit.
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10. Rumerman, NASA Historical Data Book, Volume VI, 178. 11. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 218228; Chambers, Innovations in Flight, 50. 12. Domenic J. Maglieri, Victor E. Sothcroft, and John Hicks, Inuence of Vehicle Congurations and Flight Prole on X-30 Sonic Booms, AIAA paper no. 90-5224 (October 29, 1990); Domenic J. Maglieri, A Brief Review of the National Aero-Space Plane Sonic Booms Final Report, USAF Aeronautical Systems Center TR 94-9344 (December 1992). 13. Christine Darden et al., Status of Sonic Boom Methodology and Understanding; Proceedings of a Workshop Sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and Held at NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, January 1920, 1988, NASA CP 3027 (June 1989), 27. 14. Boeing Commercial Airplanes, High-Speed Civil Transport Study; Final Report, NASA CR 4234 (September 1989); Douglas Aircraft Company, 1989 High-Speed Civil Transport Studies, NASA CR 4375 (May 1991) (published late with an extension). For a summary of Boeings design process, see George T. Haglund, HSCT Designs for Reduced Sonic Boom, AIAA paper no. 91-3103 (September 1991). 15. Allen H. Whitehead, ed., First Annual High-Speed Research Workshop; Proceedings of a Workshop Sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC, and Held in Williamsburg, Virginia, May 1416, 1991, NASA CP 10087 (April 1992), pt. 1, 522, 202 (hereafter cited as 1991 HSR Workshop). Later sonic boom workshop titles will be similarly abbreviated with the year conducted. 16. Robert E. Anderson, First Annual HSR Program Workshop: Headquarters Perspective, in Whitehead, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 1, 7, 20, quotation taken from McLean, Supersonic Cruise Technology, 6. 17. George Unger, HSR Community Noise Reduction Technology Status Report, in Whitehead, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 1, 272. 18. Ibid., 275. 19. Session V, Sonic Boom (Aerodynamic Performance), 665810; Session IX, Sonic Boom (Human Response and Atmospheric Eects, in Whitehead, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 3, 11991366. 20. As examples of recent work at Langley, see Robert J. Mack and Kathy E. Needleman, A Methodology for Designing Aircraft to
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21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
Low Sonic Boom Constraints, NASA TM 4246 (February 1, 1991); Kathy E. Needleman, Christine M. Darden, and Robert J. Mack, A Study of Loudness as a Metric for Sonic Boom Acceptability, AIAA paper no. 91-0496 (January 1991). Christine M. Darden, ed., High-Speed Research: Sonic Boom; Proceedings of a Conference Held at Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, February 2527, 1992, parts 1 and 2, NASA CR 3172 (October 1992). Thomas A. Edwards, ed., High-Speed Research: Sonic Boom, in Proceedings of a Conference Sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, DC, and Held at the Ames Research Center, Moett Field, California, May 1214, 1993, NASA CP 10132, 1. (The second volume, on congurations and design, including sonic boom minimization, has never been publicly released on the NTRS.) David A. McCurdy, ed., High-Speed Research: 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop, Atmospheric Propagation and Acceptability Studies, in Proceedings of the Third High-Speed Research Sonic Boom Workshop, Hampton, Virginia, June 13, 1994, NASA CP 3209; High-Speed Research: 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration, Design, Analysis, and Testing, in Proceedings of the Third High-Speed Research Sonic Boom Workshop, Hampton, Virginia, June 13, 1994, NASA CP 209669 (December 1999). Daniel G. Baize, 1995 NASA High-Speed Research Program Sonic Boom Workshop: Proceedings of a Workshop Held at Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, September 1213, 1995, NASA CP 3335 (July 1996); Conguration, Design, Analysis, and Testing 2, NASA CP 1999-209520 (December 1999). For guidance in helping to choose which of the many research projects to cover, the author referred to Christine M. Darden, Progress in Sonic-Boom Understanding: Lessons Learned and Next Steps, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop, 269292. Figure 4-1 is copied from page 270. Peter G. Coen, Development of a Computer Technique for Prediction of Transport Aircraft Flight Prole Sonic Boom Signatures, NASA CR 188117 (March 1991) (based on M.S. thesis, George Washington University, Washington, DC.). Christine M. Darden et al., Design and Analysis of Low Boom Concepts at Langley Research Center, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 2, 676679. Photo with HSCT model provided to author by Dr. Darden.
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28. Ibid., 680698. 29. Ibid., 685, 687, 693. 30. Kinney, NASA and the Evolution of the Wind Tunnel, in Hallion, NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics 2, 346. 31. Thomas A. Edwards et al., Sonic Boom Prediction and Minimization Using Computational Fluid Dynamics, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 2, 728732, quotation from 732. 32. Ibid., 732. The other CFD codes used were TRANAIR (a full potential code with local mesh renement capability), TEAM (an Euler/ Navier-Stokes code with versatile zonal grid capability), AIRPLANE (an unstructured-grid Euler solver), and UPS (a parabolized Euler/ Navier-Stokes code). 33. Ibid., 736. 34. M.J. Siclari, Sonic Boom Predictions Using a Modied Euler Code, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 2, 760784. Figures 4-2, 4-3, and 4-4 extracted from 762, 766, and 772. 35. Robert J. Mack and Christine M. Darden, Limitations on WindTunnel Pressure Signature Extrapolation, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 201220. 36. Percy J. Bobbitt, Application of Computational Fluid Dynamics and Laminar Flow Technology for Improved Performance and Sonic Boom Reduction, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 137144. 37. Edwards et al., Sonic Boom Prediction Using Computational Fluid Dynamics, 1991 HSR Workshop, 732. 38. Susan E. Cli, Computational/Experimental Analysis of Three Low Sonic Boom Congurations with Design Modications, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 89118. 39. M.J. Siclari, Ground Extrapolation of Three-Dimensional NearField CFD Predictions for Several HSCT Congurations, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 175200, with gure 4-5 copied from 192. 40. Samson H. Cheung and Thomas A. Edwards, Supersonic Airplane Design Optimization Method for Aerodynamic Performance and Low Sonic Boom, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 3144. 41. John M. Morgenstern, Low Sonic Boom Design and Performance of a Mach 2.4/1.8 Overland High Speed Civil Transport, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 5563. 42. George T. Haglund and Steven S. Ogg, Two HSCT Mach 1.7 Low Sonic Boom Designs, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 6588, quotations from 66 and 72.
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43. Eugene Tu, Samson Cheung, and Thomas Edwards, Sonic Boom Prediction Exercise: Experimental Comparisons, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration Design, Analysis, and Testing 2, 1332. 44. Robert Mack, Wind-Tunnel Overpressure Signatures from a LowBoom HSCT Concept with Aft-Mounted Engines, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration Design, Analysis, and Testing 2, 5970. 45. Susan E. Cli et al., Design and Computational/Experimental Analysis of Low Sonic Boom Congurations, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration Design, Analysis, and Testing 2, 3357. For a review of CFD work at Ames from 19891994, see Samson Cheung, Supersonic Civil Airplane Study and Design: Performance and Sonic Boom, NASA CR-197745 (January 1995). 46. Christopher A. Lee, Design and Testing of Low Sonic Boom Congurations and an Oblique All-Wing Supersonic Transport, NASA CR-197744 (February 1995). 47. Michael J. Siclari, The Analysis and Design of Sonic Boom Congurations Using CFD and Numerical Optimization Techniques, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 107128, gure 4-6 extracted from 110. 48. Donald G. Baize et al., A Performance Assessment of Eight LowBoom High-Speed Civil Transport Concepts, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 149170, gure 4-7 copied from 155. 49. Domenic J. Maglieri, Victor E. Sothcott, Thomas N. Deer, and Percy J. Bobbitt, Overview of a Feasibility Study on Conducting Overight Measurements of Shaped Sonic Boom Signatures Using RPVs, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 2, 787807. 50. Domenic J. Maglieri et al., Feasibility Study on Conducting Overight Measurements of Shaped Sonic Boom Signatures Using the Firebee BQM-34E RPV, NASA CR-189715 (February 1993). Figure 4-8 is copied from page 52, with waveforms based on a speed of Mach 1.3 at 20,000 feet rather than the 9,000 feet of planned ight tests. 51. David Lux et al., Low-Boom SR-71 Modied Signature Demonstration Program, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration, Design, Analysis and Testing 2, 237248. 52. Interview, Dana Purifoy by Lawrence Benson, Dryden Flight Research Center, April 8, 2011. 53. Wyle Laboratories developed MDBOOM to meld CFD with sonic boom prediction theory. J.A. Page and K.J. Plotkin, An Ecient
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57. 58.
Method for Incorporating Computational Fluid Dynamics into Sonic Boom Theory, AIAA paper no. 91-3275 (September 1991). Plotkin and Cantril, Prediction of Sonic Boom at a Focus, AIAA paper no. 76-2. Kenneth Plotkin, Juliet Page, and J. Micah Downing, USAF Single-Event Sonic Boom Prediction Model: PCBoom3, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 171184. Edward H. Haering et al., Measurement of the Basic SR-71 Airplane Near-Field Signature, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration, Design, Analysis, and Testing, 171197; John M. Morgenstern et al., SR-71A Reduced Sonic Boom Modication Design, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 199217; Kamran Fouladi, CFD Predictions of Sonic-Boom Characteristics for Unmodied and Modied SR-71 Congurations, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 219235. Figure 4-9 is copied from 222. Catherine M. Bahm and Edward A. Haering, Ground-Recorded Sonic Boom Signatures of F/A-18 Aircraft in Formation Flight, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 220243. J. Micah Downing, Lateral Spread of Sonic Boom Measurements from US Air Force Boomle Flight Tests, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 117136; Domenic J. Maglieri et al., A Summary of XB-70 Sonic Boom Signature Data, Final Report, NASA CR 189630 (April 1992). William L. Willshire and David Chestnut, eds., Joint Acoustic Propagation Experiment (JAPE-91) Workshop, NASA CR 3231 (1993). William L. Willshire and David W. DeVilbiss, Preliminary Results from the White Sands Missile Range Sonic Boom Propagation Experiment, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 137144. Bart Lipkens and David T. Blackstock, Model Experiments to Study the Eects of Turbulence on Risetime and Waveform of N Waves, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 97108; Robin O. Cleveland, Mark F. Hamilton, and David T. Blackstock, Eect of Stratication and Geometrical Spreading on Sonic Boom Rise Time, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 1938; Richard Raspet, Henry Bass, Lixin Yao, and Wenliang Wu, Steady State Risetimes of Shock Waves in the Atmosphere, 1992 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 109116. The author was alerted to the contributions of Bass and Blackwood by Kenneth Plotkin.
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62. Gerry L. McAnich, Atmospheric Eects on Sonic BoomA Program Review, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 1, 12011207; Allan D. Pierce and Victor W. Sparrow, Relaxation and Turbulence Eects on Sonic Boom Signatures, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 1, 12111234; Kenneth J. Plotkin, The Eect of Turbulence and Molecular Relaxation on Sonic Boom Signatures, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 1, 12411261; Lixin Yao et al., Statistical and Numerical Study of the Relation Between Weather and Sonic Boom, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 3, 12631284. 63. Leonard M. Weinstein, An Optical Technique for Examining Aircraft Shock Wave Structures in Flight, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop, Atmospheric Propagation and Acceptability 1, 118. The following year, Weinstein demonstrated improved results using a digital camera: An Electronic Schlieren Camera for Aircraft Shock Wave Visualization, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 244258. 64. Kevin P. Shepherd, Overview of NASA Human Response to Sonic Boom Program, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 3, 12871291; Shepherd et al., Sonic Boom Acceptability Studies, 1991 HSR Workshop, pt. 3, 12951311. 65. David A. McCurdy et al., An In-Home Study of Subjective Response to Simulated Sonic Booms, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Atmospheric Propagation and Acceptability 1, 193207; McCurdy and Sherilyn A. Brown, Subjective Response to Simulated Sonic Boom in Homes, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 278297, with gure 4-10 copied from 279. 66. James M. Fields et al., Residents Reactions to Long-Term Sonic Boom Exposure: Preliminary Results, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop: Atmospheric Propagation and Acceptability 1, 209217. 67. Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 253. 68. Christine M. Darden, Progress in Sonic-Boom Understanding: Lessons Learned and Next Steps, 1994 Sonic Boom Workshop, Conguration, Design, and Testing 2, 272. 69. Ibid., 272274. 70. Ibid., 275. 71. Ibid. 289290. 72. 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration, Design, Analysis, and Testing 2, NASA CP 1999-209520, 47175. 73. James M. Fields, Reactions of Residents to Long-Term Sonic Boom Noise Environments, NASA CR-201704 (June 1997).
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74. Edward A. Haering, L.J. Ehernberger, and Stephen A. Whitmore, Preliminary Airborne Experiments for the SR-71 Sonic Boom Propagation Experiment, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 176198. 75. Ibid., Stephen R. Norris, Edward A. Haering, and James E. Murray, Ground-Based Sensors for the SR-71 Sonic Boom Propagation Experiment, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 1, 199218; Hugh W. Poling, Sonic Boom Propagation Codes Validated by Flight Test, NASA CR 201634 (October 1996). 76. Figure 4-11 copied from Edward A. Haering and James E. Murray, Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration/Experiment Airborne Data: SSBD Final Review, PowerPoint presentation, August 17, 2004, slide no. 3. 77. Robert J. Mack, A Whitham-Theory Sonic-Boom Analysis of the TU-144 Aircraft at Mach Number of 2.2, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop 2, 116. For a complete account of this cooperative project by one of the test pilots, see Robert A. Rivers, NASAs Flight Test of the Russian Tu-144 SST, in Hallion, NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics 2, 914956. 78. Volume 1 of the 1995 NASA High-Speed Research Program Sonic Boom Workshop, published in July 1996 (without a subtitle) as CP-3335, covered theoretical and experimental sonic boom propagation, while the second volume, Conguration Design, Analysis, and Testing, was published in December 1999 as CP 1999-209520. 79. Ibid., 1, eight papers in Session 1 on atmospheric propagation eects, 1175. 80. Ibid., 1, ve papers in Session 3 on human response, 278332. 81. Kenneth J. Plotkin, Theoretical Basis for Finite Dierence Extrapolation of Sonic Boom Signatures, 1995 Sonic Boom Workshop: Conguration, Design, Analysis, and Testing 1, 55. 82. Graham Warwick, Cutting to the Bone, Flight International (July 17, 2001), accessed ca. June 15, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/ articles/2007/07/17/134122/cutting-to-the-bone.html. 83. Chambers, Innovations in Flight, 6162; Conway, High-Speed Dreams, 286300; James Schultz, HSR Leaves Legacy of Spinos, Aerospace America 37, no. 9 (September 1999): 2832. The Acoustical Society held its third sonic-boom symposium in Norfolk from October 1516, 1998. Because of HSR distribution limitations, many of the presentations could be oral only, but a few years later the ASA was able to publish some of them in a special edition of its journal. For a status report on one major spino at the end of
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the HSR, see Kenneth J. Plotkin, State of the Art of Sonic Boom Modeling, JASA 111, no. 1, pt. 3 (January 2002): 530536. 84. National Research Council, Commercial Supersonic Technology: The Way Ahead (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2001), 1, accessed ca. June 15, 2011, http://www.nap.edu/openbook. php?record_id=10283. 85. Ibid. 86. Ibid., 43.
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CHAPTER 5
With NASAs High-Speed Research program having once again revealed how dicult it would be to design and produce a full-size airliner with a sonic boom quiet enough to y over land, the alternative of small- or medium-size supersonic aircraft for civilian passengers began attracting more attention. One of the worlds top sonic boom experts was among those looking into this option. In November 1998, as the HSR program was winding down, Richard Seebass presented two papers on supersonic ight and the sonic boom at NATOs von Krmn Institute in Belgium.1 One of his papers examined the general problems and prospects for commercial supersonic transports,2 while the other traced the history and current status of sonic boom minimization theory.3 In each of these and subsequent publications, he concluded by endorsing a less ambitious but more pragmatic way than the HSCT to surmount the sonic boom barrier: a supersonic business jet (SSBJ).
of $1 billion a year for the plane, which he optimistically hoped (with enough outside nancial support) to bring to market in 2000. Using Seebasss minimization techniques, the design was projected to have a sonic boom overpressure as low as 0.4 psf, although locally focused booms during acceleration would still be a problem. FAA certication, especially for the sonic boom and jet noise near airports under the FAAs Stage 3 standard of 1978, was identied as a potential show stopper.5 Greenes presentation emphasized the importance of Government help in developing such an aircraft. Although the United States had failed to be rst to develop an SST, he argued that it is NASAs role to make the US rst in business jets.6 Based on the ongoing experience of the Concorde and related market analyses, Richard Seebasss subsequent presentations in 1998 were decidedly pessimistic about the viability of a large supersonic passenger plane in the foreseeable future. With 350,000 mostly supersonic ying hours during the Concordes rst 14 years of reliable operation, Seebass did consider the Concorde a great technical success.7 Economically, however, the case for another SST had yet to be made. The British and French governments paid for most of the Concordes development and production (essentially donating the last ve of them to their national airlines). This allowed their small eet of 12 aircraft to attract enough passengers willing and able to pay a high fare for the two airlines to break even on operations, even at a fuel-cost-per-passenger mile several times that of a Boeing 747. But because such a U.S. Government subsidy was highly unlikely in the future, Seebass observed how the development of a supersonic transport that can be operated at a prot by the airlines and sold in sucient numbers for the airframe and engine manufacturers to realize a prot as well remains a challenge.8 Specically, the challenge is to build, certify, and operate an SST at marginally increased fares while providing the airlines a return on investment comparable to a similar investment in subsonic aircraft.9 As shown by repeated studies, generating sucient passenger loads to justify the expense of a supersonic airliner would most likely require overland supersonic routes from a large number of airports. This meant solving the acoustic issues of jet noise, especially when taking o, and the sonic boom when accelerating and cruising. Recent NASA HSR data indicated that adequate sound suppression of 15 to 20 perceived noise decibels would add about 6,500 pounds per engine, or the equivalent weight of 90 passengers.10 As researched by NASA as far back as the SCAR program of the 1970s (see chapter 3), a variable-cycle engine that could switch from a quieter high-bypass ratio during takeo and landing to low-bypass ratio to limit drag during cruise could be needed. Although engine noise was an intimidating challenge, it might be potentially solvable with some future technical breakthroughs.
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When it came to sonic boom minimization, some immutable laws of physics posed even more intractable problems. One of these, warned Seebass, was that the sonic boom due to lift cannot be avoided. The aircrafts weight must be transmitted to the ground.11 In general, as he verbally explained a key equation, the minimum achievable sonic boom is related to the aircrafts weight divided by three-halves the power of its length. In addition to the easier-saidthan-done goal of reducing weight, the main way to alleviate the eects of lift was to nd acceptable tradeos in designing an airframe (i.e., the aircrafts volume) to shape the sonic boom signature in a manner tolerable to listeners but not too detrimental to aerodynamic performance. As for the old problem of determining what would be acceptable to the public, the HSRs human-response surveys and NASA Langleys simulator experiments along with related research in Canada and Japan had improved ways to measure the apparent loudness of variously shaped sonic boom signatures. Although about 5 percent of people might nd any sonic boom they can discern as unacceptable, some of the results indicated that a perceived level of 68 decibels outdoors would be acceptable to 95 percent of those exposed to it. This, Seebass predicted, could be achieved by a signature with an initial shock-pressure rise of 0.25 psfif a maximum pressure of 1 psf is delayed 20 milliseconds after the front shock arrives and then begins to recede 20 milliseconds before the onset of the rear shock. Still to be determined, however, were the eects of such waveform shaping on the longstanding issue of acceptable sonic boom vibrations indoors. This would need to be determined by ight testing with an aircraft designed for this purpose.12 Seebass was already convinced, however, that it would not be possible for an SST-size airplanes elongated N-wave signature to avoid causing the structural vibrations that annoy people indoors, thereby continuing to restrict it to intercontinental routes over water and some unpopulated regions.13 The one possible exception, at least in theory, might be a supersonic oblique-wing transport. As Seebass explained in his sonic boom minimization paper, The aerodynamic optimum supersonic aircraft [is] an elliptic wing ying obliquely, which we note is unusual in that its maximum sonic boom does not occur directly below the aircraft.14 As regards market potential, it appears that an oblique ying wing could provide a Mach 1.41.6 transport that operates with no surcharge over future subsonic transports and compete with them over land as well.15 Such an unconventional conguration, with its long wingspan, would of course require some airport modications, but even more daunting, it would require a very expensive R&D eort. One can also assume that passenger acceptance of such a strange-looking airplane and its interior accommodations might also pose a challenge.16
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Since building vibrations were not an inherent problem for a properly designed smaller airplane, Seebass asked a hypothetical question: Could a 100 ft. long, Mach 1.6 supersonic business jet, cruising at an altitude of 40,000 feet and weighing 60,000 lbs.[,] have an acceptable sonic boom?17 The benecial eects of vibrational relaxation from small aircraft were well understood many years ago, but we did not consider them in sonic boom minimization because they are not important in the sonic boom of transport-sized aircraft. The shock waves from a much smaller, slender-bodied supersonic airplane, however, could be so weak as to be nearly inaudible while also containing less energy in the frequencies important in structural response and indoor annoyance.18 The fact that business jets do not follow scheduled routes might also help in the certication of supersonic versions, since they would not create the repetitive sonic booms of supersonic airliners. This, Seebass concluded, leads us to conclude that a small, appropriately designed supersonic business jets sonic boom may be nearly inaudible outdoors and hardly discernible indoors.19 Such an airplane, he further stated, appears to have a signicant market if certiable over most land areas.20
major airframe and engine manufacturers. The company then drew up preliminary designs for four two-engine congurations with a range of 4,000 miles and an ability to cruise subsonically as well as supersonically using a modied version of the Concordes proven Rolls-Royce Snecma Olympus 493 engine. By 1985, concerns about weight, the FAAs Stage 3 noise restrictions, and the sonic boom brought the project to an end.23 In early 1988, while Douglas and Boeing were engaged with NASA in studies for the HSCT, Gulfstream Aerospace began studying market and technical criteria for an SSBJ.24 (Grumman had started Gulfstream in 1958 as part of a diversication strategy into civilian aircraft but divested itself of the brand in 1972.25) The company, which catered to the high end of the executive jet market, drew up plans for a 125-foot, 100,000-pound, Mach 1.5 airplane with ogive-delta wings (i.e., with their trailing edges angled forward, much as the leading edges were swept back). In a preliminary attempt at sonic boom minimization, the designers were able to lower its predicted overpressure from 1.0 psf to 0.6 psf but only at the expense of some increased wave drag.26 Meanwhile, the sudden ending of the Cold War (and the unraveling of state funding for the Russian aircraft industry) led the Sukhoi Design Bureau, which had been studying a 114-foot, cranked-arrow wing SSBJ (the Su-51), to seek an international partner. At the 1989 Paris Air Show, Sukhois chief designer and Gulfstreams chairman agreed to explore joint development, taking advantage of the formers expertise with supersonic ghters and the latters expertise with successful business jets.27 The companies aimed at a speed of Mach 2 and range of 4,000 miles as they considered design options, but the problems of weight versus performance requirements proved to be beyond current technologies. Although variable-cycle and ejector-mixer engine designs might partly mitigate the level of jet noise, Gulfstream concluded that a concerted eort by the FAA, NASA, industry, and academia would be needed to solve the problem of sonic boom acceptability.28 Even after the two companies parted ways in 1992, Sukhoi continued pre-prototype design work in the hopes of forming another partnership in the future.29 As will be shown in later sections, Gulfstream too remained interested in a supersonic SSBJ, including sonic boom minimization technology. In addition to the university and company projects, NASA conducted or sponsored eight SSBJ-related studies between 1977 (4 years after it dropped sonic boom minimization from the SCAR program) and 1986 (just as it initiated studies on the HSCT). The rst, by Vincent Mascitti of Langley, explored ve possible congurations for an eight-passenger, Mach 2.2 supersonic executive aircraft based on the latest SCAR research ndings and technological advances. Although reduced engine noise was an objective, none of the options were designed with the expressed goal of sonic boom minimization, so a transatlantic range of 3,200 nautical miles was one of the criteria.30 Also in 1977,
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Boeing completed a feasibility study for NASA on a subscale SCAR demonstrator followed in 1979 by North American Rockwells proposed supersonic business jet presented at the last Supersonic Cruise Research Conference (both described in chapter 3). The next NASA study, left unpublished in 1981 as a possible casualty of the Reagan administrations abrupt cancellation of the SCR program, was the rst phase of what had been planned as a three-phase market survey for supersonic business jets.31 The same year, however, also marked the completion of the rst of four SSBJ studies performed for Langley by the local technology division of Kentron International (later PRC Kentron). Each of the studies applied the latest technical advances to various SSBJ concepts during the period between the SCR and HSCT programs. Kentrons 1981 report presented concepts for an advanced droop-nose, two-engine Mach 2.7 business jet carrying eight passengers a distance of 3,200 nautical miles. Reecting advances since Mascittis study in 1977, the researchers assumed the use of the latest titaniumand superelastic-formed diusion bonded materials to reduce its weight from 74,000 pounds to 64,000 pounds and a scaled down version of the GE 21/ J11 variable-cycle turbofan engine for propulsion. As regards its sonic boom, the predicted overpressure of 1.0 psf at the start of cruise and 0.7 psf at the nish (due to reduced fuel weight) would still prohibit overland operations.32 The next study, completed in 1983, examined the use of a more fuel-ecient turbofan engine, the smallest possible eight-passenger compartment, and only one pilot to reduce takeo weight to only 51,000 pounds. The result was a 103-foot-long, arrow-winged Mach 2.3 executive jet with a range of 3,350 nautical miles at Mach 2.3. Using Carlsons simplied overpressure prediction method with additional area-rule calculations, former NASA supersonic aerodynamicist A. Warner Robins hoped the combination of low wing loading, high cruise altitude, and modied ight proles for climb and acceleration would alleviate the sonic boom problem on cross-country ights. The plane was also designed to y 2,700 nautical miles at Mach 0.9 if necessary when cruising over land.33 In 1984, the same Kentron researchers completed the concept for a 114-foot-long executive jet with variable-sweep wings for better low-speed performance, which would eliminate the need for a droop nose as on the previous conguration. Although such adjustable wings had been found infeasible for the SST in the 1960s, the researchers hoped lower weight materials and advances in stability and control technology would make them more practical (which subsequent analysis proved overly optimistic). This latest design (gure 5-1) would have a ramp weight of 64,500 pounds with eight passengers and a two-person crew. Its performance included a range of almost 3,500 nautical miles at Mach 2.0 and over 5,000 miles at Mach 0.9 with takeo and landing
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distances of less than 5,000 feet. Using the same prediction method as before, the overpressures at Mach 1.2 and Mach 2.0 varied from 0.9 psf to 2.0 psf depending on weight and altitude, making speeds no higher than Mach 0.9 mandatory for overland cruise.34 The last of the NASA studies was completed in 1986. For possible expansion of the customer base, the Kentron design team assessed the feasibility of an eight-passenger, long-range SSBJ with a planform similar to the 1981 and 1983 studies that could be converted into a missile-carrying interceptor (presumably for foreign sales). With a takeo weight of 61,600 pounds for the civilian version and 63,246 pounds for the military version, its low-bypass-ratio turbofan engines would give it a range of more than 3,600 nautical miles or a combat radius of more than 1,600 nautical miles, both at Mach 2.0. Takeos would require a 6,600-foot runway. By ying an optimum prole for climb and acceleration, sonic boom overpressure was calculated at 1.0 psf, but the plane could also cruise transonically for 3,780 nautical miles at Mach 0.96.35 Although NASA and the major aircraft manufacturers focused on the HSCT for the next decade, the idea of a small supersonic plane continued to intrigue many in the small airplane manufacturing and general aviation communities. The rapidly growing corporate jet market appeared to have room for higher speeds, perhaps using more fractional ownership arrangements. The main roadblocks were the complex technology and considerable resources that would be required to develop, test, and produce such an advanced aircraft. This made Government support and partnerships among competing companies appear necessary. Overseas, Frances Dassault Aviation explored developing a
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supersonic version of its popular Falcon business jet in the 1990s before scaling back its eort because of the lack of a suitable engine.36 Sometime in the mid 1990s, Lockheeds legendary but secretive Skunk Works (ocially titled its Advanced Development Company), which 20 years earlier began work on the rst jet airplane to have a very low radar signature, became interested in learning how to design airframes with a low sonic boom signature. (In March 1995, Lockheed merged with Martin Marietta Corporation to become Lockheed Martin.) Obviously, there would also be military advantages for some air vehiclessuch as aircraft designed for high-speed reconnaissance not to betray their presence by laying down a loud sonic boom carpet. To help in this eort, the Skunk Works hired McDonnell Douglas aerodynamicist John Morgenstern, who had been that companys lead boom analyst for the HSCT (see chapter 4). He was among those involved in designing a patented control surface near the nose of an airplane that could be extended to reduce the pressure and slope of the shock waves as a way of shaping its sonic boom.37 To further add to its expertise, the Skunk Works also brought in none other than Richard Seebass as a consultant.38 By 1998, Lockheed Martin had made enough progress on sonic boom minimization that it teamed up with Gulfstream to work on ways to develop a low-boom SSBJ.39 (General Dynamics acquired Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation in 1999 as a wholly owned subsidiary.40) Meanwhile, the market for business jets was booming. It grew about 400 percent from 1995 through 2000, much of this captured from the scheduled airlines business and rst-class passenger categories. Furthermore, a good portion of this growth was in new models of more sophisticated and expensive corporate jets, whether privately purchased or under fractional ownership arrangements. Progress in understanding how to deal with the sonic boom reinforced a conviction that customers would be willing to pay the premium required to develop and produce an SSBJ. With the advent of new technologies, and a travel market that increasingly desires time above all else, the business case is clearing emerging for new, fast transports.41 The National Research Councils study on the way ahead for commercial supersonic ight (described at the end of chapter 4) found that airframe manufacturers believed customers would be willing to pay about twice as much for a plane that could y twice as fast as current business jets and estimated the potential market for such an SSBJ to be at least 200 aircraft over a 10-year period.42 Unlike the Skunk Works highly classied stealth technology, which did not have civilian applications, reducing the sonic boom could obviously benet the private sector as well as have potential military advantages. The Department of Defense, however, had no current operational requirement to develop a new supersonic bomber, let alone one with a quiet sonic boom. Indeed, the Air Forces bomber roadmap, released in March 1999, focused on sustaining its current
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mix of B-1B Lancers, B-2 Spirits, and B-52H Stratofortresses for decades to come with elding of a new bomber postponed until the 2030s.43 Internally, however, many in the Air Force were still interested in advanced strike concepts.
high-speed transport that could quickly deliver vital spares and other equipment to forward-operating locations (the function most related to an SSBJ). To manage the QSP program, DARPA chose Richard W. Wlezien, a researcher from NASA Langley recently assigned to DARPA to manage a program on microadaptive ow controls. His specialty, the manipulation and control of shear ows, was a good match for overseeing technologies relevant to the QSP program.50 In seeking participants from both industry and academia, Wlezien made sure to cast a wide net. As DARPAs initial step in disseminating information about the program, it hosted an Advanced Supersonic Platform Industry Day in Alexandria, VA, on March 28, 2000. The announcement for this event, released 1 month earlier, informed interested parties that it is our desire to facilitate the formation of strong teams and business relationships in order to develop competitive responses to a forthcoming DARPA Request for Information (RFI) and any subsequent solicitation.51 Although encouraging the participation of small technology companies and academic institutions with specialized expertise, DARPA needed major aerospace corporations to assess and assimilate the wide range of airframe and engine technologies that would be required for the type of quiet, long-range supersonic aircraft desired. With the consolidations in the defense industry after the end of the Cold War, the three corporations with the required expertise and resources to be these system integrators were Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. For help in formulating the programs sonic boom strategy, Richard Wlezien received briengs from experts in the eld such as Peter Coen of NASA Langley and Domenic Maglieri and Percy Bobbitt of Eagle Aeronautics.52 The latter two planted some seeds for a sonic boom demonstration to eventually become part of the QSP by reviewing their Firebee proposal from the early HSR program and pointing out the continued value of physically proving sonic boom minimization predictions with an actual airframe in the real atmosphere.53 (Through a Lockheed Martin contract, DARPA later had them prepare a survey on the ndings of previous sonic boom research as background information for QSP participants.54) In August 2000, the DARPA Tactical Technology Oce issued its formal solicitation for QSP systems studies and technology integration to include seeking detailed proposals for fostering new technologies sucient to mitigate the sonic boom for unrestricted supersonic ight over land. Phase I of the program was expected to last 12 months. Phase II contracts, to be awarded later through a down-select process, would extend through the second year. The solicitation informed interested participants that the program is designed to motivate approaches to sonic boom reduction that bypass incremental business as usual approach and is focused on the validation of multiple new and
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innovative breakthrough technologies for noise reduction that can ultimately be integrated into an ecient quiet supersonic vehicle.55 The initial goal of the QSP program was to develop and validate critical technology for long range advanced sonic boom, reduced take-o and landing noise, and increased eciency relative to current-technology supersonic aircraft.56 The only rm requirement at the start of the program, mentioned in the solicitation and succinctly put into context by Richard Wlezien, was a concept that would reduce the overpressure of the sonic boom to 0.3 psfa level that wont rattle your windows or shake the china in your cabinet.57 It was hoped a signature this low would allow unrestricted operations over land, although a sonic boom with 0.5 psf might be permissible in designated corridors. System goals (less rm than the sonic boom requirement) included a speed of Mach 2.4, a gross weight of 100,000 pounds (about one-quarter that of the Concorde), a range of 6,000 miles, a 20-percent payload capacity, and meeting the FAAs Stage 3 noise restrictions.58 Derived goals included a lift-to-drag ratio of 11 to 1, an engine-thrust-to-weight ratio of 7.5 to 1, a specied fuelconsumption rate, a 40-percent fuel fraction, and a 40-percent empty-weight fraction (both relative to gross takeo weight). The concept aircraft was also expected to have adequate subsonic performance. As explained by Wlezien, We have worked with NASA and the US Air Force to come up with numbers which make sense and are self-consistent. In our view, the numbers are reasonable given the state of the technologies, but still well o the projected trend lines.59 Even so, meeting these multiple goals would not be easy. This was made clear by David Whelan, director of the DARPA Tactical Technology Oce. We do not see any silver bullet solution.... But it might be possible to make improvements in many dierent areas that add up to a real net improvement.60 Achieving these goals would require the R&D capabilities of major aircraft and engine manufacturers, scientic and technical ideas from university engineering departments and specialized contractors, and the support and facilities of Government agencies. The needed NASA contributions would include modeling skills, wind tunnel facilities, and eventual ight-test operations. NASA administrator Dan Goldin strongly approved the QSPs approach. Rather than a big point-design program that characterized HSR, [it] is a precompetitive study addressing core issueseciency, engine jet noise, sonic boom overpressure, and emissions.... Once we have suciently explored a broad range of promising technologies, we will work to develop and fund a more substantial industrial partnership.61 The QSP emphasized potential military uses, but the sonic boom was currently a bigger problem for civilian aviation. Military aircraft had always been able to y supersonic in designated airspace in the United States, so DARPAs goal of a validated concept for boom minimization could be of greatest benet to the development of an SSBJ.
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After the announcement of Northrop Grummans QSP contract, Boccadoro provided some insight into the companys team-oriented approach. Because of its lack of commercial airplane experience, NGC sought out Raytheon, specically the Raytheon Aircraft Company subsidiary that made Beechcraft and Hawker corporate jets, as its primary subcontractor.69 They will be working principally the civil applications, and well be working principally the military applications, he explained.70 For help on engine technology and concepts, Northrop Grumman would be working with Pratt & Whitney, General Electric, and MITs Gas Turbine Laboratory (all awarded their own QSP contracts) as well as General Motors Allison Transmission and the Air Force Propulsion Laboratory.71 In addition to having the sonic boom expertise of Wyle Laboratories, Eagle Aeronautics, and Stanford University, Northrop Grummans own scientists and engineers had also gained some relevant knowledge in previous decades. As Boccadoro put it, We understand the physics of boom mitigation.72 By January 2001, all 16 of the QSP Phase I contracts had been announced. Many of them focused on engine technologies, where major innovations were considered essential. To study concepts for advanced propulsions systems using high-bypass turbofans to meet the QSP goals, DARPA selected General Electric and Pratt & Whitney. Other contracts called for analyses of specic propulsion subcategories: Aerodyne for a vaporization-cooled turbine blade; Honeywell for ceramic components and compressor ow control, Techsburg (of Blacksburg, VA) for controlling the boundary-layer thickness of engine passageways; and MITs Gas Turbine Laboratory for a two-stage, counter-rotating aspirated compressor.73 Most of the other QSP contracts involved innovative or even radical technologies for sonic boom mitigation. Gulfstream would follow up on some of its previous work by looking at integrated, top-mounted supersonic inlets that (being above the wings) could counter the contribution of inlet nacelle shocks to the sonic boom signature. Weidlinger Associates of New York City was engaged to investigate the previously dismissed theory of increasing virtual body length to spread out shock waves using the heat from a thermal keel or ramjet. Directed Technologies of Arlington, VA, in partnership with Reno Aeronautics, would assess using foamed metallic surfaces to promote natural laminar ow over a thin unswept wing (similar in shape to that of the F-104 Starghter). Laminar ow, which is easier to achieve at supersonic speeds than at subsonic speeds, would greatly decrease the boundary layer turbulence and friction that causes aerodynamic drag by keeping air adjacent to the surface in a thin, smoothly shearing layer. (Active laminar ow requires the use of airow devices creating suction to draw air into tiny holes in a special material covering a wings surface.) In January 2000, NASA Dryden had tested a scale model
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of Reno Aeronautics Corporations natural laminar ow wing attached to the center pylon of an F-15B on four supersonic ights with remarkable results.74 Universities were the recipients of the remaining sonic boom research contracts. DARPA chose Stanford (by then the university doing the most advanced sonic boom research) to develop an ecient boom propagation tool optimized for multidisciplinary design techniques, Princeton for integrating aircraft shaping with energy-generated ionization of plasmas to prevent shock wave strengthening, and Arizona State University to demonstrate and develop design tools for using distributed roughness to inhibit crossow instabilities on natural laminar ow over moderately swept wings. Finally, the University of Colorado received a contract for a more conventional assessment of aircraftshaping techniques with a three-dimensional propagation tool to prevent shock waves from coalescing into the sonic boom.75 Sadly, Richard Seebass, chair of the University of Colorados Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences until May 1999, passed away in November 2000 at the age of 64just as the Quiet Supersonic Platform was getting ready to put his and Albert Georges longstanding sonic boom minimization theory into practice.76 These selections reected DARPAs policy to encourage smaller businesses and academic organizations to participate. As Richard Wlezien put it, We are trying to get the traditional players to think out of the box and to bring in people with new ideas on an equal footing.77 Not only did the QSP program aim to promote innovative technologies, it also employed an innovative management philosophy to get its contractorsincluding those who were traditional competitorsto work together. Although some of their techniques, ndings, and data remained proprietary, DARPA required the major aircraft and engine companies to assess and integrate the impact of all the technologies under consideration. In Phase I of the QSP (which lasted through 2001), the three systems integrators developed conceptual airplane designs intended to meet the aforementioned sonic boom requirement and performance goals with promising technologies and congurations. In addition to relevant ndings by the QSP technology contractors, the designs relied heavily on tools and methods developed during the HSR and previous NASA programs while incorporating the latest computational and optimization techniques, especially increasingly powerful CFD capabilities. Even with improved modeling and prediction of sonic boom propagation, however, the value of actually demonstrating the persistence of a reduced sonic boom signature through the atmosphere became increasingly apparent as the program continued.78 The three systems integration contractors, their partners, and all the technical and propulsion contractors worked intensely but quietly for the next year with relatively little about their progress appearing in the aerospace trade press or other media. The rst task of Northrop Grumman, Boeing, and Lockheed
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Martin was to perform 3-month studies on system scoping for their conceptual aircraft designs and technology assessments on developing and validating sonic boom mitigation measures. At the same time, the specialized sonic boom mitigation contractors worked on technology scoping studies of their own. Meanwhile, the advanced propulsion contractors worked on 6-month studies.79 By the end of the QSP programs rst 3 months, the technology and propulsion contractors provided their ndings to date to the system integration teams, which also shared the results of their own sonic mitigation studies among themselves. For the remaining 9 months of Phase I, the three major contractors worked on their conceptual supersonic aircraft designs while completing technology evaluation reports on sonic boom mitigation. The sonic boom contractors also completed technology evaluation reports on their assigned areas while the propulsion contractors, upon completing their 6-month scoping studies, moved on to integrating technologies into conceptual designs.80 The progress being made to address the sonic boom problem using computational uid dynamics was somewhat encouraging. It doesnt require new science, said Richard Wlezien, it requires good engineering.81 Although most of the QSP program went pretty much according to plan, two major changes involving the sonic boom occurred toward the end of its rst year. Despite the progress being made on minimization, the sonic boom requirement of 0.3 psf was downgraded to be just one of the goals, equivalent to such other goals as long-range and low takeo weight. This reected a course adjustment to move the program more in the direction of military missions (perhaps at least partly a response to the terrorist attacks of September 11). By then, however, QSP management had also decided that the most pressing issue involving the sonic boom was to actually demonstrate the persistence of a shaped signature through the atmosphere. This would be consistent with the
Figure 5-2. QSP timeline and major program activities. (DARPA) Key: LFC = laminar ow control; MDO = multiple discipline optimization.
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recently published report on supersonic technology by the National Research Council, which recommended proceeding to a system/subsystem model or prototype demonstration in a relevant environment.82 The Northrop Grumman QSP team had already made preliminary plans on how to do this in the 3 months before April 2001, when DARPA formally solicited proposals for this demonstration.83 After the NGC proposal was selected, this spino of the QSP program became known as the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration. The SSBD is the subject of the next three chapters, with the third of these also covering a follow-on project sponsored by NASA known as the Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment. Figure 5-2 depicts the nal structure of the QSP program as it evolved after these changes.84 Although there had been some hopes for a full-scale QSP Phase III that would have continued work on the design concepts or lead to development of a truly low-boom X-plane,85 the SSBE was later considered by some sources to have been Phase III of the Quiet Supersonic Platform.
from the inlet shock.89 Boccadoros team also found that an above-airframe engine position resulted in less spillage as well as external compression and expansion elds. To achieve lower drag, the team was using Arizona States distributed roughness concept to enable laminar ow on the planes lifting surfaces while using natural laminar ow on some of its other surfaces. As for applying any of the more revolutionary methods, a key nding of our studies was that the QSP goals could be achieved without active or exotic sonic boom reduction technologies.90 More details on the QSP concepts came out during the annual AIAA meeting in Reno, NV, during mid-January. After studying 12 design concepts, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon came up with a preferred dual-relevant concept appropriate for civilian as well as military purposes. They expected this conguration would meet the QSPs sonic boom mitigation goal with a slightly slower cruise speed of Mach 2.2 and a takeo distance of 7,000 feet, which would be about halfway between the shorter business jet distance and the longer allowance for a military strike aircraft. The design featured a strut-braced (or joined-wing) conguration. A single vertical tail extended above the two 91 engine nacelles nested IMAGES FOR FIGURE 5-2: on the rear of the aircraft. Steve Komadina, chief engineer on Northrops QSP team, later said this conguration is a design we think can be evolved into a strike aircraft or business jet.92 It could accommodate
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either two 27-foot-long weapons bays or a 22-foot passenger cabin.93 A briefing slide released later (gure 5-3) depicts Northrop Grummans concept as it evolved during both phases of the QSP.94 Advance news of DARPAs selection of Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin to continue developing their concepts under Phase II of the QSP rst leaked out in early March 2002.95 Lockheed Martins concept had a slender fuselage (described as sinuous), highly contoured swept wings with engines beneath, and a V tail while Boeing, which later published a paper with details on its design eort, had probably the most radical conguration. It featured two sets of thin, unswept wings (with natural laminar ow) fore and aft and a swiveling main wing that could be stowed along the top of the fuselage during cruise.96 DARPA ocially awarded its Phase II contracts in May 2002. Northrop Grummans Integrated Systems Sector received $2.7 million to validate the QSP concepts dened during the programs rst phase. This would include wind tunnel testing of its preferred aircraft conguration and work with Raytheon on the fabrication and testing of a structural component made with an advanced composite core. At the same time, DARPA also awarded the NGC Integrated Systems Sector a $3.4 million contract for what became the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration.97 Other contract awards included Lockheed Martins Skunk Works for its design concept, General Electric for its advanced propulsion system, and Arizona State University for its distributed-roughness laminar ow research. By the time these contracts were awarded, DARPA had decided to make a priority of the long-range supersonic bomber for the QSPs military mission with the more liberal sonic boom goal of 0.5 psf overpressure, and it decided to place more emphasis on such factors as survivability.98 This reduced boom might allow the aircraft to y in new supersonic corridors beyond the limited connes of military training airspace without causing the public relations problems experienced by the Air Forces last midrange Mach 2 bomber, the B-58 Hustler (described in chapter 1). On September 26, 2002, Northrop Grumman unveiled more about the preferred system concept of its QSP team, including an image of the sleek plane in ight (as pictured in front of this chapter). Its joined wing airframe was 156 feet long with a wingspan of 58 feet, a speed somewhat higher than Mach 2, and a range of 6,000 nautical miles. As had been a consideration with the Concorde, this speed would allow the use of lower cost materials, especially aluminum. The main wings were highly swept but thin and narrow for lower drag and better laminar ow, which would be easier to sustain with less turbulence across a shorter chord (wing width). These high-aspect-ratio cranked-arrow wings were braced by two much smaller wings swept forward from the rear of the aircraft. The concept also featured a dual top-mounted isentropic inlet (designed for smooth and steady airow), extensive laminar ow
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aerodynamics, and an adaptive leading edge on its wings. Team members from Raytheon Aircraft Company designed an SSBJ variant.99 Further renements of the military concept gave it a cruise speed of Mach 2.2.100 To supplement its extensive CFD modeling, Northrop Grumman tested a scale model of its nal QSP conguration at Mach 2.2 in the 9-foot-by-7-foot section of the NASA Ames Supersonic Wind Tunnel for 33 hours in April 2003.101 Richard Wlezien moved to NASA Headquarters in the early fall of 2002. He was replaced as QSP manager by Steven H. Walker, who had been assigned to DARPA from Defense Research and Engineering in the Pentagon.102 Walker later explained that even though the sonic boom goal had been relaxed, What we ended up nding out was that if you improve lift and drag, if you improve specic fuel consumption, if you reduce your empty weight, all these things lend themselves to lower sonic boom as well.103 Except for the ongoing Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration, DARPA phased out the QSP program during the rst half of 2003. Its biennial budget estimate submitted in February included $4.8 million for FY 2003 but nothing for FY 2004.104 Northrop Grummans QSP team submitted extensive documentation of its work on May 22, 2003. Results of its and Lockheed Martins QSP concepts went to the Air Force for use in its ongoing long-range-strike platform study.105 No longer comfortable with the rather unambitious projections in its 1999 bomber roadmap, the Air Force leadership was seeking the latest ideas on long-range strike from the aerospace industry. It eventually examined more than 20 proposals from Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and Boeing.106 None of these, however, led to a follow-on program like the QSP that could continue rening and demonstrating other supersonic technologies, such as reduced boom designs, as had once been contemplated. Even so, the QSP participants had learned much and documented a great deal of data that could be of potential value in the future. The program had explored and evaluated a wide range of cutting-edge technologies, advancing the state of the art in aeronautics, propulsion, and related elds. For Northrop Grummans engineers, who had not had any major supersonic projects after developing the YF-23 and the supersonic inlets for the Boeing F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, the QSP aorded valuable experience and new skills. This helped sustain the companys aerodynamic design capabilities for future projects, such as DARPAs Switchblade oblique-wing study, and advanced work with the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL).107 The most publicized aspect of the QSP program, however, was the opportunity it provided for Northrop Grumman and its partners to make aviation history by being the rst to demonstrate the creation of less intense sonic booms.
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Endnotes
1. Seebass, who had been born and raised in Denver before becoming a professor at Cornell and later the University of Arizona, moved in 1981 to the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he served as dean of its College of Engineering until 1994. 2. Richard Seebass, History and Economics of, and Prospects for, Commercial Supersonic Transport, Paper 1, NATO Research and Technology Organization, Fluid Dynamics Research on Supersonic Aircraft (proceedings of a course held in Rhode SaintGense, Belgium, May 2529, 1998), Research and Technology Organization (RTO)-EN-4 (November 1998). 3. Richard Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization, Paper 6, NATO Research and Technology Organization, Fluid Dynamics Research on Supersonic Aircraft (proceedings of a course held in Rhode SaintGense, Belgium, May 2529, 1998), RTO-EN-4 (November 1998). A slightly expanded version was also published with Brian Argrow as Sonic Boom Minimization Revisited, AIAA paper no. 98-2956 (November 1998). 4. Domenic Maglieri to Lawrence Benson, Comments on QSP Chapter, e-mail message, August 23, 2011. 5. Randall Greene and Richard Seebass, A Corporate Supersonic Transport, in Transportation Beyond 2000: Technologies Needed for Engineering Design, Proceedings of a Workshop Held in Hampton, Virginia, September 2628, 1995, NASA CP-10184 (February 1996), pt. 1, 491508. 6. Ibid., 506. 7. Seebass, Prospects for Commercial Supersonic Transport, I-1. 8. Ibid., I-3, I-5. 9. Ibid. 10. Ibid., I-4; National Research Council, U.S. Supersonic Aircraft: Assessing NASAs High-Speed Research Program (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 1997), 4649. 11. Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization Revisited, 6. 12. Ibid., 89. As described in chapter 9, NASA Dryden later developed a way to repeatedly create reduced sonic booms using existing ghter aircraft. 13. Ibid., 8. 14. Ibid., 3. 15. Seebass, Prospects for Commercial Supersonic Transport, I-5. 16. Authors speculation.
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17. Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization (NATO version), VI-8. Although Seebass still attributed the structural vibrations specically to the signatures impulse (which he dened as the integral of the positive phase of the pressure with respect to time), other structural engineering factors related to the ultralow frequencies of the sound waves caused by the extended N-waves of larger aircraft were also found to be involved. 18. Seebass, Sonic Boom Minimization Revisited, 810. 19. Ibid., NTRS Abstract. 20. Seebass, Prospects for Commercial Supersonic Transport, I-6. 21. The study, originally completed in 1997, was nally published just in time for use in this book. See Domenic J. Maglieri, Compilation and Review of Supersonic Business Jet Studies from 1963 through 1995, NASA CR 2011-217144 (May 2011). 22. CASA became part of the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company N.V. (EADS) in 1999. 23. Maglieri, Compilation and Review of SSBJ Studies, NASA CR 2011-217144, 13. 24. Gulfstream Studies Development of Supersonic Business Jet, Aviation Week (September 12, 1988): 47. 25. The History of Gulfstream, 19582008, accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.gulfstream.com/history/. 26. Maglieri, Compilation and Review of SSBJ Studies, NASA CR 2011-217144, 14. 27. Richard DeMeis, Sukhoi and Gulfstream Go Supersonic, Aerospace America 28, no. 4 (April 1990): 4042. 28. H.S. Bruner, SSBJA Technological Challenge, ICAO Journal 46, no. 8 (August 1991): 913. 29. Sukhoi Goes Supersonic, Aviation Week (September 20, 1993): 41; Graham Warwick, Sonic Dreams, Flight International (May 6, 2003); 34. 30. Vincent R. Mascitti, A Preliminary Study of the Performance and Characteristics of a Supersonic Executive Aircraft, NASA TM 74055 (September 1977). 31. Maglieri, Compilation and Review of SSBJ Studies, 21, summarizes from a draft copy of this study. 32. Roy A. Da Costa et al., Concept Development Studies for a Mach 2.7 Supersonic Cruise Business Jet, NASA CR 165705 (April 1981). This report is not available through the NTRS, but Maglieris compilation, 2122, summarizes its abstract.
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33. F.L. Beissner, W.A. Lovell, A. Warner Robins, and E.E. Swanson, Eects of Advanced Technology and a Fuel-Ecient Engine on a Supersonic-Cruise Executive Jet with a Small Cabin, NASA CR 172190 (August 1983). 34. F.L. Beissner, W.A. Lovell, A. Warner Robins, and E.E. Swanson, Application of Near-Term Technology to a Mach 2.0 Variable Sweep Wing Supersonic Cruise Executive Jet, NASA CR 172321 (March 1984). 35. F.L. Beissner, W.A. Lovell, A. Warner Robins, and E.E. Swanson, Eects of Emerging Technology on a Convertible, Business/ Interceptor, Supersonic Cruise Jet, NASA CR 178097 (May 1986). 36. Graham Warwick, Sonic Dreams, Flight International (May 6, 2003): 3436. 37. John M. Morgenstern, low sonic boom shock control/alleviation surface. US Patent 5,740,984, led September 22, 1994, and issued April 21, 1998. Accessed November 12, 2011, http://www.patents. com/us-5740984.html. 38. Univ. of Colorado, Biography of A. Richard Seebass, accessed April 27, 2011, http://www.colorado.edu/aerospace/ARichardSeebass.html. Seebass, who had stepped down from being dean of the University of Colorados College of Engineering and Applied Sciences to become chair of the Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences in 1995, had created a Lockheed Martin Engineering Management Program there. 39. Bill Sweetman, Whooshhh! Popular Science, posted July 30, 2004, accessed February 20, 2009, http://www.popsci.com/ military-aviation-space/article/2004-07/whooshhh. 40. The History of Gulfstream, 19582008, accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.gulfstream.com/history/. 41. Richard Aboulaa, The Business Case for Higher Speed, Aerospace America Online, accessed July 8, 2010, http://www.aiaa.org/aerospace/ Article.cfm?issuetocid=ArchiveIssueID=16. 42. National Research Council, Commercial Supersonic Technology: The Way Ahead (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2001), 10. 43. John Tirpak, The Bomber Roadmap, Air Force Magazine 82, no. 6 (June 1999): 3036. 44. Department of Defense FY 2001 Budget Estimates: Research, Development, Test and Evaluation Defense-Wide, 1, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, February 2000, Program Element 0602702E, 8788, 107109. (Page 88 notes that it was a congressional add.)
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45. Guy Norris, Back to the Future, Flight International (December 18, 2001), accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/ articles/2001/12/18/140226/back-to-the-future.html. 46. Bill Sweetman, Back to the Bomber, Janes International Defence Review 37, no. 6 (June 2004): 55. 47. Department of Defense Appropriations Act 2001, Pub. L. No. 106259, 114 Stat. 656 (August 9, 2001), accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-106publ259/content-detail.html. 48. Sweetman, Back to the Bomber, 5459. 49. Department of Defense FY 2002 Amended Budget Submission: Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Defense-Wide, 1, Defense Advanced Projects Agency, June 2001, 132. 50. Biography, Rich Wlezien, accessed ca. April 15, 2011, http://www. richwelzein.com/Personal/Wlezien.html. 51. DARPA Special Notice 00-17, Advanced Supersonic Program Industry Day, March 28, 2000, Alexandria, VA (February 29, 2000). 52. Chambers, Innovations in Flight, NASA SP-2005-4539, 65. 53. D.J. Maglieri, P.J. Bobbitt, and H.R. Henderson, Proposed Flight Test Program to Demonstrate Persistence of Shaped Sonic Booms Signatures Using BQM 34E RPV, Eagle Aeronautics response to DARPA RFI-Advanced Supersonic Program, April 19, 2000, cited in Joseph W. Pawlowski, David H. Graham, Charles H. Boccadoro, Peter G. Coen, and Domenic J. Maglieri, Origins and Overview of the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 6, 14. 54. Domenic J. Maglieri and Percy J. Bobbitt, History of Sonic Boom Technology Including Minimization, Eagle Aeronautics, Hampton, VA, November 1, 2001. This comprehensive study totaled 373 pages. 55. Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) Systems Studies and Technology Integration, Commerce Business Daily, SOL RA 00-48, posted on CBDNet, August 16, 2000, accessed August 18, 2011, http://www. fedmine.us/freedownload/CBD/CBD-2000/CBD-2000-18au00.html. 56. Richard Wlezien (DARPA) and Lisa Veitch (IDA), Quiet Supersonic Platform Program, AIAA paper no. 2002-0143, 40th Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1417, 2002, 4. IDA is the acronym for Institute for Defense Analysis. 57. Robert Wall, DARPA Envisions New Supersonic Designs, Aviation Week (August 28, 2000), 47. 58. Wlezien and Veitch, Quiet Supersonic Platform Program, 56.
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59. Graham Warwick, Supersonic and Silent, Flight International (December 9, 2000), accessed November 13, 2011, http://www. ightglobal.com/articles/2000/09/12/120156/supersonic-and-silent. html. 60. Ibid. 61. Cited in Warrick, Cutting to the Bone, Flight International (July 17, 2001), accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/ articles/2001/07/17/134122/cutting-to-the-bone.html. 62. Pennington Way, Northrop Grumman Awarded First Contract to Study Quiet Supersonic Platform, Defense Daily (November 14, 2000), http://ndarticles.com/p/articles/mi_6712/is_30_208/ ai_n28800344/. 63. Robert Wall and William Scott, Northrop Grumman Gets Quiet Supersonic Work, Aviation Week (November 13, 2000): 32. 64. Telephone interview of Charles H. Boccadoro by Lawrence Benson, August 20, 2011. 65. Ibid.; Joseph Pawlowski to Lawrence Benson, Re: More SSBD Questions, e-mail message, August 17, 2011. Also representing Northrop Grumman at the industry day were Tony Springs, Rob Chapman, and Jay Trott. 66. Biography of Charles Boccadoro, in Decadal Survey of Civil Aeronautics: Foundation for the Future (Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2006), 179. ISS headquarters was in Dallas. 67. Pawlowski to Benson, Re: More SSBD Questions, August 17, 2011. 68. Benson/Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. The comprehensive NGC plan had eight sections on the various aspects it envisioned for the program. 69. In 2007, Raytheon sold its aircraft company to outside investors, who renamed their new entity Hawker Beechcraft Corporation. 70. Wall and Scott, Northrop Grumman Gets Quiet Supersonic Work, 32. 71. Way, Northrop Grumman Awarded First Contract. 72. Wall and Scott, Northrop Grumman Gets Quiet Supersonic Work, 32. 73. Robert Wall, New Technologies in Quest of Quiet Flight, Aviation Week (January 8, 2001): 6162; Graham Warwick, DARPA Cash to Fund Studies into Sonic Boom Reduction, Flight International (January 9, 2001): 17.
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74. NASA Dryden, Extensive Supersonic Laminar Flow Attained Passively in Flight, News Release 00-13, January 26, 2000. 75. Wall, New Technologies in Quest of Quiet Flight, 6162; Warwick, DARPA Cash to Fund Studies; Warwick, Supersonic and Silent. 76. University of Colorado, News Center, Former Dean of Engineering Richard Seebass Dies Tuesday, November 14, 2000, accessed ca. July 15, 2011, http://www.colorado.edu/news/ r/4c5668f27e7454651c98568ed3ae0f5.html. 77. Warwick, Supersonic and Silent. 78. Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of SSBD Program, 4. 79. Wlezien and Veitch, Quiet Supersonic Platform Program, 7. 80. Ibid. 81. Bill Sweetman, Quiet Supersonics in Sight: Technology Currently Under Development Could Form the Basis for Bizjet, Strike/ Reconnaissance Aircraft, at Interavia Business & Technology (November 1, 2001): accessed ca. July 20, 2011, http://www. highbeam.com/doc/1G1-80743274.html. 82. National Research Council, Commercial Supersonic Technology: The Way Ahead (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2001), recommendation number 2, 42, which references conducting a technology demonstration as dened on page 7. 83. Pawlowski et al, Origins and Overview of SSBD Program, 5; Benson/Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. 84. Source for gure 5-2: Peter G. Coen, David H. Graham, Domenic J. Maglieri, and Joseph W. Pawlowski, QSP Shaped Sonic Boom Demo, PowerPoint presentation, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 10, 2005, slide 3. 85. Guy Norris, Preferred Concepts Unveiled for Strike and Business QSP Versions, Flight International (October 1, 2002), 4, quoting Charles Boccadoro. 86. Graham Warwick, Super Striker, Flight International (January 15, 2002), accessed November 13, 2011, http://ightglobal.com/ articles/2002/01/15/141264/super-striker.html. 87. Ibid. 88. Ibid. 89. Guy Norris, Overwing Engine Placing Shows Low Boom Promise, Flight International (January 29, 2002): 29. 90. As quoted in Warwick, Super Striker. 91. Guy Norris, Manufacturers Unveil Dual Relevant QSP Conguration, Flight International (January 21, 2002): 6. No AIAA
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92.
papers were published on the QSP information revealed at this meeting. Paul Lowe, Answers Sought for SSBJ Questions, Aviation International News (June 2002), accessed ca. July 20, 2011, http://www. ainonline.com/aviation-news/aviation-international-news/2007-10-03/ answers-sought-ssbj-questions. Ibid. Northrop Grumman, Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (SSBD) Program, presentation, Washington Press Club, September 3, 2003, slide 3. DARPA Selects Two To Develop Supersonic Aircraft, Janes Defence Weekly (March 8, 2002), accessed ca. July 30, 2011, http://www. articles.janes/Janes-Defence-Weekly-2002/DARPA. Warwick, Super Striker. For a description of Boeings design eort by leaders of its QSP team, see Peter M. Hartwich, Billy A. Burroughs, James S. Herzberg, and Curtiss D. Wiler, Design Development Strategies and Technology Integration for Supersonic Aircraft of Low Perceived Sonic Boom, AIAA paper no. 2003-0556, 41st Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 69, 2003. Neither of the other two system integrators published similar reports on their design process. Northrop Grumman, Northrop Grumman Awarded Additional Contracts To Continue Work on Quiet Supersonic Platform, news release, May 14, 2002. Robert Wall, Bomber Becomes Focus of Quiet Aircraft Eort, Aviation Week (May 6, 2002): 28. Northrop Grumman, Northrop Grumman Unveils Concept for Quiet Supersonic Aircraft, news release, September 26, 2002, with the illustration used in front of this chapter, accessed ca. July 30, 2011, http://www.irconnect.com/noc/press/pages/news_releases. html?d=32118; Sweetman, Back to the Bomber, 56; Northrop Grumman Unveils Concept for Quiet Supersonic Flight, Space Daily (October 2, 2002, accessed ca. July 30, 2011, http://www. spacedaily.com/new/plane-sonic-02b.html. Robert Wall, Noise Control, Aviation Week (August 4, 2003): 2324. Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. Biography, Rich Wlezien; U.S. Air Force Biography of Dr. Steven H. Walker, accessed November 13, 2011, http://www.af.mil/information/ bios/bio.asp?bioID=13291.
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103. Laura M. Colarusso, Fly Fast With No Boom, Air Force Times, September 22, 2003, accessed ca. August 5, http://www.airforcetimes. com/legacy/new/0-AirPaper-2209084.php. 104. Department of Defense, Fiscal Year (FY) 2004/FY 2005 Biennial Budget Estimates, Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Defense-Wide, 1Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, February 2003, 248. 105. Colarusso, Fly Fast With No Boom; Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. NGCs QSP II report and related data was submitted on a DVD. 106. Bill Sweetman, Back to the Bomber, Janes International Defence Review 37, no. 6 (June 2004): 5459; Adam J. Herbert, LongRange Strike in a Hurry, Air Force Magazine 87, no. 11 (November 2004): 2731. 107. Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. The Switchblade project is summarized in chapter 9.
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CHAPTER 6
With most of the Quiet Supersonic Platform program consisting of engineering studies, computer models, and laboratory experiments, its most tangible legacy became the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD). This innovative project used an actual airplanethe Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (also SSBD)to nally put theory into practice. Yet despite all the condence that decades of peer-reviewed articles, wind tunnel experiments, and computational uid dynamics had conferred on the basic principles of the SeebassGeorge-Darden sonic boom minimization theory, showing that it would actually work with a real airplane in the real atmosphere was anything but easy.
Selecting a Demonstrator
In June 2001, Charles Boccadoro picked Joseph W. Pawlowski, who was in charge of systems engineering for the QSP eort, to manage Northrop Grummans sonic boom demonstration proposal.1 Pawlowski was a versatile engineer who had worked on a wide variety of systems since being hired by Northrop in 1973. He and another veteran engineer, aerodynamicist David H. Graham from NGCs Advanced Air Vehicle Design oce, had gone on factnding trips in late summer of 2000 to garner some of the latest information on sonic boom mitigation. Helping the pair bond for the challenging project that lay ahead, on their rst ight Graham oered the much taller Pawlowski his rst-class seat, which had been reserved using frequent yer miles. In Hampton, VA, they, along with Charles Boccadoro and Steve Komadina, visited Eagle Aeronautics, where Domenic Maglieri described his ideas for a low-cost sonic boom demonstrator. Later, while at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, Pawlowski and Graham met Wyle Laboratorys sonic boom specialist Ken Plotkin (there on a visit from his oce in Arlington, VA). Plotkin went over some of his thoughts on sonic boom minimization with the two NGC engineers. The conversation continued when Plotkin gave Pawlowski a ride
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to the airport. Northrop Grumman engaged both Eagle and Wyle to become members of its QSP team in August 2000.2 Although DARPA had not planned for the sonic boom demonstration to be an initial part of the QSP program, Boccadoros QSP team was interested almost from the beginning in Maglieris long-standing proposal to use a supersonic Ryan BQM-34E remotely piloted vehicle as a relatively low-cost sonic boom demonstrator (described in chapter 4). The Firebees modular construction, performance characteristics, and interchangeable components as well as previous wind tunnel data continued to make it an attractive option, at least in theory. Northrop Grummans recent purchase of Teledyne Ryan perhaps added to the teams incentive to explore this opportunity. In anticipation of a future sonic boom demonstration contract, Northrop Grumman acquired all of the Navys usable BQM-43E components except for engines that were still being used in subsonic models of the Firebee. The airframes and spare parts were trucked from the Naval Air Weapons Station at Point Mugu, CA, to one of NGCs facilities along Aviation Boulevard in El Segundo.3 By early 2001, the Northrop Grumman QSP team began to reconsider its concept for the demonstration. Analysis by NASA indicated that the Firebees airframe might not have been long enough to demonstrate a denitive shaped boom signature. CFD modeling also raised concern about eects of the shock waves from the jet-engine inlet located under the airframe. Furthermore, NGC technicians had found that the Firebee fuselages and parts obtained at Point Mugu, where they had been stored outdoors in the salty air, had deteriorated signicantly since the mid-1990s. So the team decided to put the Firebee option on the back burner.4 As a possible long-shot alternative, David Graham pointed out that Northrop Grummans own F-5E ghter had two variations: the two-seat F-5F trainer and the RF-5E reconnaissance version with noses up to 42.5 inches longer and of dierent shapes than the basic F-5E (gure 6-1). Perhaps ying each of these aircraft supersonically at short intervals over an array of pressure sensors under the right conditions could show enough dierence in their sonic booms to demonstrate the eect of airframe shapingall at very little cost. However, some preliminary analysis in February 2001 by Graham and NGC colleague Hideo Ikawa and more detailed sonic boom modeling by Eagle Aeronautics revealed that all the signatures would still be typical N-waves. This had been predicted 2 months earlier by Domenic Maglieri, who determined that the longer noses did not have the smooth equivalent area distribution needed to produce a attop or ramp-type signature. As a potential solution, Maglieri thought the F-5 would be an excellent candidate for using a new, properly designed nose extension to reshape its initial pressure rise into a attop signaturesomething like what had been proposed for the Firebee.5 Of all
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the supersonic ghters in the U.S. inventory, the F-5E was uniquely suitable for such a modication.6
Encouraged by progress with the TZ-156, Northrops design team continued working on its N-156F lightweight ghter version, using corporate funds to build the rst prototype in early 1958. The Air Force soon agreed to buy two more prototypes, the rst of which made its maiden ight at Edwards AFB on July 30, 1959going supersonic without its engine yet having an afterburner. The early ight tests went so well that the Air Force stopped work on the third N-156F, which was eventually completed as an Air Force YF-5A that rst ew in May 1963. While retaining as many T-38 structures as possible, Northrop spent the next few years weaponizing its NF-156F design with internal guns, bomb racks, missile pylons, fuel tanks, and other features needed in a rugged combat aircraft. The result was the F-5A and the two-seat F-5B. After the Air Force awarded its rst F-5 production contracts in October 1962, Northrop built them alongside T-38s on its highly ecient assembly line in Hawthorne, CA. The F-5B entered operational service as a trainer with the Air Force in April 1964, followed 4 months later by the F-5A.9 In view of the F-5s intended international role during the Cold War, the Air Force named it the Freedom Fighter. In October 1965, the Air Force deployed a unit of 12 F-5As, modied for aerial refueling and armored against small-caliber antiaircraft weapons, to South Vietnam for a 6-month combat evaluation code named Skoshi Tiger (Little Tiger). Although the F-5As did not y enough missions over North Vietnam among their 2,664 sorties to test their air-to-air capabilities, they acquitted themselves well in air-to-ground operations considering their limited range and payload compared to the F-4 Phantom II and even the older F-100 Super Sabre. Maintenance personnel hours per ying hour were slightly better than with the F-100 and much better than with the big, complicated F-4. After completion of Skoshi Tiger, the F-5As were used to help form a commando ghter squadron and later transferred to South Vietnams Air Force in 1967. By 1972, 15 nations had received F-5As, F-5Bs, and RF-5As under the U.S. Governments military assistance program or foreign military sales program while others were built under license in Canada and Spain.10 Based on the Vietnam deployment and feedback from other nations using the initial models of the F-5 Freedom Fighter, Northrop began testing an improved version, the F-5-21, which could better engage the latest models of the MiG-21.11 Rather than accept Northrops unsolicited bid for this to become the F-5A/Bs replacement, the Air Force decided to sponsor what it called the International Fighter Aircraft competition. Lockheed, McDonnell Douglas, and Ling-Temco-Vought submitted modied versions of existing ghters as other candidates. In November 1970, the Air Force declared Northrops entry the winner, with an initial contact for 340 aircraft. One month later, the Air Force gave it the designations F-5E and (for the two-seat version) F-5F. The
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Air Force also tried to bestow the generic name International Fighter Aircraft on the F-5E/F but eventually renamed it the Tiger II, an informal nickname it had picked up largely in memory of Skoshi Tiger. The RF-5E reconnaissance version was later called the Tigereye. The maiden ights of the F-5E and F-5F were in August 1972 and September 1974 respectively. In June 1973, an F-5E put on a spectacular display of its agility for potential customers at the Paris Air Show.12 Later in the 1970s, Northrop developed the RF-5E at its own expense, using three interchangeable nose pallets for various camera systems. (Joe Pawlowski spent the rst 10 years of his career at NGC working on the F-5E and RF-5E, so he was already intimately familiar with the aircraft chosen for the SSBD project.) Northrops Hawthorne facility would eventually build 792 F-5Es and 140 F-5Fs plus 12 RF-5Es while factories in Switzerland, Korea, and Taiwan would build more than 500 additional variants of these aircraft under license.13 Compared to the F-5A, the F-5E incorporated GEs more powerful J85-21 engines with 20 percent higher thrust, 9 percent more wing area, maneuvering aps, bigger leading edge extensions that extended all the way to the wing roots, a larger fuselage with more internal fuel storage, and a two-stage nose gear strut that can be raised almost 12 inches for a better angle of attack during takeo. As regards military utility, the biggest improvement over its predecessor (basically a day ghter) was the installation of an Emerson AN/APQ-153 radar as part of an integrated re control system with a computing gunsight, a missile-launch computer, air-data inputs, and a gyroscopic platform. The F-5E has a maximum takeo weight of 25,350 pounds, a takeo run of 5,100 feet at that weight, a combat ceiling of 52,000 feet, and a ferry range (with three external tanks) of over 1,550 miles. Mach 1.64 is generally listed as the planes maximum speed at 36,000 feet above sea level.14 (This is where the coldest temperatures of the tropopause generally beginallowing supersonic aircraft to achieve their highest Mach numbers.) The relatively heavy losses suered by large U.S. ghter-bombers from the hit-and-run tactics of smaller North Vietnamese MiG-17 and MiG-21 interceptors led to more realistic combat training of American aircrews. In 1969, the Navys Fighter Weapons School at Naval Air Station (NAS) Miramar, near San Diego, CA, began a training regimen known as Top Gun. A key aspect of Top Gun was ying small and agile aircraft, such as the Douglas A-4 Skyhawk, against larger ghters, a practice known as Dissimilar Air Combat Tactics (DACT). The Navys success eventually prompted the USAF Tactical Air Command to form an adversary training squadron to provide DACT to Air Force aircrews. Because Air Force ghter wings in the early 1970s were mostly equipped with F-4s, the proponents of DACT wanted the new squadron to y Northrop F-5s since its size, performance, and smokeless jet engines were a
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close match to the MiG-21. Unfortunately, the Air Force owned no F-5s when its 64th Aggressor Squadron was being formed at Nellis AFB, NV, in 1972, but its Air Training Command had plenty of Northrop T-38s. Equipped with some of these Talons, the squadron soon proved its value in training road shows to other ghter bases.15 Although the T-38s proved to be a worthy adversary, they had not been designed or built for such strenuous maneuvers and began to suer premature wear and tear. Fate intervened with the sudden North Vietnamese conquest of Saigon in May 1975. Seventy brand new F-5Es earmarked for the South Vietnamese Air Force suddenly became available to equip the 64th and two new aggressor squadrons in Nevada and England with a fourth soon activated in the Philippines.16 These F-5Es (painted in a wide variety of camouage schemes) helped hone the skills of USAF aircrews for the rest of the Cold Warskills that were demonstrated during Desert Storm air operations in early 1991. By then, the Air Force had inactivated its aggressor squadrons because of force reductions in Europe and the Pacic, the aging of their F-5Es, and the option of ying F-16s (which more closely emulated some current Russian-built ghters) against larger F-4s, F-15s, and F-111s for DACT training. During the 1970s and 1980s, the U.S. Navy had supplemented and eventually replaced its A-4s with F-5Es, surplus Air Force F-16As (refurbished as F-16Ns), and Israeli Kr C.1 ghters (redesignated as F-21s) for Navy and Marine Corps aggressor squadrons.17 The Navy and Marines have continued to use F-5Es well into the 21st century. In 1996, the Navy moved its Top Gun program from NAS Miramar to the Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center at NAS Fallon in northwestern Nevada. As part of this realignment, Composite Fighter Squadron Thirteen (VFC-13), a Naval Reserve unit recently equipped with F/A-18 Hornets, converted to F-5E Tiger IIs to help provide adversary training at Fallon.18 The Marine Corps had a similar unit, Marine Fighter Training Squadron (VMFT) 401, stationed since 1987 at its Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) in Yuma, AZ.19 As was the case with the Air Force, however, the Navy and Marine F-5Es began showing their age after years of hard use. To help keep them ying as long as possible, the Navy contracted with Northrop Grumman in 1999 to perform phased depot-level maintenance on its F-5s at the NGC East Coast manufacturing center in St. Augustine, FL. Northrop Grumman and selected subcontractors also continued to provide maintenance support, spares, and modications for the F-5s still being own by foreign nations, many of them increasingly being used as a lead-in jet trainer rather than a frontline combat aircraft.20 Besides its supersonic speed, the F-5E has many features that made it an attractive choice for serving as a sonic boom demonstrator. These included its light weight, a high neness ratio, a blended canopy, and a relatively long
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forebody with engine inlets located farther back than most other ghter aircraftall of which could help diminish the contributions of secondary shock waves to the planned demonstrators bow shock. Northrop Grummans experience in producing larger F-5F and RF-5E versions by simply adding forebody extensions, and the extensive analytical and ight-test data collected when doing so, also boded well for the planned sonic boom modications. From a nancial standpoint, the costs of operating an F-5 were relatively low.21 Ironically, however, Northrop Grumman had no F-5s of its own to modify.
T-38/F-5 family and with what Northrop had hoped would be its high performance ospring, the single-engine F-20 Tigershark. Most recently, he had own a series of high-stress ight tests of the F-5 for the Navy in 2000. He also had many contacts throughout the civilian and military test pilot community that would be helpful in arranging support for the project.23 In what would prove to be an advantageous move, Charles Boccadoro got Roy Martin involved early in the QSP program. In the summer of 2000, Boccadoro called him into his oce along with David Graham to talk about the possible options for a sonic boom demonstration. Martin was less than enthusiastic about the proposal to use Firebee RPVs. When Graham asked about modifying an F-5, Martin thought that might be a good solution and said he was scheduled to go up to NAS Fallon for a safety day and would begin checking on the availability of Navy F-5Es stationed there. While at Fallon, Martin ate lunch with Mike Ingalls, a manager at the NGC facility in St. Augustine that performed depot maintenance for the Navy, including that for F-5s. He informed Martin that the Navy was reviving a previous proposal for the U.S. Government to buy back surplus Swiss F-5Es with low ying hours to replace its stable of heavily used F-5Es. Once the Navy got congressional approval and funding for the deal, obtaining and modifying one of its tired Tiger IIs presumably would not be too dicult.24 In April 2001, DARPA released its formal solicitation for proposals from all three systems integrators on how best to show the persistence of a shaped sonic boom. DARPA added an unusual twist to this QSP minicompetition. The winner would not only have to propose the best plan in terms of technology and cost but would also have to propose the best plan for incorporating design reviews by the other two systems integrators and for sharing data collected among all QSP participants.25 Northrop Grumman quickly responded that same month with a proposal structured as a cooperative eort involving other companies and Government agencies. As for the vehicle to be used, the company submitted its preliminary design for modifying an F-5E with a specially shaped nose extension (shown in the next chapter). The cover of its proposal featured a CFD-generated image showing the modied aircrafts hoped-for shock wave pattern.26 Because of the Dryden Flight Research Centers sonic boom experience, resources, and credibility, NGC proposed making NASA responsible for data collection. Based on a comparison of this and the other proposals, DARPA awarded a $3.4 million contract (MDA 972-01-2-0017) to the NGC Integrated Systems Sector in late July 2001 to begin preparing its ight demonstration of a shaped sonic boom signature using F-5Es.27 Northrop Grumman ocially came under contract in midAugust when it received the rst payment.28
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Several weeks before the contract award, DARPA invited attendees from Northrop Grumman, the other two system integrators, NASA, the Air Force, and some of the other contractors and universities to a shaped sonic boom workshop on July 10, 2001, in Valencia, CA (just north of Santa Clarita).29 Consistent with DARPAs rule that anyone who participates in the demonstration would share in the data, the workshop examined how the various attendees and their organizations could help in the project. Some of the invitees who soon became key members of Northrop Grummans Sonic Boom Demonstration Working Group (SBDWG) included Peter Coen of NASA Langley, Edward Haering of NASA Dryden, Mark Gustafson of the Air Force Research Laboratory (representing DARPA as its technical agent), and John Morgenstern, Lockheed Martins veteran sonic boom specialist. The working group also included the sonic boom experts from Wyle and Eagle who were already part of the QSP team. Right after the contract award was announced, Joe Pawlowski began formally establishing the SBDWG. Because the working groups members were located all across the United States, and getting them all together at one time and place would be dicult, he set up a special Web site for sharing information and ideas.30 (Later, this information was also posted on the DARPA Web site for access by Government participants.) As the weeks went by, additional experts from NASA Langley, NASA Dryden, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Gulfstream, and Raytheon joined the working group.31 Eventually, more than 30 people served as members, with 9 of them composing the SSBDs program management team: Richard Wlezien and then Steven Walker of DARPA, Charles Boccadoro and Joe Pawlowski of Northrop Grumman, Mark Gustafson of the AFRL, Peter Coen of NASA Langley, and Ed Haering and David Richwine of NASA Dryden.32 At rst, Northrop Grumman optimistically predicted being able to conduct the ight testsprojected to require about 18 sortiesat Edwards AFB in the summer of 2002.33 But nding an F-5E to modify was only one of the many challenges confronting the SBD project. Before DARPA would let Northrop Grumman obtain an aircraft to modify, the company would have to complete an approved design. And to do this meant overcoming some unanticipated technical obstacles. One of the rst to be identied was the need to better understand the eects of shock waves generated in front of jet-engine inlets. NASA sonic boom specialist Ed Haering, who had gained valuable experience from NASA Drydens supersonic probing and measurement of shock waves during ight experiments in the 1990s (described in chapter 4), became involved in the project when he was invited to the Valencia workshop. He introduced himself in advance to David Graham by alerting him to the GPS,
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telemetry, recording, and other equipment that would need to be installed in the participating F-5Es to ensure the collection of accurate datathe topic of a presentation he later made at the workshop. He wrote that he was also concerned that inlet-wing shocks will be dierent than predicted, adversely aecting the signature.34 Following up on his presentation at the QSP workshop, Haering provided more details about his proposal to conduct a preliminary F-5E ight test to accurately measure the shock waves and expansions (regions of decreasing pressure) as they came o the various body parts of an F-5E, especially the shock waves that tended to spill out from around its engine inlets. He proposed using one of Drydens F-15s or F/A-18s as a probe aircraft, perhaps as early as December.35 These secondary shock waves coalesced through the atmosphere to merge with and reinforce the strength of the front and rear shock wave of the typical sonic boom. As the rst prerequisite for conducting this test, Roy Martin went to NAS Fallon in mid-August to begin arranging for VFC-13 to deploy one of its F-5Es to Edwards, hopefully in January if not December.36 He also continued investigating ways to obtain F-5Es later for the shaped sonic boom demonstration itself. The rst meeting of the SBDWG was held at the NGC Advanced Systems Development Center in El Segundo on August 22, 2001. Those who could not attend in person participated via the new Web site and special telephone connections. The initial intent was to meet for approximately 2 hours every other Thursday, but with scheduling conicts and other events, the working group would normally hold these meetings somewhat less often. Joe Pawlowski described the SBDWG ground rules as follows: Remember that this is a working group meeting and that team interaction and brainstorming are the desired products. Your ideas and support are appreciated. As stated at the Boom Workshop in Valencia, our goal is to reach technical consensus among team members in the formulation and execution of the SBD Program. The working group meetings are [also] designed to support critical decisions at the scheduled milestone reviews.37 After implementation of the DARPA contract and establishment of the SBDWG, work to design the most eective possible F-5 modications (described in chapter 7) greatly accelerated. By February 2002, some of the members began brainstorming a new name and acronym for the working group as well as the SBD project itself, which occasionally was referred to in jest as silent but deadly.38 Among the more creative suggestions were Boom Shaping Technology (BooST) and the Boom Aerodynamic and Atmospheric Attenuation Demonstration (BAAAD).39 The nal choice was less colorful but very descriptive: the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD).40 (The abbreviation of the working group thus became SSBDWG.)
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Grumman technicians.48 When Martin took the proposed changes to VFC13, ocers in the echelon above the squadron recommended a top-down approval process to get clearance.49 As a result, the proposal was elevated to Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) at NAS Patuxent River in Maryland, where specialists gave the proposed cockpit installation a thorough review.50 Northrop Grummans Electrical and Data Systems Design oce responded to NAVAIRs concerns with a detailed layout for the GPS and modem setup, including its wiring, that was delivered to NAVAIR as part of a data package on December 21, 2001.51 While awaiting Navy approval for the F-5 deployment, Ed Haering planned the routes and proles that the F-5E and F-15B would need to follow during the in-ight measurements as well as location of the ground sensors. He worked closely with David Richwine, Drydens F-15B manager, and Tim Moes, the F-15B chief engineer. Other members of the SBDWG helped in planning for optimal data collection, but Dave Graham alluded to Haerings key role as follows: If in doubt use Eds values. This is his test; we are all just very interested observers.52 A ight safety specialist at Fallon thought the basic ight plan looked acceptable,53 and VFC-13s operations ocer assured Roy Martin on the qualications of its pilots for the test. They are all second tour, eet ghter pilots who are highly experienced in formation ying and multi-plane operations.54 Early in January, scheduling conicts involving Drydens three F-15B pilots and other factors caused the test to be postponed until mid-February, which also allowed more time to get the Navys approval.55 On January 23, having done a t test of the custom-built map case with an F-5E at Fallon, Martin delivered the GPS and associated equipment from Dryden to El Segundo for installation into the custom-built map case. After sending an apparent approval for the installation of the GPS equipment on January 30, a NAVAIR ocial apologetically informed Joe Pawlowski that the command still needed to check its electrical connections and possible eects on instrumentation.56 With Pawlowski having key Northrop Grumman employees who worked at Patuxent River help to expedite the process,57 NAVAIRs nal clearance for the cockpit equipment came through on February 8.58 This approval came just in time to conduct the ISSM tests the following week. NASA Dryden activated a previously planned schedule of events. Dana Purifoy, its F-15B probe pilot, ew Northrop technicians and Ed Haering up to Fallon in one of Drydens small passenger planes on Monday, February 11. Purifoy briefed VFC-13s chosen pilot, Lt. Commander Edgar Sting Higgins, on operating procedures at Edwards while the GPS equipment was being installed. Navy technicians then checked the equipment for any electromagnetic interference.59 Haering used a receiving radio modem to ensure the GPS
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NASA F-15B and Navy F-5E during Inlet Spillage Shock Measurement Test, February 2002. (NASA)
package was transmitting data properly. He and Purifoy also asked that the F-5Es centerline tank be removed since its shock waves would be incompatible with the design of the SSBD.60 Higgins ew the F-5E down to Edwards the following morning. As he entered the bases airspace, Purifoy met him in an F/A-18 to familiarize Higgins with the test area and for the Dryden control room to check data reception from the F-5Es GPS equipment. After landing for fuel, Higginss F-5E and Purifoys accompanying F-15B took o for the rst of two ight tests on February 12, 2002, ying at about Mach 1.4 in both directions through the Edwards supersonic corridor. The pair completed two more similar test sorties on February 13, with Higgins returning the F-5E to Fallon later in the day.61 The F-15B, using its special nose boom with sensitive pressure instrumentation, gathered 56 supersonic shock wave signatures from the F-5B at distances from 60 feet to 1,355 feet while various sensors on the ground collected plentiful data in their sonic boom carpets.62 After the rst sorties on February 12, Ed Haering immediately sent members of the working group some encouraging preliminary data just in time for a previously scheduled Interim Design Review (IDR) the next day in El Segundo. He also passed along an intriguing atmospheric phenomenon. A
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NASA employee at one of the sensor sites could see the shock waves in the clouds for one pass. The shocks hit a sundog, increasing the brightness about ten times, and this lasted for 510 seconds, then started to fade. He is guessing the shocks may have crystallized the water vapor, or melted the ice crystals, or something. Of course he did not have a camera.63 In accordance with earlier arrangements, Northrop Grumman reimbursed VFC-13 for its expenses and Peter Coen arranged for Dryden to get some special NASA supersonic research funding to help cover its portion of the test.64 In expressing NGCs and its partners gratitude for the Navys support, Joe Pawlowski acknowledged that it took a series of small miracles to pull this o, and I want to thank everyone involved for their support.65 The precedents set in working with the Navy boded well for having VFC-13 deploy an F-5E again in the future. In fact, the entire ISSM ight-test project served as an excellent dry run for the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration.66
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distances measured. Later CFD analyses of mideld pressure signatures using both inviscid and viscous modes did verify negligible dierences. The GCNSfv program included an extensive number of boundary conditions useful for measuring inlet ows. Its grid originally contained 8 million data points in the near eld (within 0.5 body lengths of the aircraft) and another 4 million out to the mideld (3.0 body lengths).67 The analysts did repeated calculations and adjustments of GCNSfvs predictions based on the actual ISSM probing data (which varied in the number of usable data points collected). By repeatedly rening the results and increasing the number of grid points to 14.2 million, concentrated mostly along the angle followed by the shock waves under the aircraft (shown in gure 6-2), the analysts were eventually able to validate the accuracy of the CFD solutions out to three body lengths.68 The analysts also developed a process to interpolate the CFD solutions onto the actual relative ight paths between the F-5E and the F-15B during each probing to accurately simulate the pressure measurement signature.69 Among the lessons learned, they found that determining the two aircrafts relative speeds and ight paths, both vertically and horizontally, was critical for accurate correlations. Even knowing the exact location of the F-5Es GPS antenna down to almost the centimeter and the planes precise angles of attack with decreasing fuel levels was important.70 Taking all these data into account, the CFD codes postprocessed pressure signatures compared very well with those collected during the in-ight probes. The comparison between the nal CFD computed pressure signatures and the four selected ight test measurement[s] provided excellent correlation.71 Figure 6-3 shows the close correlation of the pressure readings collected by the F-15B on February 13 during its 47th probe from about 94 feet beneath the F-5E compared with the postprocessed CFD prediction using the same ight conditions.72 For continuing design work on the modied F-5E, ISSM results found that the CFD estimates of F-5E inlet performance were acceptable. Indeed, the entire process of the ISSM ight test and CFD correlation was successful, providing all the Figure 6-3. F-5E pressure signature prediction using the necessary procedures and con- Euler-based CFD code (solid line) compared to in-ight dence in predictive tools needed measurements (line with dots) by F-15B. (NGC) for the SSBD program.73
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Endnotes
1. With the participants being organized as an integrated product team (IPT), his formal title became QSP Shaped Sonic Boom Demo IPT Lead. 2. Interview of Joseph W. Pawlowski and David H. Graham by Lawrence R. Benson, Northrop Grumman Space Park, Redondo Beach, CA, April 12, 2011; Biographical Sketch and Resume, Joseph W. Pawlowski, as of April 2011; David Graham to Lawrence Benson, Biographical Information, e-mail, April 28, 2011; Joseph Pawlowski to Lawrence Benson, e-mail, August 17, 2011. 3. Joseph W. Pawlowski, David H. Graham, Charles H. Boccadoro, Peter G. Coen, and Domenic J. Maglieri, Origins and Overview of the SSBD Program, Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, Jan 10-13, 2005, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 4, 6, (also published with brieng slides by the Air Force Research Laboratory as AFRLVA-WP-2005-300 [January 2005]). 4. Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of the SSBD Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 6. 5. Ibid., 7; Benson, Pawlowski/Graham interview, April 12, 2011; Domenic J. Maglieri by Lawrence R. Benson, telephone interview, March 18, 2009; David Graham to Lawrence Benson, SSBD Design Questions, August 4, 2011. 6. Source for gure 6-1: David Graham and Roy Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD Aircraft, Northrop Grumman PowerPoint presentation, August 17, 2004, slide no. 3. 7. Marcelle S. Knaack, Oce of Air Force History, PostWorld War II Fighters, 19451973 (Washington, DC: GPO, 1986), 287; Frederick A. Johnsen, Northrop F-5/F-20/T-38, 44, Warbird Tech Series (North Branch, MN: Specialty Press, 2006), 56; William G. Stuart, Northrop F-5 Case Study in Aircraft Design (AIAA, September 1978), 5-9. Stuart provides an engineers perspectives on the design process. 8. Johnsen, Northrop F-5/F-20/T-38, 7-8, 5356; 2011 USAF Almanac: T-38 Talon, Air Force Magazine 94, no. 5 (May 2011): 9394. 9. Knaack, PostWorld War II Fighters, 288290; Johnsen, F-5/F20/T-38, 822. 10. Johnsen, F-5/F-20/T-38, 39-51, 91; Knaack, PostWorld War II Fighters, 288-289. 11. Johnsen, F-5/F-20/T-38, 6264, 7176.
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12. John L. McLucas with Kenneth J. Alnwick and Lawrence R. Benson, Reections of a Technocrat: Managing Defense, Air, and Space Programs During the Cold War (Montgomery, AL: Air University Press, 2006), 127128. McLucas was Acting Secretary of the Air Force at the time. 13. Knaack, PostWorld War II Fighters, 292; Northrop F-5, Wikipedia, accessed July 18, 2011, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Northrop_F-5. This article is particularly well-sourced. 14. Knaack, PostWorld War II Fighters, 297; Johnsen, F-5/F-20/T-38, 7190, 99. For design of each component of the re control and avionics systems, see Stuart, Northrop F-5 Case Study, 171202. 15. C.R. Anderegg, Sierra Hotel: Flying Air Force Fighters in the Decade After Vietnam (Washington, DC: Air Force History and Museums Program, 2001), 7278. 16. McLucas, Reections of a Technocrat, 128129. 17. Johnsen, F-5/T-38/F-20, 90-91; Aggressor Squadron, Wikipedia, accessed July 18, 2011, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggressor_squadron. The Kr was derived from the Dassault Mirage III. Enzo Angelucci, The Rand McNally Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft, 19141980 (New York: The Military Press, 1983), 440. 18. Naval Air Station Fallon, accessed July 11, 2011, http://www.cnic. navy.mil/Fallon/About/index.htm; Fred Krause, Naval Air Station Fallon Adversaries, Part One: VFC-13 Saints, accessed July 21, 2011, http://modelingmadness.com/scotts/features/krausevfc13g.htm. 19. Marine Fighter Training Squadron 401, accessed July 21, 2011, http://www.yuma.usmc.mil/tenantcommands/vmft401.html. 20. Northrop Grumman, F-5 Tiger, accessed July 18, 2011, http:// www.as.northropgrumman.com/products/f5tiger/index.html. 21. Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of the SSBD Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 7. 22. D.J. Maglieri and P.J. Bobbitt, Overview of Flight Demonstrations to Demonstrate Persistence of Shaped Sonic Boom Signatures, presentation by Eagle Aeronautics to Dr. Richard Wlezien for Northrop Grumman, March 12, 2001, cited in Ibid., 78, 14. 23. Biographical Sketch, M.L. Roy Martin, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, undated; Interview of Roy Martin by Lawrence R. Benson, Lancaster, CA, April 7, 2011. 24. Benson, Martin interview, April 7, 2011. 25. Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of the SSBD Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 5. 26. Northrop Grumman, Demonstration of the Persistence of Shaped Booms Using a Modied F-5E Aircraft, April 2001, cited in
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27.
28. 29.
34. 35.
36.
Ibid., 8, 14; David Graham to Lawrence Benson, SSBD Design Questions, e-mail, August 4, 2011. Northrop Grumman, Northrop Grumman Awarded Contract To Demonstrate Less Intense Sonic Boom, news release, Aug. 3, 2001, accessed ca. July 15, 2011, http://www.irconnect.com/noc/press/pages/ news_releases.html?d=19142. Joe Pawlowski to Peter G. Coen et al., QSP SBDWG Meeting Agenda, e-mail, August 16, 2001. Andrea Brda to C.M. Darden and 28 others, Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) Shaped Sonic Boom Workshop Announcement, e-mail, June 20, 2001; Charles Alcorn to C.M. Darden et al., Shaped Boom Workshop, e-mail, July 3, 2001. Joe Pawlowski to Peter G. Coen et al., QSP Shaped Boom Demo Program Status, e-mail, August 1, 2001. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBDWG meeting announcements, e-mail messages, August 16, 2001April 9, 2002. For a complete list of the SSBD Working Group, see Appendix A. Pawlowski to Coen et al., QSP SBD Program Status, August 1, 2001; Bruce Smith, US Eyes Design to Lessen Sonic Boom, Aviation Week (August 13, 2001): 26; Guy Norris, Quiet Supersonic Tests Set for 2002, Flight International (August 14, 2001), accessed ca. July 15, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/ articles/2001/08/14/134686/quiet-supersonic-tests-set-for-2002/html. Ed Haering to David H. Graham, cc: to Joseph Pawlowski et al., F-5E QSP Data Needs and Accuracies, e-mail, June 28, 2001. Interview, Edward A. Haering by Lawrence R. Benson, Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards AFB, California, April 5, 2011; Ed Haering to David H. Graham et al., Supersonic Probing of F-5E in 2001, e-mail, July 13, 2001. M.L. Roy Martin (hereinafter, Roy Martin) to Ed Haering, Re: Supersonic Probing of F-5E in 2001, e-mail, July 24, 2001; Roy Martin to Ed Haering, Re: Supersonic Probing of F-5E in 2001, e-mail, August 17, 2001. Joe Pawlowski to Peter G. Coen et al., QSP SBDWG Meeting Agenda, e-mail, August 16, 2001. Benson, Pawlowski/Graham interview, April 12, 2011. Ed Haering to Joe Pawlowski et al., New SBD name?, e-mail, February 22, 2002; Roy Martin to Ed Haering et al., Re: New SBD name?, e-mail, February 22, 2002. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBDWG Meeting Reminder 2/28/02, e-mail, February 22, 2002.
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41. Benson, Pawlowski/Graham interview, April 12, 2011; Keith B. Meredith, John A. Dahlin, David H. Graham, Edward A. Haering, Juliet A. Page, and Kenneth J. Plotkin, Computational Fluid Dynamic Comparison and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E OBody Pressures, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, AIAA paper no. 2005-6, 2005, 2. 42. David Graham to Ed Haering, F-5 O-Body Pressures, e-mail, October 1, 2001; Ed Haering to David Graham, Re: F-5 O-Body Pressures, e-mail, October 5, 2001; Interview of Dana Purifoy by Lawrence Benson, Dryden Flight Research Center, April 8, 2011. 43. Ed Haering to David Graham, Re: F-5E QSP Data Needs and Accuracies, e-mail, September 20, 2001; David Graham to Ed Haering, cc: Joe Pawlowski, Re: F-5E QSP Data Needs and Accuracies, e-mail, September 20, 2001. 44. Ed Haering to Roy Martin, Re: F-5E QSP Data Needs and Accuracies, e-mail, September 21, 2001. 45. Ed Haering to Roy Martin, Re: F-5 ight and F-15B ight, e-mail, October 10, 2001. 46. Ed Haering to Roy Martin, Re: F-5 O-Body Pressures, e-mail, October 10, 2001. 47. Numerous e-mail messages between Roy Martin and Ed Haering et al., October 10November 7, 2001. 48. Roy Martin to Ed Haering and Joe Pawlowski, Re: Backup GPS, e-mail, November 12, 2001. 49. LCDR Darren Grove to Ed Haering et al., Re: FW: F-5 GPS installation, e-mail, November 15, 2001. 50. Roy Martin to Je Ysells (NAVAIR) et al., F-5E SBD Close Aboard Test Update, e-mail, November 21, 2001; Tommy White (NAVAIR) to Je Ysells, F-5E SBD Close Aboard Test Update, e-mail, December 4, 2001. 51. Mark Wang to Ed Haering et al., GPS Instrumentation Schematic, e-mail, December 18, 2001; Roy Martin to Ed Haering et al., Re: F-5E drawing numbers, e-mail, December 21, 2001. 52. David Graham to Juliet Page, Flightpath for F-5E ISSM, e-mail, February 9, 2002. 53. Ed Haering to David H. Graham, Re: Urgent, F-5E probing priority, e-mail, January 2, 2002. 54. Roy Martin to Ed Haering, Re: F-15B/QSP Review Kick-o, e-mail, January 2, 2002. 55. Ed Haering to Joe Pawlowski et al., Re: F-5E status importance, e-mail, January 7, 2001.
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56. Tommy White to Je Ysells et al., Re: Flight Clearance Request, e-mail message, January 30, 2002; Scott White (NAVAIR) to Joe Pawlowski, Re: Flight Clearance Request, e-mail, February 1, 2001. 57. Joe Pawlowski to Roy Martin et al., FW: QSP Flight Clearance, e-mail, February 4, 2001. 58. Je Ysells to Joe Pawlowski et al., Re: QSP Flight Clearance, e-mail, February 8, 2002; COMNAVAIRSYSCOM to COMAIRESFOR, Interim Flight Clearance for F-5 Aircraft with Flight Test Instrumentation Installed..., teletype message, 0820006Z, February 2002. 59. Roy Martin to Je Ysells, Re: QSP Mapcase, e-mail, January 23, 2002. 60. Edward A. Haering to Lawrence Benson, Quick SSBD Question, e-mail, August 29, 2011. 61. Joe Pawlowski to John Cole et al., F-5E Flight Test at NASA, e-mail, February 14, 2002. 62. Meredith et al., CFD and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E, AIAA paper no. 2005-6 (January 2005), 3. 63. Ed Haering to Joe Pawlowski et al., VERY preliminary ISSM data, e-mail, February 12, 2002. 64. Peter Coen to Dan Banks et al., DFRC Funding Summary, e-mail, January 10, 2002; Peter Coen to Ed Haering et al., Re: Telecon for Tuesday, e-mail, February 19, 2002. 65. Pawlowski to Cole et al., F-5E Flight Test at NASA, e-mail, February 14, 2002. 66. Meredith et al., CFD and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E, AIAA paper no. 2005-6 (January 2005), 1. 67. Ibid., 35. 68. Ibid., 59, David Graham and Roy Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD Aircraft, Northrop Grumman, PowerPoint brieng, August 17, 2004, slides 1216. Figure 6-2 is copied from slide 14. 69. Meredith et al., CFD and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E, AIAA paper no. 2005-6 (January 2005), 10. 70. David Graham to Ed Haering et al., Re: GPS Antenna Position, e-mail, February 20, 2002, with previous message trac; Roy Martin to Joe Pawlowski et al., Time and Fuel Line, e-mail, February 22, 2002. 71. Ibid.
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72. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation, slide no. 15. 73. Meredith et al., CFD and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E, AIAA paper no. 2005-6, 10.
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Improved SSBD wind tunnel model and mounting mechanism, May 2002. (NGC)
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CHAPTER 7
In February 2001, 3 months after the QSP Phase I contract awards, some of the members of Northrop Grummans integrated product team (IPT) for the Quiet Supersonic Platformin collaboration with Eagle Aeronauticss sonic boom expertsbegan preliminary work on a new F-5E nose modication that would lower the strength of its sonic boom. As described in previous chapters, the basic principles and theories for reducing the pressure rise in the front half of an N-wave signature were fairly well understood. Even so, designing the exact geometrical contours (known aerodynamically as the loft) that would be certain to accomplish this goal while still retaining acceptable performance and handling qualities became a highly iterative process. Using a building block approach, the designers would eventually draw up almost two dozen basic congurations. The dierences from one to the next were usually quite subtle, but the nal conguration looked quite dierent than the original concept. This design process combined high-order computational uid dynamics, linear sonic boomprediction models, wind tunnel evaluations, and some preliminary ight testing (the inlet spillage and shock measurements described in the previous chapter). The computer-generated image of F-5E shock waves in gure 7-1 hints at the value of continued advances in CFD to this endeavor not only for its powerful numbers-crunching and airow-prediction capabilities but also for visualizing the nonlinear propagation of shock waves near an aircraft.1 As implied by the experience described in this chapter, successfully creating an aerodynamically ecient low-boom aircraft would have been unlikely if not impossible before the advent of advanced CFD capabilities.
They began by using relatively simple and speedy linear analysis tools to propose changes to the shape and volume of the nose that would achieve the desired pressure patterns for sonic boom reduction based on areadistribution principles.2 Additional analyses rened the preliminary concept signicantly. Using Euler codes, Eagle Aeronauticss Percy Bobbitt completed a detailed study in early Figure 7-1. CFD-generated image March 2001 dening the shape of the equivaof F-5E shock waves with pressure contours and expansion elds. (NGC) lent area distribution for modifying the front portion of an F-5E (while staying within the overall length and width of an F-5Fs forebody). CFD analysis indicated this loft would generate a attop signature from 30,000 feet at Mach 1.4.3 Dierent ight conditions were also examined. Hideo Ikawa of NGC used a design optimization tool based on Christine Dardens computer program for the minimization of sonic boom parameters (which she had named SEEB in recognition of its descent from the minimization theories of Richard Seebass.)4 Ikawa used this to calculate an area distribution that would create a attop sonic boom at Mach 1.55. David Graham converted the results to a Mach 1.0 area distribution, which the NGCs conguration specialist, Jay Vadnais, adapted to create the initial geometry for the proposed shaped boom demonstrator. Graham ran this design through Peter Coens PBOOM suite of linear tools to conrm it would generate a basically attop sonic boom signature.5 Keith Meredith of Northrop Grummans Advanced Flight Sciences CFD group completed verication of the near-eld eects of this design using Euler codes on April 18, 2001. The NGC team submitted its proposal to demonstrate sonic boom shaping using this F-5E modication to DARPA a couple of days later. The initial conguration with this nose glove (which included an underbody extension known as a fairing) was later designated SBD-01 (gure 7-2).6 After DARPA awarded the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration contract to Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems Sector based on this proposal in July 2001 and then provided funding in August, the design process resumed in earnest. SBD-02 was completed that same month, and SBD-04 was completed in September. Formation of the Sonic Boom Demonstration Working Group in August brought in more outside experts to help in the design process and evaluate the congurations. The steps required for each design iteration included (1) specifying an area distribution, (2) drawing up the aircraft lines, (3) projecting these surfaces onto a computational grid, (4) calculating a CFD solution, (5) validating the CFD solution, (6) evaluating its sonic boom signature based upon the shock wave pattern, and (7) correcting the area distribution based on these
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SBD-01 SBD-03 SBD-04 SBD-05 SBD-06 SBD-07 SBD-08 SBD-11 SBD-12 SBD-14 SBD-15 SBD-16 SBD-17 SBD-18 SBD-19 Figure 7-2. Preliminary SSBD congurations. (NGC)
evaluations. Initially, this cycle took about 2 weeks, but as the participants gained experience, they were consistently able to do this in about 3 days.7 Even so, the design process took considerably longer than initially expected. At rst, the team expected that only about 6 major design iterations would be needed to reach a suitable conguration, but in the end they created 23 major congurations (most of which are shown in gures 7-2 and 7-3). Counting minor variations in many of these, the designers produced a total of 60 congurations.8 From an aerodynamics perspective, it probably would have been easier to design a completely new forebody from scratch.9 The design team used a variety of linear methods, especially during the early months when assuring that the congurations would generate the properly shaped sonic boom signature was the primary concern. These included the aforementioned SEEB and PBOOM, both of which were developed at NASA Langley in the early 1990s, and VORLAX, a generalized vortex lattice methodology rst developed for NASA Langley in 1977 to help determine both subsonic and supersonic airows.10 Other linear models included Wyle Labs latest version of PCBoom11 and NFBoom, a propagation code developed by Donald A. Durston of NASA Ames.12 Dardens SEEB code was used throughout the design process, either directly or incorporated with other methods.13 As illustrated by gure 7-3, later congurations took on the characteristic pelican shape as the nose glove increased in size while the fairing under the fuselage grew longer and deeper.14 This fairing created an area of expansion under the engine inlets, lowering the pressure of a shock wave that would normally coalesce with
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that from the bow.15 Concerns about shock SBD-20 waves from the wings SBD-21 leading edges and inlet SBD-22 spillage, which led to the ISSM tests, drove some of the SBD-23 design changes.16 In its later conSBD-24 gurations, the combined structure had doubled in size. Many of the SBD-25 changes reected the increased application of the NGCs high-order GCNSfv Figure 7-3. Later SSBD congurations. (NGC) computational uid dynamics code (introduced in chapter 6).17 CFD specialists led by Keith Meredith used GCNSfv to account for nonlinear near-eld and, later, mid-eld shock and expansion eects. Previously, the GCNS code had normally been used to analyze onbody pressures, so it had to be revised to predict the obody pressures as required for sonic boom purposes. Completing a single CFD prediction took 10 to 12 hours even on the powerful Silicon Graphics computer used for analyzing SSBD congurations. Fortunately, Northrop Grummans CFD laboratory had quite a bit of spare computer time available during the SSBD design eort, and the project received managements support.18 The main purpose of the later design changes was to improve the aerodynamic performance and handling qualities of the modied F-5E while still maintaining its boom-shaping capability. Some congurations had to be rejected for not doing the latter. Regarding the predicted sonic boom signatures of the various congurations, Everyone trusted Ken Plotkins judgment.19 Roy Martin played a similar role on the F-5Es aerodynamic performance. Early on, he recommended not making the nose glove any longer than the nose of a standard F-5F to avoid excessive lateral instability and being sure the width of the nose glove did not interfere with a smooth airow into the engine inlets.20 He also advised conguring the nose glove for optimum performance at 32,000 feet rather than the 30,000 feet used in some of the early models. In addition to allowing a higher Mach number because of lower temperatures, this would permit the chase plane probing the demonstrators shock waves to also stay above 30,000 feet, which was the minimum height for Edwards AFBs high-altitude supersonic corridor.21 Continual feedback from other members of the SSBDWG, including parallel CFD analyses by Boeing and Lockheed Martin using their own proprietary codes, was also part of the process.22 John Morgenstern and Tony Pilon of Lockheed Martin and Todd Magee of Boeing provided constructive help and advice. Morgenstern, for example, suggested a way to improve the NGCs
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method of calculating corrections to the area distributions that signicantly reduced the turnaround time for design iterations. To help interpret inconsistencies in the CFD evaluations of the congurations by the three companies computer codes, Juliet Page of Wyle Labs devised an easy and consistent format for comparing their data.23 In addition, a recently developed three-dimensional propagation code by Eagles Percy Bobbitt, with programming support from Old Dominion Universitys aerospace engineering department, was used to verify the results of these analyses.24 The SSBDWGs second Interim Design Review, the purpose of which was to present the working groups consensus on a technical solution to DARPA, was held on February 13, 2002the day after the rst ISSM ight tests at Edwards AFB (described in chapter 6). An e-mail sent that evening by Ed Haering at NASA Dryden to IDR attendees tentatively conrmed a positive correlation between near-eld ight-test probe data and CFD predictions.25 The working group was thus able to show DARPA that it was closing in on a design that could more accurately account for the eects of inlet spillage and associated shocks as well as the F-5Es less-than-ideal wing sweep. The conguration approved at the IDR had been designated SBD-24b (a minor alteration of SBD-24, shown in gure 7-3), the design of which initially was completed in January 2002.26
Figure 7-4. SSBD model in Glenn wind tunnel, March 2002. (NGC)
be exchanged with the models regular nose. Because of the models original purpose, it had a wind tunnel mounting strut where the tail section would have been. The goal of the SSBD was to modify only the shock waves aecting the front end of the sonic boom signature, so the lack of shock waves from tail surfaces was not critical to its design. The shock waves created by the mounting device, however, would cause problems.28 The model had several other limitations that would soon become painfully apparent. It had no internal-force balance, and its ow-through inlets lacked internal ducting, so the airow passed straight through the internal cavity and exited in an uncontrolled manner. Because of the concerns about inlet spillage, a mass ow plug was placed just behind the model, connected by a berglass ow adaptor duct that covered the aft portion of the models fuselage. This allowed inlet spillage to be controlled so that the testers could assess the eects of the airow. To change the models angle of attack (AOA), which was necessary for experimenting with dierent ight conditions, someone had to enter the tunnel and manually adjust the mounting bracket. This meant turning o and then restarting the 87,000-horsepower motors that drive the tunnels high-speed compressor. Figure 7-4 shows the SSBD models installation in the wind tunnel.29 The tunnel test plan called for examining the model in both its baseline and modied congurations at speeds of Mach 1.30, Mach 1.35, and Mach 1.40 using three angles of attack. In addition to sensors in the mass ow plug, there were survey probes at numerous stations along the tunnel walls to collect obody pressure measurements. The test required use of the Glenn Wind
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Tunnel for 80 hours; 20 of those with the air owing. As these hours passed, the problems became ever more evident. To quote the denitive technical account of the test, results were disappointing for both the baseline F-5E and the SSBD-24b conguration.30 The obody pressures from the baseline F-5E showed unexplained and unrealistic sensitivities to the Mach numbers as well as signicant changes in forebody, inlet, and wing shocks when only small changes in the latter two shocks were expected. The models azimuth (directional) angles not only aected the wing shock as expected but also appeared to aect the pressure readings from the forebody. There were further discrepancies between baseline CFD predictions and wind tunnel data. Results with the SBD-24b conguration were somewhat dierent but no less troubling. For example, at both Mach 1.30 and Mach 1.40, there were unexpected pressure changes in the shocks from the modied forebody, which aected the plateau region of the pressure signature that would be critical for generating a attop sonic boom N-wave. Even allowing for expected interference from the models support structure, the testers observed signicant dierences in shock location and strength from the CFD predictions. Figure 7-5 is an example of some of these discrepancies.
Figure 7-5. Wind tunnel data (dotted line) versus CFD prediction (solid line) at Mach 1.40, March 2002. (NGC) Key: h/L = height-to-length ratio; = azimuth angle; MFR = inlet mass ow ratio; p = pressure increase in pounds per square foot; WTM = CFD wind tunnel model.
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In this case, the wind tunnel data from the nose area matched CFD predictions fairly well (left third of the chart), departed from CFD predictions in the inlet and wing area (middle third), and failed as expected to provide any data from the rear of the model (right third). Even where the results followed anticipated trends, the data points were scattered and often not repeatable. Problems involving the wind tunnel itself included static pressure variations, o-centerline data, and questionable Mach and ow-angle calibrations.31 In conclusion, the results at Glenn did not verify the shaped sonic boom design methodology; the near-eld pressure did not support the CFD predicted signature, and signicant model & tunnel data quality issues were identied.32 As would be expected, the Glenn wind tunnel test was a major topic at the next SSBDWG meeting on March 21, 2002. This was followed by the SSBD Preliminary Design Review (PDR) on March 26.33 Disappointed but determined to overcome this serious setback, SSBD program management decided to attempt another wind tunnel test after correcting as many of the problems as possible.34 (As discussed later in this chapter, this PDR also featured some good news about the availability of a Navy F-5E for the future demonstration.) Because of recent events and the need for more testing and CFD work, the critical design review (CDR), scheduled for mid-May, was postponed until the discrepancies could be resolved. As explained to the SSBDWG by Joe Pawlowski, We are still in the process of understanding the issues with the previous test and will be generating additional test plans. NASA Glenn is investigating the data issues....35 In preparation for this second try, Northrop Grumman specialists improved the model by adding an internal six-component force-and-moment balance to directly measure lift and other forces acting upon it. (In this context, moment refers to the torque that would tend to twist or pitch an airframe up or down.36) They also removed the mass ow plug to reduce the interference from extraneous shock waves. To help compensate for its absence, they inserted wedges in the duct and pressure instrumentation (known as rakes) at the aft exit to control mass ow. To move the model farther from the strut and its shock waves, they mounted it on a short sting. As shown in the accompanying photograph, the strut itself was reduced in size to alleviate blockage and lower the strength of the shocks it produced. After troubleshooting the problems encountered at Glenn, the projects CFD experts carefully analyzed the eects of proposed conguration changes prior to fabrication of the new model components. Meanwhile, specialists at Glenn conducted a ow survey and examined ways to improve the collection and validity of SSBD data in the wind tunnel.37 During this same period, the design team was making subtle revisions to SBD-24b. Based on continued analyses, the team digitally sculpted the aft section of the under-fuselage fairing to a narrower and more tapered shape
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to improve airow and thereby reduce the possibility of viscous separation. Additionally, the design team realigned the angle of the nose assembly to minimize trim drag. CFD modeling assured that these changes did not adversely aect the desired sonic boom pressure distribution. This latest (and nal) conguration was designated SSBD-24b4. Figure 7-6 shows Figure 7-6. Final SSBD conguration the shape of its nose glove and fairing from 24b4 compared with other F-5s and the side, in cross sections, and under the showing its new underbody fairings. (NGC) fuselage (including two additional small fairings extending back from the engine inlets). Although considerably higher and deeper than the nose of a standard F-5F, the SSBD nose glove matched its length and width. The additional weight of the added components, including ight-test instrumentation, would be more than oset by the absence of the F-5Es two 20 millimeter (mm) cannons, ammunition, radar, and other equipment. Extra ballast would therefore be required to keep its center of gravity within the limits of a normal F-5E or F-5F.38 With the 5-percent F-5E models new mounting system and loft revised to match that of SSBD-24b4, the retest in the Glenn Centers 8-foot-by-6-foot wind tunnel section took place during the last week of May 2002. The tunnel was operated at Mach 1.367, which was as close as could be precisely calibrated to the Mach 1.40 speed planned for the eventual ight demonstration. Only 40 hours of tunnel time were required compared to 80 hours in March with 20 of the 40 hours being actual air-on time. This time, the results were encouraging. Wind tunnel and CFD pressure distributions for the SSBD conguration showed a good correlation over most of the length of the model.... Wing shock strength and location were correctly predicted when matched with normal force.39 The results veried the ability of Northrop Grummans GCNS code to predict obody pressures of the SSBD conguration to at least 1.5 body lengths from both congurations of the model as well as sensitivity to lift, Mach number, and mass ow changes.40 The data also conrmed CFD predictions that making moderate changes to Mach number, lift coecient, and inlet mass ow did not signicantly change near-eld, obody pressures. The only correlation that had fallen o since the March test involved pressure measurements near the inlet, which was not unexpected because of the removal of the well-instrumented mass ow plug. Although the specialists at the Glenn Center went out of their way to improve test procedures, there was some continued data scattering. Even so, Results of the second test were signicantly better than the rst in nearly every way.41
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The experience gained at NASA Glenn oered two major lessons learned for conducting sonic boom wind tunnel experiments. Because of the wellknown inuence of an airplanes lift coecient on sonic boom overpressures, any models used need to be equipped to directly measure the forces acting upon them. And because sonic boom testing is less forgiving than regular aerodynamic testing for measuring onbody and obody pressures, the wind tunnel used should be thoroughly analyzed in advance of model fabrication for characteristics such as the model-mounting arrangements, inlet-ow elds, Reynolds number, and test section ow characteristics.42 After a careful analysis of data from the successful second test, the Critical Design Review for the SSBD was held in El Segundo on July 18, 2002. Most importantly, the meeting approved the latest conguration and allowed Northrop Grumman to begin physical fabrication of the new nose and fairing.43 Although having encountered some unexpected challenges, the design process owed its ultimate success to several factors (some that could be considered lessons learned for similar projects in the future). Getting early test pilot involvement proved invaluable for maximizing the use of similarity to previous aircraft modications and for understanding the many capabilities and few important limitations of the F-5 aircraft.44 The working group structure encouraged prompt contributions from a wide range of participants, which was especially useful in areas like sonic boom and wind tunnel testing, where NGC personnel had less experience. The relatively small design and analysis team dedicated to the project was able to react quickly to each new CFD result while QSP-SSBD program management assured access to the needed computer resources. Northrop Grummans extensive database of past F-5 congurations, both produced and proposed, and its existing 6-DOF simulation that could be quickly modied, provided valuable data and saved time.45
obody pressures of certain individual components (such as the nose-mounted pitot probe that measures airspeed), spillage from an inlet to the aircrafts environmental control system (ECS), wing lift, and horizontal tail angles. Some of the seemingly mundane but essential features that also required additional design work were nose-gear doors (which later proved problematic), arrangements for drainage, and exhaust ducting for the ECS. The functioning of this exhaust system would be critical because the fairing would be covered with a composite carbon-ber skin known as LTM-45EL. This was a cost-eective material for making prototype and low-volume items partly because its resin was preimpregnated into the fabric and did not need curing at high temperatures and pressures.46 One drawback, however, was that it would not tolerate direct heating of more than 250 F. Dave Graham was more worried about this issue than the eects of the SSBD modications on the F-5Es stability and control. The design teams devised a stainless steel ECS exhaust system to ensure dissipation of any heat buildup by using CFD to model its geometry, surface ow, and cooling capacity. They also decided to install thermal switches inside the fairing to alert the pilot in case of a dangerous hot-air leak.47 Even as some design work continued, a team of skilled craftsmen at Northrop Grummans Advanced Composites Manufacturing Center in El Segundo were preparing to make the nose glove and fairing.48 Leading this team was Mark Smith, a manufacturing engineer who had begun his career with Northrop in 1973 working on the F-5. To accomplish the fabrication as eciently as possible, they followed rapid prototype procedures, which NGC had used when making small new vehicles in the past. The initial fabrication process began during July 2002 in NGCs Building 905. As shown in the two accompanying photos, some of the rst steps were to create the foam tooling that served as templates for laminating (laying up) the surfaces to be used for shaping the outer skin panels. Preparing tooling (top) to form the outer mold line A total of 33 precisely engineered of the nose glove (bottom) in August 2002. (NGC)
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panels of various sizes eventually would be needed to cover the exterior of the nose glove, including the fairing extending under the fuselage. As with the aerodynamic design process, making all the required parts became more complicated (and time consuming) than originally planned.49 Although there was now condence that SSBD conguration 24b4 could indeed lower the initial overpressure of its sonic boom signature, more testing and analysis were needed to verify its stability and control qualities. The value of CFD continued to be evident in this eort. Because of the small size of the high-speed wind tunnel model and its uncalibrated ducts, only CFD could be used to show the supersonic trimmed-drag eects of the nose glove.50 The CFD analyses indicated that the aerodynamics of SSBD-24b4 were within Northrop Grummans existing (and very extensive) F-5 database but just barely for angles of attack at high speeds.51 They also predicted it could meet the desired speed of Mach 1.4 at 32,000 feet on a standard day (i.e., one with the normal range of temperatures for that altitude) and would be statically stable about all its axes.52 Even though preliminary CFD predictions of the aerodynamic coecients showed acceptable handling qualities, two more wind tunnel tests were needed to validate the obody pressures of the SSBD design and to update 6 degrees of freedom (6-DOF) motions used in computer simulations for the standard F-5Es ight maneuvers. These tests would help verify the planes handling qualities for ight-readiness reviews to be conducted by both Northrop Grumman and the Navy. Fortunately, the SSBD F-5 would be ying mostly straight and level with relatively gradual turns, which did not require validating the entire F-5E ight envelope. Wind tunnel testing of the SSBD 24b4s low-speed handling qualities required a model at least twice as large as the 5 percent scale model used for high-speed testing, one with both vertical and horizontal tail surfaces.53 The SSBDWG originally had assumed that they could modify a legacy F-5E model from the 1970s, but despite inquiries both within and outside the company, David Graham was unable to locate one. So Northrop Grumman fabricated a 10-percent scale model using stereolithography, the CAD technique in which an ultraviolet laser device printed the three-dimensional loft of the model one layer at a time using a special resin-like material.54 After getting an aluminum skin, the resulting 5-foot-long model (shown in the accompanying photograph) was tested in Northrop Grummans 7-foot-by-10-foot low-speed wind tunnel for 25 hours in August 2002 to validate CFD predictions for stability and control, including force-and-moment measurements throughout its reduced ight envelope. The existing 5-percent model was then tested for the same factors in a 4-foot supersonic wind tunnel section at the Air Forces Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC) in Tennessee during October 2002. Both tests started with the models having the standard
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F-5E nose to establish a direct link to the existing database before moving on to the SSBD conguration. All the data collected were postprocessed to build increments between the standard and modied congurations for the stability and control analysis.55 These two nal wind tunnel tests revealed no signicant changes in SSBD-24b4s longitudinal responses Ten percent model of SSBD in Northrop except for the need to add 2 degrees Grummans low-speed wind tunnel, October of horizontal tail trim at most Mach 2002. (NGC) numbers to compensate for a change in its pitching-moment coecient. The lateral (directional) responses were comparable to that of a standard F-5E except for some reductions in yaw and roll stability. This made its handling qualities very comparable to an F-5F (with its longer forebody) when carrying a 275-gallon centerline fuel tank (which produced eects much like the underbody fairing). The controls worked well, with no signicant change in power by the ailerons or horizontal tail surfaces and only a slight reduction in rudder power at high deections and angles of attack. Previous concerns about sideslip eects on control power were deemed insignicant. Further aerodynamic and engineering analyses found that the eects of the SSBD modication on stability and control matched CFD predictions and would be suitable within its restricted ight envelope. In conclusion, both the subsonic and supersonic handling qualities of the modied aircraft were found to be satisfactory and not too dierent from other F-5 congurations with stability augmentation engaged.56 With the completion of wind tunnel testing and additional design renements, the nal conguration was conrmed at a DARPA-sponsored meeting in Huntington Beach, CA, in December 2002. Before the parts could be completed and installed, however, the Navy would have to approve this radical remodeling of one of its Tiger IIs and place it on loan to Northrop Grumman.
the Mojave Airport, in one of Drydens hangars at nearby Edwards AFB, or in an NGC building at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale. Although these locations would be close to the manufacturing facilities in El Segundo and the test range at Edwards, they selected Northrop Grummans maintenance depot in St. Augustine, FL (abbreviated as the NGSA), which is located at the St. Johns County Airport, as the most logical choice. The technicians and mechanics at the NGSA had unequalled experience in breaking down, refurbishing, and returning to ight status various Navy aircraft including F-5s. Doing the SSBD modications would be similar to this work. Roy Martin later determined, however, that the 8,000-foot St. Johns runway, although suitable for a normal F-5, would not provide enough of a safety margin for the modied F-5E. As a solution, John Nevadomsky, the NGSA operations and safety ocer, suggested ying all but the rst Florida ight out of the nearby Cecil Commerce Center, which had been built up around a former military base named Cecil Field with a 12,500-foot runway. An Army reserve unit there later agreed to host the modied F-5 and its chase plane.57 Now all that was needed was to obtain a suitable aircraft. While hoping the Navy would agree to provide one of theirs, Northrop Grumman explored several other options. These included leasing an F-5E from the Swiss Air Force or from a couple of private companies that were considering the purchase of F-5Es from Switzerland or Taiwan.58 As explained in chapter 6, arranging for the U.S. Navys aggressor squadron at NAS Fallon in Nevada to deploy one of its F-5Es to Edwards AFB for the 2-day ISSM ight tests had not been a simple matter. Even so, Roy Martin was happy to report from Fallon in late October 2001 that the sta of VFC-13, including its soon-to-be commander, W.J. Cole, had agreed to support the future SSBD (pending the approval of higher headquarters) with another similar deployment. Of course, they expected reimbursement by either NGC or NASA. Martin also informed fellow SSBD team members that VFC-13 would try to accommodate all the needed special equipment in the F-5Es cockpit.59 Getting the Navys approval for a long-term loan of one of its F-5Es, which would have to be demilitarized and partially rebuilt into the SSBD conguration, was more complicated. The instrument for arranging this would be a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA), which is basically a contract between a Federal and a non-Federal entity to facilitate joint R&D projects. As with the ISSM test, Mike Ingalls, NGSAs aircraft overhaul program manager who had excellent relationships with many Navy ocials, was largely responsible for obtaining the F-5E. In January 2002, he informally approached Naval Air Systems Command ocials about allowing Northrop Grumman to borrow and modify one for the SSBD. Receiving a favorable response, Joe Pawlowski drafted a formal request cosigned by Steven R. Briggs, a retired rear admiral who was
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vice president of the NGC Air Combat Systems division. Ingalls delivered this request to the NAVAIR program management oce for multimission aircraft (code PMA-225) in late January while stopping at Patuxent River on his way to Switzerland with NAVAIR representatives.60 There they discussed the purchase of surplus F-5s from the Swiss Air Force, which would be a key factor for obtaining use of one of the Navys existing F-5Es. In March 2002, after Joe Pawlowski had explained more about the program to Rear Adm. Timothy Heely of the Naval Air Warfare Centers Aircraft Division, Jim Sandberg, a former test pilot who was one of NGCs onsite personnel at Patuxent River, set up a full-scale brieng for Vice Adm. Joseph Dyer, NAVAIR commander. Dyer was very knowledgeable on the technical and safety aspects of experimental projects like the SSBD, having formerly been the Navys chief test pilot and chief aviation engineer.61 Attendees at this meeting, held on March 22, included Lisa Veitch representing DARPA; Peter Coen from NASA; and Charles Boccadoro, Steven Briggs, and Joe Pawlowski from NGC. After Veitch gave an introduction to the QSP program, Pawlowski gave a short brieng on the planned Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration. Admiral Dyer responded favorably pending three conditions: having a Navy test pilot y some of the sorties, meeting all Navy ight clearance criteria, and being given more involvement in the QSP program, especially if there was a follow-on to Phase II. The Navys tentative approval to provide an aircraft allowed DARPAs Richard Wlezien to make a favorable go, no-go decision on the SSBD at the Preliminary Design Review held on March 26.62 Even with NAVAIRs tentative approval, negotiating terms of the CRADA became a drawn-out process that included coordination with the Navys Type Command (TYCOM) in New Orleans, which was responsible for operating F-5 type aircraft. Because the planned purchase of the surplus F-5Es from Switzerland was not yet nal, the Navy at rst wanted the modied F-5E restored to its original condition after the demonstration. Negotiating terms of the CRADA required frequent discussions and exchanges of information with NAVAIR. Joe Pawlowski and other NGC personnel made three more trips to Patuxent River to negotiate terms of the CRADA and work with NAVAIR specialists regarding the ight clearance process.63 On December 10, 2002, 1 day after Admirals Dyer and Heely and Barbara Olsen from NGCs subcontracts oce signed the CRADA, Pawlowski reported the good news to the membership of the SSBDWG. The Navy has nally signed the CRADA and released the F-5E aircraft! We are now getting it ready to y a baseline functional check ight next week to assess aircraft performance prior to modication.64 The F-5E chosen for the modication, identied as BUNO 74-1519, came from the U.S. Marine Corps aggressor squadron at Yuma, AZ. (In Navy parlance, BUNO is an abbreviation for Bureau Number.)
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As indicated by the rst two digits of this number (inherited from the original Air Forceallocated tail number), it had been built in 1974. The plane was in need of a major overhaul, but NAVAIR authorized a lifetime extension of 50 ight hours given that the planned demo would put only minimal stresses on the airframe. Roy Martin put the old F-5 through its paces during functional check ights (FCFs) on December 17 and December 18. The rst ight revealed some minor handling abnormalities, but after the NGSA mechanics replaced some parts, he was able to make several runs along the supersonic corridor o the Florida coast. Instead of the expected Mach 1.55, however, the plane was able to achieve only Mach 1.4 at 32,000 feet. The temperature there was measured at 41 F compared to 48 F on a standard day. In view of the abnormally high temperature and having the option of using a pushover maneuver from a higher altitude to gain speed, Martin and Graham still hoped to be able to achieve the planned Mach 1.4 during the planned tests at Edwards despite the extra drag that the modication would impose. After further analyses, it was concluded that a max Mach number of only 1.4 for the unmodied aircraft on a hotter than standard day is not a show stopper. There is no reason to delay installing the SSBD modications to the...aircraft.65 To begin preparing the Marine ghter plane for this work, it was towed into NGSAs Hangar 40 on January 9, 2003.66 Much to the delight of all involved, in early February, NAVAIR notied Joe Pawlowski that the last of four congressional committees had approved the Navys purchase of Swiss F-5s. This meant that after having disassembled and modied BUNO 74-1529, the NGSA would not have to restore the plane to its original condition after the demonstration as had been required in the CRADA.67
Nose bulkheads and framework being assembled and later crated for shipment with skin panels attached. (NGC)
The new nose and other recently delivered parts in a hangar at St. Augustine on April 3, 2003. (NGC)
Fabrication of the nose section was completed in mid-March, when it was carefully packaged as shown in the next photograph. The fairing was also completed for shipment to St. Augustine on March 17. As an extra precaution because of the skins susceptibility to overheating, the designers provided a number of temperature-indicating tabs to be applied to the fairings outer skin near the ECS exhaust outlet. During the future test program, postight inspections of these tell-tales (which would change color if exposed to high temperatures) revealed no such problems.69 The next photograph shows the new nose being aligned with the strippeddown F-5E fuselage shortly after its arrival at NGSA Hangar 40 along with boxes and crates holding other components. To some extent, the rebirth of the Marine ghter as the F-5 SSBD was equivalent to handcrafting a new prototype. To help in this process, the NGSA workforce was augmented by Mark Smith and three technicians from El Segundo. Reecting
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the high-level interest in completing the project, Charles Boccadoro and Joe Pawlowski spent the next several months taking turns overseeing the work in St. Augustine. As might be expected when putting a one-of-a-kind structure together for the rst time, the modication team began encountering some problems.70 One of the more tedious issues involved securely mating the nose glove and fairing to the existing framework of the old F-5. A complex arrangement of bulkheads and aluminum stringers (shown in gure 7-7) served as a skeleton for the modied exterior. Based on NGCs le of F-5E plans and specications, the fabrication design team had congured this aluminum framework for easy attachment to a production F-5Es existing structure or so it was hoped. Unfortunately, over the past quarter century BUNO 74-1529 had undergone a lot of eld maintenance and some overhauls with many minor changes not documented in available maintenance records. Because of these nonstandard specications, about 90 percent of the shims and spacers shipped from El Segundo did not quite line up in the exact places they were supposed to. As a result, the NGSA technicians had to improvise and hand-t new connectors.71 Not all of the projects troubles involved work on the aircraft. One late evening in April 2003, Charles Boccadoro was returning to his hotel on a narrow country road when he swerved to avoid a drunk driver in a black pickup truck. His rental car crashed into a drainage ditch, and when he regained consciousness, the engine compartment was on re. Despite a badly injured kneecap, he was able to pull himself out the window and, with the help of some good Samaritans who came on the scene, get away before the passenger compartment was engulfed in ames. When emergency personnel arrived, his biggest concern was retrieving his laptop computer. Fortunately, a very good doctor in Jacksonville helped him begin rehabilitation from his injury, and even the data stored on the hard drive of his charred computer was recoverable. The accident may also have garnered him some sympathy at corporate headquarters, where unhappiness about the SSBDs delays and cost overruns had been mounting. In that regard, the SSBD project was fortunate to have continued receiving strong support from Scott Seymour, Boccadoros superior at the Integrated Systems Sector.72
Figure 7-7. Framework for the SSBD nose glove and fairing. (NGC)
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In addition to the F-5 SSBDs external shape being modied, much of its internal equipment was replaced. In eect, the former ghter plane was transformed into a ight--research platform. First, the NGSA team had removed the radar antenna, both 20 mm guns and ammunition boxes, the lead computing optical sight system, and the re control computer. They also installed a sophisticated pitot static probe on the point of the new nose and relocated the battery, tactical air control antenna, and UHF identication friend or foe (IFF) antenna to other parts of the aircraft.73 Ed Haering and colleagues at NASA Dryden planned and obtained the special ight-test instrumentation needed in the SSBD. As during the ISSM test in February 2002, one of the key components was an Ashtech Z-12 carrierphase dierential GPS receiver.74 In addition to recording data in its internal memory, it had a UHF modem for transmitting data to others. Once again, the NGC specialists in El Segundo integrated the receiver into a package that t in the map case on the right side of the cockpit as shown in an accompanying photo. The GPS unit would determine the planes exact position relative to the similarly equipped F-15B probe aircraft, the standard F-5E, and the array of microphones on the ground.75 Precisely measuring speed, acceleration heading, pitch, roll, yaw, and other aerodynamic factors required a suite of sensitive air-data acquisition instruments. This specialized equipment consisted of a calibrated Mach meter; temperaturecontrolled air-data transducers; an unheated outside air temperature probe with a signal conditioner and power supply to gauge true airspeed; a three-axis rate gyroscope; sensitive accelerometers; a signal-conditioning, power control module; an S-band telemetry transmitter; an Inter-Range Instrumentation Group (IRIG) format B time code generator; and three time recorders. To record pilot comments and the readings of cockpit instrumentssuch as air speed, altitude, and trimtwo small lipstick video cameras were connected to a three-deck 8 mm airborne video and voice recorder mounted in the right-side gun bay. The telemetry system would allow realtime monitoring and recordings on the ground, while the onboard data-recording system would provide redundancy. Using UHF, the GPS data would be transmitted separately from the telemetry data stream on the S-band.76 The accompanying photograph shows some of the GPS equipment and one of the little video cameras inside the cockpit. Lipstick camera and GPS unit in cockpit. (NGC)
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Since Northrop Grummans St. Augustine facility conducted only routine ights of the aircraft it overhauled, it did not have the antennas or instrumentation needed to receive and record ight-test telemetry from the F-5 SSBD, as the former F-5E would be redesignated. To obtain these data during the required local check and envelope-expansion ights, Northrop Grumman had to install a special ground telemetry station as well as arrange advance clearances from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for the frequencies that would be used.77 The equipment included a microwave antenna mounted on the roof of the NGSA hangar and an S-band telemetry receiver with related processors, displays, recorders, and printers.78 Most of the instrumentation was installed and wired by late April. On April 28, the modied F-5 with a big new olive drab nose and owhite underbody fairing attached to its original gray airframe was towed to the NGSA painting facility. One week later, it emerged having a bright white exterior with the sides of the fuselage featuring a red pinstripe shaped like a typical N-wave sonic boom signature and a parallel blue pinstripe representing the predicted attop signature.79 This clever design was the inspiration of a Northrop Grumman engineer named Joan Yazejian.80 The transformation of the old F-5E ghter jet into the F-5 SSBD appeared to be complete. All seemed to be going well until June 8, during preparations for the rst high-speed taxi test scheduled for the following day. The inspectors noticed some unacceptable free play with the front doors for the nose landing gear. Unlike the aft portion, which was replaced with a newly designed wider door, the existing clamshell doors had been integrated into the new fairing using the same hinges and an extended actuation arm. This metal strap seemingly simple mechanical problem took the rest of the month to solve. Mark piano hinge Smith, who was now leading the modiforward door cation team in St. Augustine following Dale Brownlows retirement in May, metal strap brought in three of the technicians who had fabricated the nose in El Segundo to help make the necessary xes and get the landing gear ight worthy. As shown in gure 7-8, one of their ingenious soluFigure 7-8. Changes made to nose gear door components. (NGC) tions was securing the clamshell doors with segments of a piano hinge.81 The delay this caused in starting ight operations almost made for an awkward situation with the Boeing Company. Regarding a chase plane and escort for the long cross-country ight to California, Roy Martins preference had been to use another F-5-type aircraft, such as a T-38, which had
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the same basic performance. Charles Boccadoro had therefore arranged for Boeing to provide a T-38 chase plane as part of the arrangement for sharing in the SSBDs data. Martin went to Seattle in early June to help Boeing test pilot Mike Bryan bring the T-38 to Florida. (As practice for later ying the F-5 SSBD with its long nose, Martin frequently controlled the T-38 from the back seat on the ight to St. Augustine.) When it became obvious that the nose gear door would not soon be xed, the time came to notify Boeing of the embarrassing delay. Just before that, however, Bryan told his hosts that his oce at Boeing had just called to inform him that his T-38 was, in any case, needed back in Seattle.82 He would return a month later when the F-5 SSBD was ready to y.
Roy Martin getting into the Pelican for a ground test on July 23, 2003, just before its rst ight. (NGC)
In preparing ght proles, the planners followed a predict, test, analyze86 procedure. They used data collected from the Northrop Grumman subsonic and AEDC supersonic wind tunnel tests combined with the existing F-5 performance database and CFD analyses to assure the modied F-5E would have enough stability (especially specic damping ratios) and other handling qualities in all of the planned ight conditions. Military Standard (MIL-STD) 1797, Flying Qualities of Piloted Aircraft, dened these and other criteria in great detail. As chief SSBD test pilot, Roy Martin approved each of the planned maneuvers.87 Northrop Grumman conducted a series of ight-readiness reviews (FRRs). These covered the statuses of the aircraft conguration, engineering analysis, test plan, completion of modications, safety-hazard analysis, and other readiness factors. On June 9, 2003, having been reassured by these reviews that the modied F-5 would be safe to y, NAVAIR formally transmitted its eagerly awaited initial ight clearance (rst announced on June 6), which closely followed the thresholds in NGCs previously published test plan. For the record, the message listed the various conditions and constraints that the aircraft would comply with, such as ying only in visual meteorological conditions, not exceeding Mach 1.45, keeping the most strenuous of several approved
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maneuvers under 3.0 equivalent gravitational forces (gs), turning with bank angles of no more than 60 degrees, and making no abrupt changes in pitch, roll, or yaw.88 Two days after the Navys initial ight clearance notication, the nose gear problem was discovered.89 Since the loose door would not aect nonying activity, Roy Martin was able to take the F-5 SSBD out on the St. Johns runway for the rst ground test as scheduled on June 9.90 Keeping below the F-5s takeo speed of 150 knots, this and two subsequent acceleration tests on July 23 were part of a systematic series of ground checkouts of all the aircrafts systems, including the revised environmental controls. The taxi runs tested the planes brakes at various speeds and distances. On one run, the drag chute was deployed to simulate an abort at 130 knots. These operations also previewed functioning of the air-data instrumentation system, the Ashtech Z-12, and the telemetry equipment that would be so important in recording and transmitting results of the ight tests.91 After resolving the landing-gear problem and receiving another NAVAIR ight clearance on July 3,92 the nal ight-readiness reviews for the planned activities could begin. These were conducted in front of a nine-person board cochaired by representatives from NGC and NAVAIR. By late July, the nal FRR for the envelope-expansion and ferry ights had assured NAVAIR that all pertinent quality assurance and safety issues for the new F-5 SSBD had been addressed successfully.93 After a nal ground test on July 23, the time had come to check it out in the air.
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Endnotes
1. Source for gure 7-1: Peter G. Coen and Roy Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier: The DARPA/NASA/Northrop Grumman Shaped Sonic Boom Flight Demonstration, PowerPoint presentation, Experimental Aircraft Assoc. (EAA) Air Venture, Oshkosh, WI, July 2004, slide no. 4. 2. David H. Graham, John A. Dahlin, Keith B. Meredith, and Jay L. Vadnais, Aerodynamic Design of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 3. 3. Domenic Maglieri to Lawrence Benson, Comments on Chapter 7, e-mail, September 19, 2011. 4. C.M. Darden, SEEB-Minimization of Sonic-Boom Parameters in Real and Isothermal Atmospheres, LAR-1179 (January 1994), NTRS abstract. 5. Peter G. Coen, Development of a Computer Technique for Prediction of Transport Aircraft Flight Prole Sonic Boom Signatures, NASA CR 188117 (March 1991). 6. David Graham to Lawrence Benson, SSBD Design Questions, e-mail, August 4, 2011. Figure 7-3 copied from Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide no. 4. 7. Graham to Benson, August 4, 2011. 8. Robert Wall, Noise Control, Aviation Week (August 4, 2003): 2324, citing interview with Charles Boccadoro; John Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, Aerospace America 42, no. 9 (September 2004): 29. Figures 7-2 and 7-3 extracted from Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide no. 4. 9. Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, 29, citing interview with Charles Boccadoro. 10. L.R. Miranda, R.D. Elliott, and W.M. Baker, A Generalized Vortex Lattice Method for Subsonic and Supersonic Flow Applications, NASA CR 2895 (December 1977). 11. Kenneth J. Plotkin and Fabio Grandi, Computer Models for Sonic Boom Analysis: PCBoom4, CABoom, BooMap, CORBoom, Wyle Report WR-02-11 (June 2002).
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12. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD (August 17, 2004), slide no. 8. Daniel A. Durstons NFBOOM Users Guide, Sonic Boom Extrapolation and Sound-Level Prediction, NASA Ames Research Center, was an unpublished document. His November 2000 edition is cited in Charles L. Carr et al., Minimization of Sonic Boom on Supersonic Aircraft Using an Evolutionary Algorithm, 2003, accessed August 14, 2011, http://portal.acm.org/citation. cfm?id=1756700. 13. Graham to Benson, August 4, 2011. 14. Figure 7-3 copied from Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide no. 6. 15. Michael Dornheim, Will Low-Boom Fly? Aviation Week (November 7, 2005): 69. 16. Ibid.; Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 3. 17. Meredith, CFD Comparison and Flight Test Measurement, AIAA paper no. 2005-6, 5. Based on the Ames Research Center 3-Dimensional (ARC3D) code, GCNSfv was a multiple-block code that allowed both arbitrary face-matching and overlapping block interfaces. It used nodal nite volume and a diagonal beam-warming algorithm with viscous modications. NGC had developed an extensive compilation of boundary conditions from various airframe components to use in airow predictions. Boundary conditions and parametric linear interpolations were computed on multiple grids and a sequence of coarse and ne meshes using various techniques. 18. Benson, Pawlowski/Graham interview, April 12, 2011; Wall, Noise Control, 24. 19. Benson, Pawlowski/Graham interview, April 12, 2011. 20. Interview of Roy Martin by Lawrence Benson, Lancaster, CA, April 7, 2011. 21. David Graham to Ed Haering et al., FW: Release of F-5SBD Loft, e-mail, October 4, 2001. 22. Lockheed Martins analysis in early 2002 used its SPLTFLOW-3D code. See John F. Morgenstern, Alan Arsian, Victor Lyman, and Joseph Vadyak, F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrators Persistence of Boom Shaping Reduction through Turbulence,
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23.
24.
25. 26.
27. 28.
29.
30. 31.
AIAA paper no. 2005-12, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 34. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SBDWG Meeting Reminder, e-mail, January 8, 2002; CFD Used in Sonic Boom Test Program, CFD Review (September 23, 2003), accessed ca. August 30, 2011, http://www.cfdreview.com/application/03/09/23/1327257. shtml. Osama A. Kandil, Z. Yang, and P.J. Bobbitt, Prediction of Sonic Boom Signature Using Euler-Full-Potential CFD with Grid Adaptation and Shock Fitting, AIAA paper no. 2002-2543 (June 2002), cited in Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of the SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 8, 14. Kandil was a professor and Yang a research assistant. Ed Haering to Joe Pawlowski et al., VERY preliminary ISSM data, e-mail, February 12, 2002. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SBDWG Meeting Reminder, e-mail, January 22, 2002; Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., IDR Rescheduled for Wednesday 2/13/02, e-mail, February 4, 2002; Graham to Benson, SSBD Design Questions, August 4, 2011. Graham to Benson, August 4, 2011. The vertical tail surface of a typical ghter aircraft conguration such as the F-5 serves as a horizontal stabilizer and rudder. The horizontal surfaces serve as vertical stabilizers as well as elevators for climbing or descending. All of these components can create shock waves during transonic and supersonic ight. David H. Graham, John A. Dahlin, Judith A. Page, Kenneth J. Plotkin, and Peter G. Coen, Wind Tunnel Validation of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft Design, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, AIAA paper no. 2005-7, 23; Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slides nos. 1719, with gure 7-4 copied from slide no. 20. Graham et al., Wind Tunnel Validation of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-7, 3. David Graham, Wind Tunnel Boom Test, PowerPoint presentation, July 18, 2002, with gure 7-5 copied from slide no. 7.
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32. Graham et al., Wind Tunnel Validation of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-7, 4. 33. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBDWG Meeting Reminder, e-mail, March 19, 2002; Joe Pawlowski to Richard Wlezien et al., SSBD PDR 3/26/0, e-mail, March 20, 2002. 34. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBDWG Meeting 4/18/02!!, e-mail, April 9, 2002. 35. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBD CDR Status, e-mail, May 1, 2002. 36. Steven A. Brandt et al., Introduction to Aeronautics: A Design Perspective (Reston, VA: AIAA, 2004), 8788. 37. Graham et al., Wind Tunnel Validation of SSBD, 45; Graham, Wind Tunnel Boom Test, July 18, 2002. 38. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, gure 7-6 extracted from slide no. 5. 39. AIAA paper no. 2005-7, 5. 40. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide no. 26. 41. Graham et al., Wind Tunnel Validation of SSBD, AIAA 2005-7, 6. 42. Ibid. 43. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., SSBD CDR Postponed, e-mail, June 17, 2002; Joe Pawlowski to Lisa Veitch, Re: SSBD CDR Meeting Reminder - 7/18/02, e-mail, July 17, 2002; Peter Coen to Ed Haering, SSBD Status, e-mail, August 7, 2002. 44. Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 6. 45. Ibid., 67. 46. R. Francombe, LTMA Flexible Processing Technology for Polymer Composite Structures, paper presented at NATO Research and Technology Organization (RTO) Applied Vehicle Technology (AVT) specialists meeting on low-cost composite structures, Loen, Norway, May 711, 2001, accessed August 28, 2011, http://ftp.rta.nato.int/public//PubFullText/RTO/MP/RTO-MP069-II///MP-069(II)-$$TOC.pdf. 47. Benson, Pawlowski-Graham interview, April 12, 2011; Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 34. 48. Joe Pawlowski to Lawrence Benson, EXT: Re: More SSBD Questions, e-mail, August 17, 2011.
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49. Benson, Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011; Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, 30. 50. Benson, Pawlowski-Graham interview, April 12, 2001; Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 34. 51. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide no. 28. 52. Ibid., slide no. 11. 53. The latter, which serve as both a stabilizer and elevator, is sometimes referred to as a stabilator. 54. Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 5; Marshall Brain, How Stereolithography 3-D Layering Works, accessed July 30, 2011, http://computer.howstuworks.com/ stereolith.htm. 55. Graham to Benson, SSBD Design Question, April 4, 2011. 56. Graham and Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD, slide nos. 3133. 57. Benson, Martin Interview, April 7, 2011; Roy Martin to G. Allen West, Preliminary QSP SOW Denition, e-mail, June 25, 2001; Roy Martin to Joe Pawlowski, Factors to be resolved concerning F-5E mod for QSP, e-mail, March 29, 2002. 58. Benson, Martin Interview, April 7, 2011; Martin to West, June 25, 2001. 59. Roy Martin to Joe Pawlowski et al., Trip Report Fallon NAS, e-mail, October 26, 2001. 60. Benson, Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011; Pawlowski to Benson, Re: More SSBD Questions, e-mail, August 31, 2011. 61. Biography of Joseph Dyer (who later became an executive at IRobot Corp. and chair of NASAs Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel), accessed July 16, 2011, http://investor.irobot.com/phoenix. zhtml?c=193096&p=irol-govBio&ID=195535. 62. Pawlowski to Benson, August 31, 2011; Pawlowski to Peter Coen, Presentation Material for SSBD PDR, e-mail, March 25, 2011. 63. Benson, Pawlowski-Graham interview, April 12, 2001; Pawlowski to Benson, August 31, 2011. 64. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., Good News! & SSBDWG Meeting Notice, e-mail, December 10, 2001. 65. David Graham to Peter Coen et al., Baseline F-5E Supersonic Functional Check Flight, e-mail, January 23, 2002, quoted;
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69. 70.
74.
75.
Roy Martin to Ed Haering et al., Florida Temperature, e-mail, January 24, 2002. Northrop Grumman, SSBD Aircraft Assembly Photo-Log, April 17, 2003, slide no. 9. Pawlowski to Benson, Re: EXT: More SSBD Questions, e-mail, September 3, 2011. Advanced Composites Group, SpaceShipOne Makes Historic Space Fight, news release, October 2004, accessed ca. August 10, 2011, http://www.advanced-composites.co.uk/aerospace_archived_ news_index_pre2007.html. Joe Pawlowski to Lawrence Benson, Re: SSBD Chapter 7 for Review, e-mail, September 29, 2011. Benson, Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011; Benson, Boccadoro interview, August 12, 2011. The three aircraft mechanics from El Segundo were Malcolm Croxton, Jack Allan, and Darrell Norwood: Boccadoro to Benson, e-mail, Names, August 20, 2011. Benson, Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011. Source for gure 7-7: Northrop Grumman, F-5 SSBD Aircraft Description, September 2, 2004, slide no. 4. Benson, Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. Steve Madison, Ken Ferguson, and Roy Martin, Test Plan: Quiet Supersonic Platform Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator Data Collection, Revision A, March 31, 2003, Appendix C, conrmed during review of this chapter. Founded in 1987 in Santa Clara, CA, Ashtech in 1997 became part of Magellan Corp., which was in turn a subsidiary of Orbital Sciences Corp. In 2001, Magellan Corp. was acquired by the Thales Group, which later sold its GPS business to an investment company that renamed it Magellan Navigationwith the Ashtech brand continuing to focus on high-precision global satellite navigation system equipment. Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, Dana D. Purifoy, David H. Graham, Keith B. Meredith, Christopher E. Asburn, and Lt. Col. Mark Stucky, Airborne Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Pressure Measurements with Computational Fluid Dynamics, 43rd AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 5.
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76. Madison et al., Test Plan: QSP SSBD, 56, Appendices B and C; Haering et al., Airborne Sonic Boom Demonstration Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 5; Haering to Benson, Re: Quick SSBD Question, e-mail, August 29, 2011. 77. Benson, Pawlowski-Graham interview; Bruce King to Ed Haering et al., Re: Urgent? Florida TM freq scheduling, e-mail, March 12, 2003, with previous message trac inserted. 78. Steve Madison, Shaped Sonic Boom Demo (SSBD) Test Plan Review, PowerPoint presentation, as of February 2011, slide no. 37. 79. Date stamps on digital photos showing the work at NGSA. 80. Pawlowski to Benson, e-mail, August 31, 2011. 81. Benson, Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011; Benson, Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. Source for gure 7-8: Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Overview, AIAA Southern California Aerospace Systems and Technology Conference, Buena Park, CA, May 21, 2005, slide no. 12. 82. Statement of Work, Boeing T-38 Chase Aircraft Support for F-5SSBD Flight Test Program, April 17, 2003; Benson, Martin interview, April 7, 2011. 83. Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems, SSBD/SSBE Team Roster, September 16, 2004, slide nos. 13 and 14. 84. Joe Pawlowski to Peter Coen et al., Draft SSBD Test Plan Available for Review, e-mail, October 15, 2002; Madison, SSBD Test Plan Review. 85. Steve Madison, Ken Ferguson, and Roy Martin, Test Plan: Quiet Supersonic Platform Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator Data Collection, Revision A, March 31, 2003; Steve Madison, Roy Martin, Keith Applewhite, and Eric Vartio, Test Plan: Quiet Supersonic Program Flight Envelope Clearance, Revision 6, May 5, 2003. 86. Benson-Martin interview; MIL-STD-1797A, Flying Qualities of Piloted Aircraft, December 19, 1997, accessed ca. September 1, 2011, http://www.mechanics.iei.liu.se/edu_ug/tmme50/MILHDBK-1797.PDF. (The next edition, MIL-STD-1797B, was issued on February 15, 2006.) 87. Ibid. 88. COMNAVAIRSYSCOM Patuxent River MD/4.OP, to AIRTEVRON Three One China Lake CA et al., F-5
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Interim Flight Clearance for TYCOM Designated Aircraft, teletype message, 162007Z, July 2003, referencing COMNAVAIRSYSCOM 092003Z, June 2003, which was the initial ight clearance. Pawlowski to Benson, e-mail, August 31, 2011. Coen and Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier, slide no. 14. Northrop Grumman, F-5 SSBD Test Plan Review, undated, slide nos. 79. Pawlowski to Benson, e-mail, August 31, 2011. Madison, SSBD Test Plan Review, slide no. 18; Pawlowski et al., Origins and Overview of the SSBD, AIAA 2005-5, 10.
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The Navys F-5E, Northrop Grummans F-5 SSBD, and Drydens F-15B on August 29, 2003. (NASA)
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CHAPTER 8
Proof at Last
The weather appeared favorable in the Jacksonville area on the morning of July 24, 2003, as the Northrop Grumman team prepared for the maiden ight of the F-5 SSBD. The former F-5E had not own since the previous December, before its transformation into a sonic boom test bed. Temperatures were in the 70s, climbing toward a high in the upper 80s. Relative humidity hovered at almost 100 percent as the day began, but visibility was satisfactory, and seasonal thunderstorms were not forecast until the afternoon.1 Before beginning this ight (and all subsequent ights), the pilot and ground personnel complied with a safety checklist and stringent go, no-go criteria based on an extensive hazard analysis.2 With everything in order, the time had nally arrived for the rebuilt F-5, now unocially nicknamed the Pelican, to take to the air.
Flying over Air Force Plant 42, showing Northrop Grummans Site 3, with arrow pointed toward Building 307, and Site 4, with Building 401 in lower right corner. (NASA)
these and all subsequent ight checks and ight tests by the F-5 SSBD were assigned a sequential number starting with QSP-1. (See appendix B for a table listing all the ights.) As with all the future ight tests, the three local sorties lasted less than an hour. The main purpose of the Florida FCFs was to conrm the planes subsonic airworthiness, the calibration of its air-data measurements, the telemetry from its new instruments to the temporary ground station during orbits over St. Augustine, and that all systems were working properly for the upcoming cross-country trip to California. Martin also veried that the modied F-5 could still exceed the speed of sound despite the drag of its larger body by pushing it to Mach 1.1.4 On July 28, having successfully completed the nal local sortie earlier in the morning, the two planes headed west on the long ferry ight to Palmdale, CA, making four stops along their way (a journey described previously in the Introduction).5 Avoiding a rare summer thunderstorm building over Lancaster, the two aircraft gracefully touched down on the runway at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale on Tuesday afternoon, July 29. Belying its name, Plant 42 is more than a single facility; it is actually a 5,800-acre installation oering spacious and secure locations for a number of separate hangars, industrial facilities, shops, oces,
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Proof at Last
and miscellaneous buildings used by Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin (including its Skunk Works), Boeing, and other aerospace companies and Government organizations. Northrop Grumman occupied facilities in Sites 3 and 4 (shown in the accompanying photo). The latter includes Building 401, the huge structure where Northrop had completed assembling its B-2 stealth bombersoriginally, in total secrecy. The SSBD team would operate out of a section of Building 307 in Site 3.6 After landing, the F-5 SSBD and its T-38 escort taxied to Site 3, where they were welcomed by a maintenance crew as well as some of the Northrop Grumman engineers from El Segundo who had designed the plane and were anxious to see the nished product. Because of the threatening weather, the F-5 was quickly moved into the shelter of Building 307; Section 4 of which was reserved for the SSBD team. When Roy Martin got back to his home in Lancaster that evening, he found that the storm had uprooted large trees onto two of his nearby neighbors homes. Such unseasonal storms were not much of a concern for the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration but the unusually warm summer was. Weather balloons had been measuring much higher-than-normal atmospheric temperatures, which, because of the Mach number parameters used in designing the F-5 modications, could pose a serious threat to the SSBDs success. Functional ight checks resumed on Saturday, August 2, with two FCFs (QSP-4 and QSP-5) own mainly over Edwards AFBs restricted airspace. For the remainder of the SSBD, Roy Martin and Cmdr. Darryl Spike Long, the Navys chief test pilot at Naval Air Weapons Station (NAWS) China Lake, CA, alternated as pilots of the F-5 SSBD. With Mike Bryan having taken Boeings T-38 back to Seattle, a NASA Dryden F/A-18 piloted by Jim Smolka ew chase. The focus of the Palmdale functional check ights was supersonic envelope expansion. Another sortie was conducted on August 4, and after a long hiatus to address the performance problems described below, the nal FCF was own on August 15.7 The subsonic and supersonic envelope expansions in Florida and California validated handling qualities for 15 ight conditions with a series of exercises called maneuver blocks. Each maneuver block included pitch stick and rudder doublets (two opposing movements of the controls in quick succession), 30-degree bank-to-bank rolls, steady heading sideslips, and close-loop turns. The subsonic maneuver blocks were own both with and without the stability augmentation system, which automatically positions the horizontal tail and rudder to dampen pitch and yaw oscillations. The system was always turned on during the supersonic maneuver blocks.8 In addition to their intended purpose, these ights had other benets. As pointed out in the published summary of the SSBD, Although the supersonic envelope expansion ights were not designed to support shaped sonic boom
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data collection, they proved to be invaluable as trial runs for the ight crews, the ight test ground controllers, and for the ground data crews.9 (As described below, the sensors and other data-collection equipment were already in place.) Unfortunately, however, concerns expressed earlier about having to delay the ight testing until summer proved well-founded. Continuing weather balloon measurements, including those from GPS radiosondes, showed ambient temperatures at the planned ight-test altitude to be about 17 C (30.6 F) higher than the standard atmosphere temperature for which the demonstration had been planned. (The standard temperature at 32,000 feet is about 55 C or 48.5 F.) The high temperature would not only hamper the F-5s ability to reach the Mach number of 1.4 for which its modications had been designed, but it would limit its endurance as well.10 Indeed, Roy Martin could only get the F-5 SSBD up to about Mach 1.2 on his rst supersonic envelope-expansion ight on August 2.11 Because of this unfortunate weather pattern, members of the SSBD Working Group and others involved in the project recommended postponing the ight tests until November, when upper atmosphere temperatures would surely be more favorable. Although this made sense from a purely technical standpoint, Charles Boccadoro had to consider other issues, such as the response of corporate management. So he vetoed any further delay, telling team members, Time is our enemy. As he later explained to the author, To be behind schedule and over budget is true hell for a program manager.12 In a bold move to allow the demonstration to proceed, he reached out to NAVAIRs propulsion directorate and General Electric Aviations engine maintenance division to get permission for Northrop Grumman techniciansled by NGSAs ight-test engineer, William W.D. Thorneto do a compressor wash and uptrim the F-5 SSBDs jet engines for maximum thrust.13 Finally, at 1030 Pacic daylight time (PDT) on the morning of August 25, 2003, with no wind and the surface temperature already at 91 F, Spike Long entered the cockpit of the Northrop Grumman F-5 SSBD for its rst sonic boom ight test (QSP-8). Turning on only the left engine to conserve fuel, he taxied to Runway 25. After about two minutes of GPS data logging to acquire and conrm satellite signals, he turned on the right engine and took o at 1102. After reaching 4,400 feet, he pushed the engines into military power (maximum thrust without the use of afterburners) and quickly climbed to 25,000 feet. On the way, he was joined by NASA F/A-18B number 846 piloted by Jim Smolka as a photo chase aircraft and NASA F-15B number 836 piloted by Dana Purifoy, who was there to perform the rst in-ight probes of the F-5 SSBDs shock waves.14 Mike Thomson was in the back seat.15 NASA Dryden had improved the F-15Bs nose boom since the ISSM tests, when its Sonix digital absolute pressure transducer (which converted physical shock
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wave measurements to electrical signals) could take only 17 samples per second. For the SSBD, NASA Dryden added a Druck analog dierential transducer that was capable of 400 samples per second.16 After nishing the photo opportunity, the tuneup of the F-5s engines soon proved to have been successful. Lighting his afterburners, Long climbed to 47,000 feet and, closely followed by Purifoys F-15B, turned toward the supersonic corridor. Nine miles west of Mojave, the F-5 SSBD began accelerating in a 12-degree dive, reaching a gravity-assisted maximum speed of Mach 1.41 before leveling o at 31,500 feet. It led the F-15B through the probing run at Mach 1.38 despite an outside air temperature of only 38.2 F (39 C).17 This speed was within the margins required for adequate ight tests. Charles Boccadoro was in an oce with Tom Weir, NGCs director of advanced design, when they received word that the plane had hit its mark.18 He immediately called Steve Walker at DARPA to report the good news. The high-delity Ashtech GPS tracking system also proved its capabilities during the ight test with relative positioning between the F-5 and the F-15 being displayed to within mere centimeters both in the two aircraft and down at the Dryden control room. Longs postight report commented somewhat sardonically that the painfully precise NASA engineers did request several redos. I gure Dana was o by a foot or two from time to time.19 Sixty-ve minutes after climbing into the cockpit, Spike Longs feet were back on the ground. Later in the day another Navy pilot, Lt. Cmdr. Dwight Tricky Dick of Composite Fighter Squadron (VFC)-13, arrived at Palmdale from NAS Fallon with his camouaged F-5E. All was in place for SSBDs next ight testthe one that would compare the two F-5s sonic booms as they reached the ground.
the ground and in the air. To take full advantage of the opportunity presented by the demonstration ights, NASAs Dryden and Langley Centers as well as Wyle Laboratories made plans for an extensive number of ground sensors.20 Implementing this proved signicantly more complicated than simply going out into the desert and setting up the equipment. With Ed Haering as the lead planner, the working groups sonic boom specialists determined the best area under the Edwards high-altitude supersonic corridor to place the array of sensors. This would in turn determine the exact route to be own by the aircraft. They chose to use Cords Road, which ran east to west under the bases R-2515 restricted airspace, as the centerline for the aircrafts ightpath (shown in gure 8-1).21 The land along Cords Road is divided into a checkerboard pattern, either under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) or privately owned. Because the private owners were dicult to contact, the planners limited their sensor sites to BLM sections. Based on maps and aerial photographs, they selected the specic locations on which to distribute sensors in the desired conguration while keeping them within a reasonable walking distance of existing roads. The sites selected were on either side of a 6-mile stretch of Cords Road just north of Harper Dry Lake, which is located about 30 miles north of California Highway 58 between Barstow and Boron.22 It was expected that this road, the lakebed, and other local landmarks would be readily visible to the pilots ying 32,000 feet above.23 Arranging to use the area for the SSBD proved to be a long and complicated coordination process for Ed Haering and some colleagues at NASA Dryden. Mostly unoccupied by humans, the area is the habitat of several threatened or endangered species, most notably the desert tortoise and Mojave ground squirrel. Starting in the fall of 2002, Haering and Mike Beck, the environmental specialist at NASA Dryden, spent a great deal of time working with the BLM oce in Barstow and the Edwards AFB environmental management division to get permits and meet other requirements to use the land. For example, they had to arrange tortoise protection training for all the Edwards AFB Supersonic Corridor personnel who would be working on the sensor array, which was eventually accomplished with the help of a video recording of the training. A BLM-approved biologist (paid for out of project funds) was required to oversee the site selections as well as the setup and removal of Figure 8-1. Map of SSBD ight plan. (NASA)
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equipment. Vehicles were prohibited from driving o the existing dirt roads, and when desert tortoises were encountered on the roads (as happened on several occasions), they could not be picked up and moved out of the way.24 To provide spatial sampling along the center of the ightpath, plus bracketing to the side, the SSBD ground sensor team set up their equipment in and around three major sites adjacent to Cords Roaddesignated West, Center, and Eastand at Sites North and South, 2 and 3 miles from the road. The sensors around the central site were arranged in a cruciform pattern. To gain an extra boost in speed from prevailing winds and avoid having the sonic booms reach Boron and communities along U.S. Highway 395, the working group chose to have the planes y from west to east for the measurements.25 (This is the reverse of the direction own on a similar route by Chuck Yeager during the XS-1s rst supersonic ight.) In addition to the pressure sensors, microphones, and associated electronic devices, the equipment positioned out in the desert included specially equipped vehicles, generators, battery packs, cables, and portable toilets. Since these items would be left unattended in the isolated area for much of the time, the testers had to hire armed guards to watch over them. As NASA Drydens security contractor explained, equipment left alone for a few days would probably be stripped clean.26 By the time the F-5 SSBD landed at Palmdale, the ground array had been laid out and its equipment made ready for use. NASA Langley had deployed an acoustic instrumentation van with ultrasensitive Brl and Kjaer (B&K) 4193 low-frequency condenser microphones and supporting equipment. Among the personnel from Langley was Christine Darden, whose minimization research had helped pave the way for designing the SSBD. Wyle Labs provided similar sensor capabilities using identical microphones feeding into advanced TEAC and National Instruments recording systems. NASA Dryden contributed two Boom Amplitude and Direction Sensor (BADS) systems and other instruments. Designed by James Murray, David Berger, and Ed Haering, each BADS system (shown in an accompanying photo) included six Sensym dierential pressure transducers attached about 6 feet apart to an octahedron-shaped framework. The separation of the sensors would help determine the angles of incoming acoustic rays. With its sophisticated pneumatic and electronic instrumentation, the BADS system could measure pressure changes to within plus or minus .003 psf at more than 8,000 times per second.27 In addition to the members of the three organizations mentioned above, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Gulfstream personnel also helped set up and monitor the stations. Because of the delayed start of the demonstration and another commitment, the Langley Acoustics Divisions van had to depart after the initial ight test of August 25, which left Site North
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Boom Amplitude and Direction Sensor near Cords Road, August 2003. (NASA)
unused for the remainder of the SSBD.28 Other than that, the ground array network functioned largely as planned for the rest of the ight tests. The same cannot be said for another highly anticipated means of measuring the shock waves. In addition to the near-eld probing by the F-15B and the far-eld measurements by the ground sensors, the SSBD test plan called for two mideld probes. To expand on prior in-ight sonic boom experiments, Ed Haering had got the working group to include provisions for recording the F-5 SSBDs shock wave signature as it evolved through the atmosphere. In August 2002, he began working with Gulfstream and Raytheon to obtain executive-type jets for this purpose.29 The companies agreed to supply a Gulfstream G-V and Raytheon Premier I. NASA Dryden equipped each of them with one of its Small Airborne Boom Event Recorder (SABER) devices, which involved installation of two static pressure ports on top of their fuselages. Dryden would also loan an Ashtech Z-12 to Raytheon to provide the Premier I with accurate position and velocity data. (The Gulfstream G-V was already equipped with this GPS system.) Including these two civilian aircraft in the SSBD ight tests required many months of coordination and logistical preparations. The test plan called for each jet to y below the F-5 SSBD at subsonic speeds, one at levels between 3,000 feet and 10,000 feet and the other at levels between 15,000 feet and 12,000 feet. Unfortunately, acoustic analyses eventually conrmed that aerodynamic noise from the two planes could adversely aect the microphones. Problems were also encountered with mounting the instrumentation. As a result, participation by the two corporate jets had to be canceled before the demonstration.30
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to Palmdale, Martin touched down on Plant 42s runway at 0703 and Dick 1 minute later. After taxiing back to NGC Site 3 and shutting down their engines at 0722, the two pilots joined other team personnel to learn more about the measurements of their sonic booms.36 Working at one of the sensor sites, David Graham thought the second boom sounded distinctly louder than the rst.37 Data disFigure 8-2. F-5E and F-5 SSBD sonic boom signatures. (NASA) played on the screen of a laptop computer quickly conrmed the dierence. It showed the sonic boom generated by Dicks standard F-5E had an initial pressure rise of 1.2 psf while that from Martins modied aircraft registered only 0.82 psf. Of equal signicance, a blue line plotting the F-5 SSBDs pressure measurements showed that its signature reached the ground with the predicted attened shape. Overlaying the blue line was a red one showing the F-5Es typical N-wave. These lines closely matched the red and blue pinstripes that so hopefully decorated the Pelicans fuselage. Although reproduced in only black and white on the printed page, gure 8-2 shows this historic sonic boom exactly as recorded by the BADS unit at Site Westthe rst sensor ever to measure a shaped sonic boom.38 When these results reached the control center at Plant 42, Ken Plotkin did a little victory dance. He then called Albert George at Cornell University, interrupting a counseling session with one his students, to inform him that the ight test had nally conrmed his and Seebasss theory beyond all doubt. I knew it would, the professor replied. When the image had been received at the NASA Dryden control room, Peter Coen jumped up from his seat and announced, Its a classic attop!39 The original SSBD test plan had called for eight sonic boom data-collection sorties with a break for in-depth data analysis after the rst four.40 The delays in starting the ight tests, the cancellation of the Gulfstream and Raytheon probe missions, deteriorating weather conditions, and other factors reduced the number of data-collection ights to ve. After a quick turnaround of the F-5 SSBD, Spike Long took o on the third of these (QSP-10) at 0905 PDT along with Tricky Dick in the F-5E. After reaching the vicinity of Lake Isabella, Long climbed to 47,000 feet while Dick, reaching 45,000 feet, maneuvered his plane to follow by the required interval. Long hit a maximum speed of Mach 1.41 as he descended through a milky haze into the ightpaththe fastest
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ight yet. He was able to maintain a steady Mach 1.38 at 31,800 feet for the sonic boom run at 0930. Although he ew about one-half mile north of Cords Road because of overcorrecting for high-altitude crosswinds, the sensor array recorded the sonic booms satisfactorily. Surface winds, however, were now too high for signatures as good as on the early morning ight. Dicks F-5E followed by 45 seconds with similar results. Long landed at Plant 42 at 0946, 2 minutes before Dick touched down. In his postight report, Long wrote that Tricky from VFC-13 has been an excellent addition to the test team and that we should make this guy a test pilot now!41 Roy Martin and Dwight Dick ew a very similar sortie (QSP-11) from 0620 to 0653 on the following morning, which provided the ground observers with more sonic boom data.42 The plots of the sonic boom signatures remained fairly consistent, conrming that the rst recordings on the morning of August 27 were no uke. However, the quality of the ground data continued to decline after that ight because of less favorable atmospheric conditions.43 The last data-collection ight on August 29 (QSP-12) focused on in-ight probing combined with more ground data collection. Spike Long in the F-5 SSBD and Tricky Dick in the F-5E took o from Palmdale shortly after 0830 local time. They joined up with Dana Purifoy and Mike Thomson in NASA F-15B number 836 and NASA F/A-18B number 846 piloted by Dick Ewers. As the aircraft climbed to altitude, Carla Thomas in the back seat of the F/A-18B took photos of the other three ying in formation (including the one in front of this chapter). Dicks F-5E then broke away and headed home to Fallon while Long and Purifoy got into position northeast of Lake Isabella before turning and descending for their second near-eld probing run through the supersonic corridor. Because the temperature at 32,000 feet was even 10 degrees warmer (at 29 F) than earlier in the week, Long could reach only Mach 1.38 during his shallow dive. He had to keep gradually descending just to maintain Mach 1.34 during the rest of the more than 80-mile probing run, which included the segment over the ground array. After completing his mission at 0920, Long reiterated one of the major lessons learned during the ight tests: The sun angle was the biggest detriment during data collection and course management was more luck than skill. If future events are planned we will reverse the run-in course to avoid this scenario.44 After Longs departure for Palmdale, Ewerss F/A-18B rejoined Purifoys F-15B in the supersonic corridor for some NASA Dryden mideld probing unrelated to the SSBD project. Because of the lessthan-favorable weather, QSP-12 was the nal SSBD ight test. After Northrop Grumman posted a combined news release with DARPA and NASA on August 28 announcing the previous days successful demonstration, what had once been a rather obscure project, mainly of interest to those involved in aeronautics or the aviation industry, quickly received wider
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publicity.45 On September 3, the NGC, DARPA, and NASA ocials hosted a brieng at the National Press Club in Washington, DC, with representatives from the general media as well as the aviation press attending.46 Charles Boccadoro presented a graphically rich slide show on Northrop Grummans participation in the QSP and the SSBD.47 He also relayed an anecdote about rst learning of the result. About 20 minutes [after takeo], we were all listening to our chief test pilot Roy Martin over the radio when the guys in the desert... called back and said they could hear the dierence. We werent expecting that. We knew we had something at that point.48 With the attendees having seen the graphic depiction of the sonic boom signatures in Boccadoros presentation, Richard Wlezien, now NASAs vehicle systems program manager in the Oce of Aerospace Technology, stated that the results were about as unambiguous as you could get.49 Added Peter Coen: The team was condent that the SSBD design would work, but eld measurements of sonic booms are notoriously dicult.... [So] we were all blown away by the clarity of what we measured. To put the achievement in its historical context, Wlezien also noted, This demonstration is the culmination of 40 years of work by visionary engineers.50 In addition to numerous accounts of the achievement in aeronautics and aviation publications, a urry of articles and reports began appearing in the general media, ranging from a short wire story by the Associated Press published in newspapers nationwide to two televised reports several minutes in length on CNBC showing video of the aircraft interspersed with interviews of Roy Martin, David Graham, and Joe Pawlowski.51 Northrop Grumman was now reaping a harvest of favorable publicity as an intangible return on its investment in sonic boom research. Some of the corporations major contributors to the SSBD are shown in the accompanying photo, taken during a company party in El Segundo on October 14, 2003, while celebrating the projects success. The timing of the SSBD projects success was fortuitous. In May 2003, the FAAciting the ndings by the National Research Council that there were no insurmountable obstacles to building a quiet small supersonic aircraft had begun seeking comments on its noise standards in advance of a technical workshop on the issue.52 The noise standards included Part 91 of Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), which prohibited supersonic ight over the United States. On November 30, 2003, in Arlington, VA, the FAA held the Civil Supersonic Aircraft Technical Workshop. It allowed subject matter experts to submit comments on recent supersonic research data and present their ndings on the mitigation of environmental impacts, as well as to inform the public. In response, the Aerospace Industries Association, the General Aviation Manufactures Association, and most aircraft companies reported that the FAAs sonic boom prohibition was still the most serious impediment to creating the market for a supersonic business jet.53
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Key members of Northrop Grummans QSP/SSBD team. Front row: Charles Boccadoro, Joe Pawlowski, David Graham, and Roy Martin. Rear row: Steve Komadina, Mark Smith, and Paul Meyer, who was vice president of advanced systems at the time. (NGC)
The major aircraft and engine companies participating in the QSP all made presentations on addressing the sonic boom and jet-noise problems. Among them, Steve Komadina and David Graham discussed the promising results of their QSP research and SSBD ight tests.54 Complementing cases made by Gulfstream and other manufacturers for a supersonic business jet, Richard G. Smith III of Berkshire Hathaways NetJets provided an analysis of the potential SSBJ market and suggested the need for a comprehensive public-private risksharing consortium.55 On the all-important issue of human response to sonic booms, Peter Coen and Brenda Sullivan updated attendees on NASA Langleys latest analyses and its reconditioned boom-simulator booth. Building on the recent progress in taming the sonic boom, Coen outlined planned initiatives in NASAs Supersonic Vehicles Technology program. In addition to leveraging the results of QSP research, NASA hoped to engage industry partners in planning follow-on projects involving critical supersonic technologies. Of special relevance to the FAA workshop, NASA was actively considering options for an experimental low-boom aircraft that could y over populated areas for the sake of denitive surveys on the publics response to reduced sonic signatures both outside and indoors.56 Meanwhile, NASA was preparing to use the only existing reduced-boom airplane for more research into the physics of sonic booms and how to control them.
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as the groups chairman, with Joe Pawlowski managing Northrop Grummans lead role in the ight operations.62 The SSBE working group convened in person in Arlington, VA, on November 13, 2003just after the FAA civil supersonic workshop earlier in the dayto establish data requirements and review a preliminary test plan. Once again, it called for back-to-back ights with the F-5 SSBD and a standard F-5E as well as near-eld probing by the F-15B. Based on lessons learned in the previous tests and the desire for more data, the planners also made several changes. In view of the poor visibility experienced by the pilots in August, the primary ightpath in the new test plan would run from east to westaway from the morning Sun. In addition to measuring signatures at the SSBDs original design speed of Mach 1.4 at 32,000 feet above sea level, the 20 planned ight tests aorded the opportunity to y some of the missions at both higher and lower speeds and altitudes for evaluating sonic boom characteristics under o-design conditions. The planners added two entirely new ight-test proles to the schedule: having the F-5 SSBD generate a focused boom and allowing the two F-5s to y over the ground array in close formation. In case of poor weather or unforeseen problems, the working group ranked the 20 planned data missions in their order of priority in case some of them had to be canceled because of weather or other problems. Yet for some missions, the planners hoped to measure the eects of turbulence on the sonic boom signatures.63 Reecting other lessons learned, there were also some major changes in datacollection arrangements and capabilities. Because of the long drives required for the ground crews to reach the area near Harper Lake and the need to guard the equipment left there during o-duty hours, the working group agreed to set up ground instrumentation at a less remote location. They decided to use a quiet section within the perimeter of Edwards AFB known as North Baselocated across Rogers Dry Lake from the major Air Force and NASA facilitieswhere security would not be a signicant issue. Based on ndings during the SSBD in August, the planners also agreed to concentrate most of the monitoring equipment into a smaller area. And to compensate for the inability to use corporate jets for in-ight measurements, the working group approved a Dryden proposal to have a Czech-made Blanik sailplane from the USAF Test Pilot School (TPS)an almost perfectly quiet aircraftmeasure mideld shock waves above the ground turbulence level.64 Its role would be similar to that of the YO-3A light aircraft used during the SR-71s probing by the F-16XL in 1995 (described in chapter 4) and the Goodyear blimp during the National Sonic Boom Evaluation in 1966 and 1967 (chapter 1). Preparations to implement this ambitious agenda continued at a fast pace during the remainder of 2003, with NAVAIR reviewing the test plan (including the new pushover maneuver needed to focus a sonic boom) and VFC-13
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formally agreeing to once again deploy one of its F-5Es to Palmdale if at all possible. Representatives from NASA Dryden, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin conducted an initial ight-readiness review on December 6. Because the F-5 SSBD had not own since August, Northrop Grumman technicians had to perform multiple inspections and maintenance actions to make sure it would be ready for another round of ight tests. By Friday, January 9, 2004, preparations were completewith the test plan having been approved, the F-5 SSBD certied for ight, the ground array being put in place, and recording instrumentation installed on the glider. The 20 planned ight tests would need to be conducted within the next 2 weeks to allow time for ying the F-5 back to St. Augustine and preparing it for return to the Navy by January 31.65 As shown in gure 8-3, the ground recording array included 26 sites (conveniently designated Alpha through Zulu) placed 500 feet apart in a straight line through desert terrain paralleling the North Base runway at a heading of 240 degrees magnetic. Two supplemental sites (M2 and Q2) were located 100 feet from Sites Mike and Quebec for ne-scale sampling, and two lateral sites (Mike Left and Mike Right) were placed 500 feet on either side of Mike to ensure the measurement of maximum overpressures in case the aircraft ew slightly o track. There were also Far North and Far South sites equipped with automatic sensors 2 miles from the main array to determine whether the F-5 SSBDs attop signature would also persist o to the sides of the sonic boom Figure 8-3. SSBE ground array (NASA). Key: carpet. To monitor surface condiMR=Mike Right, ML=Mike Left, FN=Far North, tions, a portable weather station was FS=Far South. deployed between sites M and M2.66 With the approval of the Edwards AFB Environmental Management Division, the ground crew set up a total of 42 dierent sensors under and to the side of the designated ightpath. Using postprocessed carrier-phase Dierential GPS (DGPS) measurements, the sensor location for each site was surveyed to within just 0.03 meters.67 Sites I through X, ML, MR, and Q2 were equipped with B&K Type 4193 low-frequency condenser microphones and associated amplication, power supplies, and processing equipment. On sites I through L, the microphones fed into a TEAC RD-145T digital audio tape (DAT) recorder. On sites M, ML, MR, and N, the microphones were connected to a laptop computer, with a special National Instruments data acquisition (DAQ) card installed, which oered immediate viewing of sonic boom signatures. The microphones on sites O through X used two DAT PC208AX
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DAT recorders. (A microphone and recording equipment are shown in accompanying photos.)68 The sites at either end of the array (A through H and Y through Z) as well as M2, FN, and FS were equipped with Dryden-built automatic sonic boom recording systems. These consisted of the previously described BADS used in the SSBD, the SABER system designed for mounting on aircraft, and another Dryden device called the Boom Amplitude and Shape Sensor (the BASSo-matic), a completely autonomous single-transducer version of the BADS. Dryden produced 10 of the latter just in time for the SSBE. All three systems used Sensym SCXL004DN pressure sensors as their basic transducer element with those for the smaller BASS and SABER systems axed to a at plate placed on the ground. After processing with lters, preampliers, buers, and computer software, the data collected was saved on ash memory cards. The three NASA systems tagged the exact times of the sonic boom measurements with built-in GPS receivers, which were later used to interpolate the exact times of the data captured by the B&K microphones in the TEAC, Sony, and National Instruments recordings.69 Personnel from NASA Dryden, NASA Langley, Northrop Grumman, Wyle Labs, Eagle Aeronautics, Gulfstream Aerospace, Boeing, and the FAA (all with desert tortoise protection training) set up and operated the ground array. Although its location was more convenient than the remote array along Cords Road, the ground crews once again had to arrive before dawn to set up and check out the equipment for morning ights. They then monitored radio communications from the approaching aircraft to learn when the supersonic sprints toward their ground array would start. NASA Dryden contracted with the USAF Test Pilot School to install B&K 4193 microphones and a SABER recording system on the two-seat L-23 Super Blanik sailplane (shown in an accompanying photo) and make mideld measurements of the sonic booms over the ground array as the F-5s ew overhead. They fastened the microphone on the left wingtip with a bullet-nose
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Blanik L-23 sailplane with microphone on left wingtip and installed recording equipment. (NASA)
attachment and windscreen to minimize wind noise during ight. A B&K Nexus amplier raised the voltage level to improve the signal-to-noise ratio for recording on the SABER, which automatically sensed the arrival of the shock waves. The testers also installed a Thales Navigation Z-Xtreme carrier-phase dierential GPS receiver for position and velocity data. A handheld GPS unit with a moving map display was also provided to help the pilot y a precise route under the F-5s ightpath.70 The in-ight probing system on NASA F-15B Number 836 (depicted in gure 8-4) was further improved from that used during the SSBD in August. NASA Dryden installed a new data recorder that lowered transducer noise and more than doubled the analog data-sampling rate to 977 times per second. The pneumatic reference tank (also called a lag tank), which was part of a complicated system used to ensure the accuracy of the pressure measurements made by the nose boom, was also replaced. During the SSBD, Dryden had
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relied on a spare 252-cubic-inch SR-71 nitrogen tank to perform this function. However, when the F-15B dived from over 45,000 feet down to below 32,000 feet for the supersonic runs, the reference tank saturated the analog dierential transducer readings for almost all the probes. This left only the digital transducer at 17 samples per second to provide good data. To correct this deciency, Dryden technicians fabricated a new 100-cubic-inch reference tank, which would work very well during the SSBE.71
descend from 40,000 feet to begin a run through the supersonic corridor about 20 miles north of Barstow. He continued supersonically on a west-southwest heading over Edwards North Base and the northern edge of Rogers Dry Lake then slowed to a subsonic speed before reaching Mojave.73 Although the initial sorties primary purpose was to serve as a functional check ight, it began with NASA F/A-18 number 846 joining up with the F-5 SSBD at 1055 for an attempt to take some schlieren photography of its shock waves during the supersonic segment of the ight test. As Martins F-5 approached the ground array after reaching the desired Mach 1.4 speed at 32,000 feet, he did a 0.5-g pushover maneuver for 3 seconds to practice creating a focused sonic boom before recovering at 30,800 feet and Mach 1.38. Meanwhile, the L-23 (call sign Cobra 77) glided quietly below. After passing over Mojave, Martin turned back toward Edwards and did a lowspeed run by its control tower at only 100 above ground level to help conrm the accuracy of the F-5 SSBDs air-data system. Proceeding south, the Pelican was back on the runway at Palmdale at 1031 local time after a busy 50 minutes in the air. Wasting no time, Martin was back in the F-5s cockpit at 1230 local time to begin preparing for the next sortie, which was supposed to include inight probing by the NASA F-15B 836. After waiting for the launch of Dana Purifoys F-15 and an airborne pickup (establishing the communications link between the two aircraft) at 1316, Martin took o to join up with the F-15. Just as the two aircraft began their supersonic run toward the ground array at 1331 PST, one of the F-15s engines suered a compressor stall, and Purifoy had to drop out of the formation. Martin continued over the ground array at Mach 1.4 and 32,000 feet with the L-23 again on station below. He then began a subsonic descent over California City, followed by another low-level yby of the Edwards tower to check air-data calibrations. Meanwhile, Purifoy had seen indications of a landing gear problem with his F-15B, so Martinwith sucient jet fuel still remainingew around to perform a visual inspection to ensure its wheels were down. After the F-15 was safely on the ground, Martin returned to Palmdale, landing at 1401 PST.74 Fortunately, the SSBEs schedule aorded plenty of opportunities to perform in-ight probing toward the end of the ight-test schedule, and the old F-15s engines would be in better condition by then. The ambitious schedule for January 13 called for three ight tests (QSP1517). With Lt. Cmdr. Dwight Dick having arrived from Fallon on the previous day, all of them featured back-to-back sonic boom measurements of the F-5 SSBD and standard F-5E (Leahi-06) at Mach 1.4 and 32,000 feet. He and Roy Martin took o on the days rst ight test at 0656 PST, just as the Sun was rising. All went according to plan as they ew over the ground array and
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the glider 45 seconds apart. After landing at Palmdale at 0730, however, they learned that eld personnel had reported a malfunction in Martins GPS telemetry. At 0930, after the Ashtech Z-12s software had been rebooted, Martin got back in the cockpit for another sonic boom run with Dick. They ew this one almost identically with the previous test with the L-23 again participating. This time Martins GPS transmissions seemed okay, but those from Dicks F-5E had experienced the same problem as the F-5 SSBDs signals had on the previous ight, and therefore, it too had to be reprogrammed. The third ight test of the day, which lasted from 1300 to 1333, ew the same scenario as the rst two, except this time both GPS systems behaved themselves, much to the relief of the data collectors.75 The same pilots ew the same basic course twice again on January 14 (QSP18 and 19), but this time to generate sonic booms at o-design speeds for data-analysis purposes. After a 0957 takeo on the rst ight, they entered the supersonic corridor from 45,000 feet and accelerated to Mach 1.43 for a data-collection run at 32,000 feet over the ground array and the glider. The days second ight, which began at 1327, followed the same prole but crossed the ground array at only Mach 1.35. Both planes were back on the Palmdale runway by 1400.76 To take full advantage of the F-5Es nal day at Palmdale, the F-5 SSBD ew three more back-to-back missions with it on January 15. Martin and Dick took o on the rst ight at 0655. At 0709, just 2 minutes before beginning the pushover from 45,000 feet toward the ground array, the control center informed Martin that his GPS modem was once again failing to transmit. He continued on the ightpath, crossing over the ground array and the glider, ying Mach 1.43 at 32,000 feet. He was followed by Dicks F-5E maintaining the same speed, with both planes back on Plant 43s runway by 0727. The Ashtech Z-12 was reprogrammed in time for the next ight, which took o at 0957. Martin and Dick ew almost the same prole as during the early morning ight except for doing the sonic boom run at only Mach 1.35.77 A published paper on the SSBE later commented, While onboardrecorded data tends to be cleaner than telemetered data, failure in the onboard recording system could result in loss of mission. Having both onboard and telemetered data gives redundancy for data collection, which saved several ights in this program.78 The test scenario for QSP-22, which took o at 1257 on the afternoon of January 15, was quite dierent from any of the previous missions involving both F-5s. The primary purpose of this test was to eliminate any eects of changing winds during the interval between the two signatures by measuring them almost simultaneously. To do this, the F-5E was supposed to y in the F-5 SSBDs Mach cone, within 580 feet behind and about 19 degrees below,
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as they passed over the ground array at Mach 1.35 and 32,000 feet. When the pilots returned to Palmdale at 1329, they learned that the F-5Es GPS modem stopped transmitting from the time it began its pushover until just after passing Site Mike.79 In this case, the Z-12s internal memory preserved the GPS data. The sonic boom measurements on the ground (described in the next section) would prove to be somewhat disappointing for another reason. The F-5E had arrived with its centerline pylon still attached. Because of the extra drag, Dicks airplane was out-accelerated by the F-5 SSBD at the start of the supersonic run and was unable to catch up and follow as closely as planned.80 With the F-5E having returned home to Fallon, ight-test operations on January 16 were the lightest of the SSBE with only one sortie in the afternoon. After a low-speed taxi to make sure that a problem discovered with the nosewheel actuator had been xed, Roy Martin took o in the F-5 SSBD at 1503. He then made an uneventful solo run at Mach 1.35 and 32,000 feet over the ground array and the glider, landing back at Palmdale at 1538. Although this was Friday, the test team would not be taking the weekend o. Roy Martin took o in the F-5 SSBD three times on Saturday morning, January 17, at 0703, 0945, and 1138. All of these were solo supersonic runs planned to measure sonic booms generated at o-design ight conditions. On the rst mission, Martin did a pushover maneuver from 32,000 feet and Mach 1.375 to create a focused sonic boom. On the second mission, he ew over the ground array at a steady-state speed of Mach 1.375 but this time at 36,000 feet. He also ew at 36,000 feet on the third mission (after noting turbulence at between 30,000 feet and 32,500 feet), but this time he sped overhead at Mach 1.45the highest speed permitted by the NAVAIR ight clearance.81 The fast pace of ight tests resumed on Monday, January 19, with three more solo sorties by Roy Martin.82 Taking o at 0659, he performed a 3-second 0.1-g pushover down to 30,000 feet that focused a sonic boom toward the L-23 then recovered at 31,000 feet to cross over the ground array at Mach 1.375. On all the remaining six ight tests, the F-5 SSBD would make passes over the ground array in both directions to get the most out of each sortie. Martin took o on the rst of these at 0954. As on many of the previous ights, he made his rst pass from east to west at Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet with the L-23 again below. He then made a supersonic U-turn to the right and, still at 32,000 feet, returned over the array from west to east at Mach 1.3. Even with the extra afterburner time, the F-5 SSBD still had 1,100 pounds of fuel left after landing at 1026. Following the postight inspection and refueling, it was back in the air at 1159 for another dual run. This time Martin made the rst pass at Mach 1.4 and 32,000 feet and the second at Mach 1.31 and 31,200 feet.83 This ight test (QSP-29) was the last in which the L-23 sailplane participated. During its 14 ights, Gary Aldrich took o in the Pawnee Pa-25 with the
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L-23 in tow about 15 to 20 minutes before the F-5 began its sonic boom run. The sailplane usually released at about 10,000 feet and glided over the ground array at between 6,000 feet and 8,000 feet.84 The lower altitudes helped it record the weak signatures of booms echoing o the ground.85 Skillful piloting and the planes slow speed kept it on station during the supersonic runs. The data recorded by the L-23 sailplane would help enable analysts to determine the distortions in sonic boom signatures caused by turbulence in the lower atmosphere and recorded by ground sensors. Approximately 16 seconds after each of the F-5s ew overhead, their sonic booms were heard by the L-23 pilot and automatically recorded by the SABER system. About 6 seconds later, it would record a second weaker boom that had been reected o the ground.86 In this interval, the glider ew about 400 to 500 feet. Figure 8-5 depicts how one of the acoustic rays in a sonic boom would pass the L-23 on its way to the sensor at Site N as well as how a reected ray from the sonic boom that had reached the ground earlier would also cross its path.87 The last 2 days of the SSBE ight tests, January 21 and Figure 8-5. Direct and reected acoustic rays passing January 22, were devoted to L-23 glider (GL) over the ground array. (NASA) near-eld measurements of the F-5 SSBDs shock wave patterns, while the ground array continued to collect far-eld data. Drydens F-15B number 836 piloted by Dana Purifoy successfully performed probe after probe as Roy Martin ew the F-5 at several dierent speeds while maintaining the optimum attitude of 32,000 feet. On each ight, the two aircraft ew side-by-side in a close formation from Palmdale until reaching the start point for the supersonic runs. As Martin pushed over and accelerated, Purifoy slid his F-15 Eagle below and behind the F-5. When Martin leveled out at 32,000 feet and radioed that he had reached the desired Mach number, Purifoy pushed his left stick with the throttles forward just enough to move slowly through the F-5s shock waves. He had to keep his eyes on the F-5 while also keeping a special vector symbol in his heads-up display (HUD) on the horizon to remain level. Since the pressure changes from F-5s shock waves disrupted the altimeter, the crewmembers in the back seat helped provide situational awareness and relayed other instrument readings, such as the indicated Mach number. Engineers in Drydens control centerwhich had a precise display of the aircrafts relative positions as well as telemetry of the nose booms pressure measurements showing when it had crossed the bow shockadvised Purifoy when to begin slowing down and back out of the
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shock waves. Unless nearing the end of the supersonic run, the F-15 would then quickly follow up with another probe.88 On January 21, Martin took o for the rst probing mission (QSP-30) at 0702, joined up with Purifoys F-15B with Mike Thomson in the backseat, and led them on a westbound Mach 1.4 run over the ground array. After beginning a right turn over Site Mike, they did an eastbound run at Mach 1.35. During these rst two runs, the F-15 completed 12 successful probes. The pressure signature recorded on the sixth of these (identied as probe 30-6) is depicted in gure 8-6. Both planes were turned around in time for Martin to make a 1124 takeo for another similar mission. This time, they made both their supersonic runs Figure 8-6. Illustration of F-15B probing F-5 at Mach 1.375, completing 10 sucSSBD shock waves. (NASA) cessful probes.89 The last day of SSBE testing on Thursday, January 22, provided six more two-way supersonic probing runs. Roy Martins F-5 SSBD took o at 1124 on its rst sortie, 1342 on its second, and 1534 on its third with Dana Purifoys F-15B already in the air before each launch. Craig Bomben ew in the back seat of the F-15 on the rst and third of these ights and Frank Batteas sat in for the second ight. The F-5 ew at 32,000 feet for all of the probing runs but at various speeds: twice at Mach 1.375 on the rst ight; at Mach 1.4 and Mach 1.35 on the second ight; and at Mach 1.375 and Mach 1.4 on the third and last of the ight tests (QSP-33). The two pilots conducted 45 successful near-eld probes during the four missions.90 In all, the F-15B completed 68 near-eld probes at distances of 60 to 720 feet from the F-5 SSBD. The majority of probes were made directly below at an average distance of about 100 feet, but others were own o to one side or the other. Although all the probes provided valuable shock wave measurements, there were some lessons learned. The F-15 collected the most detailed data when it moved through the shock wave pattern at the slowest possible speed relative to the F-5.91 It was also noted that the F-15 tended to be pushed around more by the shock waves when probing o to the side than when directly under the F-5.92 In planning the SSBE, historical January weather statistics for the area around Edwards AFB had indicated that only early morning ights would meet the stringent atmospheric criteria required to collect useful sonic boom data.93 As it turned out, nearly perfect weather conditions as well as the overall reliability of the participating aircraft allowed the functional check ight and
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all 20 planned ight tests to be completed in only 11 days. The SSBD project had gone through its share of problems and delays over the past 2 years, but as Joe Pawlowski remarked when looking back years later, it also experienced a lot of small miracles.94 Even though the ight tests ended in what seemed like plenty of time to return the F-5 SSBD to the Navy, Roy Martin did not get much rest after his nal postight debrieng. He was back at Northrop Site 3 the next day to y the F-5 back to St. Augustine, this time accompanied by an F/A-18 from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 31 (VX-31) at China Lake. On the third leg of their journey, the F/A-18 had an in-ight emergency and had to divert to Memphis, TN, while Martin landed at Birmingham, AL. He was stuck there for 3 nights awaiting another escort and sitting out inclement weather in Alabama and northern Florida. On Tuesday, January 27, accompanied by a Northrop Grumman Citation XL corporate jet, Martin nally made it to the St. Johns County Airport, where the Pelicans journey had begun 6 months before.95
Fourteen members of the SSBEs data-collection team. Front row, left to right: Edward Haering (Dryden), Brenda Sullivan (Langley), David Graham and David Schein (NGC), James Murray (Dryden), Mark Stucky (USAF TPS, in ight suit), Domenic Maglieri (Eagle), and Gary Aldrich (USAF TPS, in ight suit). Rear row: Kenneth Plotkin (Wyle), David Read and Judy Rochat (FAA), Peter Coen (Langley), John Swain (Wyle, without hat), and Joe Salamone (Gulfstream). (Photo by Plotkin)
The ground array sensors made over 1,300 sonic boom recordings, the F-15B captured near-eld shock wave signatures on 45 probes, and the L-23 recorded 29 mideld signatures plus secondary booms reected o the desert oor. All of this data was supplemented by records of atmospheric conditions, including the weather balloons launched at Edwards AFB, Vandenberg AFB (CA), China Lake, and other military installations in the region.97 The redundancy of recordings and the analysts ability to cross-reference and interpolate data from the various sources helped compensate for certain equipment limitations. For example, the atmospheric measurements made by highly accurate DGPS rawinsonde-equipped weather balloons was used to compensate for pneumatic lag and related inaccuracies in the F-5 SSBDs pitotstatic air-data system, which was later discovered to have a small leak in the plumbing used to apply pressure to the nose boom. The SSBEs comprehensive data-collection strategy also helped compensate for a few major malfunctions. For example, on six ights, the raw GPS data from the F-5 SSBD or baseline F-5E were lost when being downloaded, but their previous GPS transmissions to the ground array had been saved. A record of GPS readings is essential for precise Mach number calibration and sonic boom data reduction. Fortunately, SSBE analysts were able to correlate the somewhat less accurate data from the
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ground instruments with those recorded from other ights by both the onboard and ground equipment. This allowed them to recalibrate time and position data for the signatures on the six aected ights for greater precision.98 Almost as soon as the ight tests had been completed, sonic boom researchers began the task of cleaning, processing, organizing, analyzing, comparing, and interpreting the vast amount of data collected. Over the next several months, key participants also presented briengs on the SSBD and SSBE at conferences and symposiums from coast to coast.99 On August 17, 2004, NASAs Langley Research Center hosted a review of preliminary ndings at a Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Closeout Workshop. Members of the SSBE Working Group presented a number of reports followed by panel discussions on the signicance of the results, issues raised, and next steps. One of the next steps was to prepare and publish a series of formal scientic and technical papers on most aspects of the SSBD and SSBE.100 The rst of these had been presented at a joint conference of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and the Council of European Aerospace Societies (CEAS) in Manchester, England, in May 2004. The AIAA then devoted an entire session to the SSBD-SSBE at its 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting and Exhibit in Reno, NV, held from January 10 through January 13, 2005. An additional paper on the SSBE was presented at the 26th AIAA Aeroacoustics Conference in Monterey, CA, May 23 through May 25, 2005. (See appendix D for a list of these reports.) The more than 1,300 sonic boom measurements made by the 42 ground sensors displayed variations caused by their location along the array, changing atmospheric conditions, dierences in aircraft speed and altitude, and some random anomalies. The lines plotted for the signatures from the F-5 SSBD usually had a jagged shape at the plateau region of its attop signatures presumably caused by intrusions from wing and inlet shock waves as well as atmospheric turbulence. Even so, reviews of the signatures conrmed consistently lower overpressure in the attop signatures of the F-5 SSBD versus the stronger N-wave signatures of the standard F-5E. The SSBDs signatures also appeared to be consistently shorter than those of the F-5E.101 One of NASAs reasons for sponsoring the SSBE was the desire to learn about the eects of turbulence on shaped sonic boom signatures. In this regard, the January weather and numerous ights later in the day, although not distorting the sonic boom signatures as much as expected, did not disappoint the analysts. In general, however, the data recorded proved the persistence of the shaped sonic boom signature through turbulence.102 An analysis by John Morgenstern and colleagues at Lockheed Martin using CFD modeling conrmed a consistent 18-percent reduction in the initial pressure impulse as well as a reduction in perceived loudness of 6.4 decibels in the F-5 SSBDs sonic
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booms as compared to those from the standard F-5E.103 The data collected by the Air Force L-23 sailplane allowed analysts to compare the sonic boom signatures recorded at ground level with clean signatures measured above by the L-23 and signatures from the shock waves reected back into the atmosphere. At rst, the Figure 8-7. One shaped sonic boom sigL-23s ight plan called for it to be nature as measured by Site B (top left), the directly over the center of the ground L-23 glider (bottom left), Site E (top right), array (near Site M) when the sonic and after being reected back to the glider boom arrived, but soon the researchers (bottom left), all within 1.3 seconds. (NASA) had it begin up boom of the center point so that the shock waves measured along the ground array could literally travel past the L-23. Approximately 6 seconds after each of the F-5s ew overhead, the sonic boom was heard by the L-23 pilot and automatically recorded by its SABER system.104 Ken Plotkin, Ed Haering, Domenic Maglieri, Brenda Sullivan, and Gulfstreams Joseph Salamone used these data to determine exactly how the surface signatures were distorted by boundary-layer conditions. Figure 8-7, for example, shows how one of the sonic booms generated by the F-5 SSBD on January 15 (QSP-21) was aected by atmospheric conditions. The four graphs plot the signatures of one sonic boom captured by B&K 4193 microphones as it evolved behind and through the L-23 glider to ground sensors and again back up to the gliderall within about 1.2 seconds.105 Using such comparative data, the researchers were able to develop a turbulencesubtraction algorithm. Because turbulence causes almost identical perturbations in the pressure patterns of both the front and rear shocks, a mathematical template based on the rear shock distortion pattern could be used to subtract the eects of turbulence and smooth out the front of the signature to show what it would be in a standard atmosphere with minimal surface windsin the case of the two F-5s, cleaner N-waves or attops. Figure 8-8 shows the application of this technique to the SSBD signatures recorded at several sites during the same Mach 1.35 yover (QSP-21) on January 15.106 Although the rapid changes in atmospheric pressure were the most common metric used for measuring the strength of sonic Figure 8-8. Removal of effects of turbulence from ve signatures. (NASA) booms, how loud these abrupt
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changes sounded to human ears would be a key factor in determining what might be acceptable to the public. Brenda Sullivan of Langleys Structural Acoustics Branch found that the shaped sonic booms were even quieter than their reduced pressure rise would indicate. The reduction of average overpressure from 1.2 psf in the sonic booms of the F-5E to 0.9 psf in those from the F-5 SSBD would equate to an expected reduction of 2.5 decibels in perceived loudness. Based on an advanced acoustical analysis of 132 booms recorded by 19 microphones on seven of the ight tests, she found the sonic booms made by the F-5 SSBD actually averaged 4.7 decibels quieter than those made by the F-5E. She concluded that the combined eects of both slower rise time and lower peak pressure of the shaped sonic boom signatures helped cause this result.107 This reduction in loudness was found to persist through turbulence.108 All previous ight tests measuring focused booms involved aircraft that normally generated N-wave signatures. The F-5 SSBD presented the rst chance to do so from an aircraft designed to create shaped sonic booms. This opportunity especially interested Ken Plotkin and Domenic Maglieri, who had collected and analyzed focused boom data in the past and were currently doing related research for NASA.109 As discussed in earlier chapters, even a civil aircraft designed to generate an acceptably quiet sonic boom carpet when cruising supersonically could still create more powerful focused booms when accelerating, turning, or beginning to descend with a pushover maneuver. Based on the F-5 SSBDs design parameters and performance limitations, such as not transitioning from subsonic to supersonic in level ight, it was decided to use a pushover maneuver for the Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment. The three pushovers own by Martin on January 12, 17, and 19 successfully placed focused booms on ground array sensors (Site Q on QSP-13 and Site E on QSP ights 24 and 27). On these sorties, Martin would quickly push his stick forward to attain unloaded forces of 0.1 g to 0.5 g and hold the pushovers Figure 8-9. Diagram of acoustic rays during for about 3 seconds until making an a pushover maneuver to create a focused approximate 1.75-g recovery into (U-wave) sonic boom. (Wyle) level ight. Figure 8-9 illustrates how this kind of maneuver projects multiple acoustic rays to form a caustic (the dark curved line) that intersects the surface with a narrow sonic footprint.110 The coverage of the focused boom footprints, projected forward more than 6 miles from the start of the pushover maneuver, closely matched that predicted using PCBoom4. The actual focused boom signatures, however, revealed new data. On January 17, for example, the signature of the focused boom was
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recorded at Site E as a sharp U-wave with an overpressure of 3 psf as predicted, and then it evolved into a shape corresponding to an N-wave as it crossed additional sensors while also being overlapped by the premaneuver attop signatures. The focused boom weakened and eventually dissipated as it passed Site W. The signatures of the postfocus carpet boom, however, did not display the attop shaping of the sonic booms created by the F-5 SSBD when ying straight and level. Instead, they were recorded as conventional N-waves. The researchers concluded that this resulted from a ight condition in which the lift load was only one quarter of that for which the F-5 SSBD was designed. The focusing maneuver was successful, but a lesson learned was that a focusing maneuver will be at a ight condition that does not correspond to a minimum boom cruise condition.111 This unexpected nding was a useful result that led to a realization that a focus maneuver of a low-boom shaped aircraft will generally correspond to an o-design condition. That result can be exploited by making an o-design condition a complex wave whose focus factor is less than that of a simple boom with two shocks.112 The only event that failed to provide hoped-for data was the close-behind ight of the two F-5s at Mach 1.35 on January 15 (QSP-22). Instead of the usual separation of 45 seconds (or about 63,000 feet), the F-5E was supposed to follow no more than 700 feet (or 0.3 seconds) behind and about 200 feet below the F-5 SSBD. This would subject their sonic boom signatures to the same amount of turbulence. Unfortunately (and somewhat ironically), the sleeker baseline F-5E could not quite keep up with the modied F-5, so its sonic boom signature arrived 2 seconds later. Because turbulence in the lower atmosphere was higher than during any of their other ights together, the eects of turbulence scatter on the sonic booms could not be precisely determined.113 The in-ight sonic boom measurements made during the F-15B probes, which measured the F-5 SSBDs shock waves shortly after coming o its airframe, would be especially valuable for use in computational uid dynamics. Figure 8-10 depicts the near-eld pressure signature as measured on the sixth probe made at Mach 1.414 during the early morning ight test on January 21 (QSP-30).114 The superimposed photo of the F-5 SSBD clearly shows the propagation of its shock waves, starting with a strong bow shock. This prevents the next three forebody shocks Figure 8-10. Near-eld probing data, with photo from moving forward to reinforce showing sources of shock waves. (NASA)
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the bow shock farther down in the mideld and far eld. After another strong shock from the wings and their leading edge extension (abbreviated as LEX on the chart), there is a strong expansion (a type of decompression) before another shock from the trailing edge of the wings and the horizontal stabilizer. After a nal recompression shock wave, the pressure drops as the plume from the engines exhaust dissipates. The box on the lower left shows the movement of the probe relative to the angle of the shock cone, and the box at the lower right shows the orientation of the F-15B below the F-5. On some probes, it was learned that the bow shock could advance 10 feet or more from the ideal Mach cone.115 A technical paper published on the airborne portion of the SSBE emphasized the importance of precision in gathering this data; among the lessons learned: For all measurements, accurate global positioning systembased timing is essential for data correlation with multiple aircraft.... Shock measuring plumbing design require[s] careful sizing.... [and] ....Real-time monitoring of measured shock waves is essential for ecient shock wave probing.116 A delay in communications from the Dryden control room to the F-15B on the relative positions of the aircraft during probes allowed only gross corrections for the next probe. It would have been desirable to upgrade the F-15Bs cockpit instrumentation, especially with a relative position display, but the compressed schedule for completing the SSBE did not allow enough time.117 After applying various corrections, recalibrations, and adjustments to the raw data and inputting ight conditions (e.g., Mach number, lift coecient, angle of attack), meteorological data, and other variables, the researchers were able to begin validation of computational uid dynamics codes. At the Langley workshop in August 2004, NGCs Keith Meredith showed how the data collected could be incorporated into CFD analyses. First, Ed Haering selected 6 of the 68 probes based on such factors as the number of data points in each recorded signature, the constancy of the F-5 SSBDs Mach numbers and ightpath angles (which implied the planes lift, AOA, and trim), and how close to exactly parallel it and the F-15B ew during the probes. He reprocessed the GPS ightpath data recorded during these probes in ve ways to select the process that would Figure 8-11. A CFD image (left) and graph of the CFDgenerated shock wave signature, with the actual signature provide the best CFD com- recorded during the ight test also shown on the graph. parisons. Meredith then The squiggly horizontal line under the F-5 SSBD depicts incorporated data from the the path own by the F-15B during this probe. (NGC)
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Figure 8-12. CFD comparison of normal F-5E (left) and F-5 SSBD (right) at Mach 1.4 with shock waves shown propagating from forebody and pressure contours from the engine inlet. (NGC)
six selected signatures with NGCs GCNS model using the oset grid with 14.2 million data points. Some of the CFD runs required minor adjustments to compensate for slight deviations in the probing measurements, but in general, the CFD results were in excellent agreement with the ight-test data. Figure 8-11 depicts the second probe on January 22 (QSP-31) ying at Mach 1.38 with an overlay of the recorded and CFD-generated sonic boom signatures.118 A collaborative overview of the SSBD project prepared by Joe Pawlowski, David Graham, Charles Boccadoro, Peter Coen, and Domenic Maglieri assessed the signicance of what the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration and Experiment had recorded. The vast amount of data collected during these tests will be invaluable to future supersonic aircraft designs in that it will allow designers to go forward with condence in the ability to predict, and thereby control, sonic booms.119 Using computational uid dynamics, the data revealed the eects of sonic boom shaping in practice as well as in theory. In what might seem counterintuitive to a layperson, the stronger bow shock generated by the F-5 SSBDs nose glove actually resulted in a weaker and more slowly spiking bow wave in the far-eld (e.g., on the ground) because trailing shock waves would be less prone to merge with it. Furthermore, the SSBDs carefully designed underbody fairing produced an area of expansion (decompression) that decreased the shock wave from the engine inlets. What in decades past could only be imagined in the minds eye of sonic boom researchers could now be imaged in vivid colors based on real-world ighttest data. Figure 8-12 shows how the F-5 SSBDs modications changed the normal F-5E shock waves and pressure dips into a pattern that reduced the strength of its sonic boom. The pressure in the dark areas above both aircraft and below the F-5 SSBD equates to at least 75 psf (below ambient air pressure), while the stronger bow shock extending down from the front of the
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F-5 SSBD equates to more than 50 psf.120 Although the original colors are not reproduced on paper, the results are clearly evident even in tones of gray and black. The achievements of the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration and Experiment did not go unrecognized. Among the many tributes and honors given to the participants, Aviation Week and Space Technology bestowed one of its Laurels for 2003 on Charles Boccadoro, Richard Wlezien, and Steven Walker; the AIAA awarded its Aircraft Design Award for 2004 to Charles Boccadoro, Joseph Pawlowski, and David Graham; and NASA recognized the entire SSBD team with a 2004 Turning Goals into Reality Partnership Award.121 The Navy, which had previously planned to use Bureau Number (BUNO) 74-1519 for spare parts, recognized the signicance of this old but now unique F-5 by allowing it to be preserved. The disassembled aircraft was delivered in August 2004 to the Valiant Air Command Museum in Titusville, FL, where, after being reassembled and restored by volunteers (as shown in a photo at the end of the last chapter), the Pelican has been on display with the museums collection of warbirds since June 2006.122
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1. Weather Warehouse, Jacksonville Cecil Field Airport, 7/24/03, accessed August 11, 2011, https://weather-warehouse.com/WxHubP/ WxSPM531874661_174.28.158.213/1_Jacksonville. 2. Steve Madison, Roy Martin, Keith Applewhite, and Eric Vario, Test Plan: Quiet Supersonic Program Flight Envelope Clearance, Appendices H and I, Revision 6 (May 5, 2003). 3. Benson-Martin interview, April 7, 2011; Peter G. Coen, David H. Graham, Domenic J. Maglieri, and Joseph W. Pawlowski, Origins and Overview of the Demonstration Program, PowerPoint presentation, January 10, 2005, slide no. 17, SSBD Flight Test Summary; Northrop Grumman, Northrop Grumman F-5E Modied for Sonic Boom Demonstration Completes First Flight, news release, July 29, 2003. 4. Steve Madison, Roy Martin, Keith Applewhite, and Eric Vario, Test Plan: Quiet Supersonic Program Flight Envelope Clearance, Appendices H and I, Revision 6 (May 5, 2003); Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 6; Northrop Grumman, Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Program Overview, undated, 5. 5. The Introduction provides a detailed description of the cross-country ferry ight, based primarily on a telephone interview of Roy Martin by Lawrence Benson, May 31, 2011. 6. Air Force Plant 42, accessed August 10, 2011, http://www. dreamlandresort.com/black_projects/plant42.htm; Madison, SSBD Test Plan Review, slide no. 51. 7. Northrop Grumman, Shaped Sonic Boom Demo Flight Test Program, PowerPoint presentation, August 17, 2004, slide no. 5, SSBD/SSBE Team Roster: Test Pilots (SSBD). 8. Graham et al., Aerodynamic Design of SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 5. 9. Pawlowski et al., Overview of the SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 10. 10. Ibid., 12. Source for temperatures at 32,000 feet: Aerographer/ Meteorology, Table 1-6, U.S. Standard Atmosphere Heights and Temperatures, accessed August 27, 2011, http://www.tpub.com/ content/aerographer/14269/css/14269_75.htm. 11. Benson-Martin interview, May 31, 2011. 12. Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 12, 2011. 13. Ibid.; Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, 30.
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14. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-8, August 25, 2003, with attached pilot report by Cmdr. Spike Long. 15. Dana D. Purifoy to Lawrence Benson, Re: Name(s) of F-15B Backseater during SSBD/SSBE, e-mail, October 6, 2011. 16. Edward A. Haering and James E. Murray, Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration/Experiment Airborne Data SSBD Final Review, PowerPoint brieng, August 17, 2004, slide no. 27; Edward A Haering, James E. Murray, Dana D. Purifoy, David H. Graham, Keith B. Meredith, Christopher E. Ashburn, and Lt. Col. Mark Stucky, Airborne Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Measurements with Computational Fluid Dynamics Comparisons, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 6. 17. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-8, August 25, 2003. 18. Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 12, 2011. 19. Cmdr. Spike Long, QSP Pilot Report, August 25, 2003. 20. Madison et al., Test Plan QSP SSBD Data Collection, 1112. 21. Source for gure 8-1: Coen and Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier, slide no. 19. 22. The lake used to have year-round water and still has a marsh with a wildlife viewing area. Bureau of Land Management, Harper Dry Lake, accessed August 20, 2011, http://www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/ fo/barstow/harper.html, as of August 2011. 23. Kenneth J. Plotkin, Edward A. Haering, Domenic J. Maglieri, Joseph Salamone, and Brenda M. Sullivan, Ground Data Collection of Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Aircraft Pressure Signatures, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 2. 24. Ibid., 3; Numerous e-mail messages from and to Ed Haering and Mike Beck on meeting desert tortoise protection and other land-use requirements. 25. Madison et al., Test Plan QSP SSBD Data Collection, 2, 1112; Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 23. 26. Ed Haering to David McCurdy, Security and toilets, e- mail, January 16, 2003. As it turned out, many of the sticks at Harper Lake used to position the sensors and all but one of the reector stakes used to nd locations in the dark were ripped up or stolen. Ed Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, June 6, 2004, 5. 27. Ken Plotkin, SSBD Ground Boom Data Wyle and Northrop, PowerPoint brieng, September 19, 2003, slide nos. 24; Plotkin et
237
31. 32.
33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44.
al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 25; Ed Haering to Lawrence Benson, Re: SSBD Chapter 8 for Review, e-mail, October 26, 2011. Plotkin, SSBD Ground Boom Data, September 19, 2003, slide nos. 24; Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 2. Ed Haering to Joe Pawlowski et al., Re: SSBDWG Meeting Notice - Flight Test Planning, e-mail, August 19, 2002. Madison et al., Test Plan: QSP SSBD Data Collection, as of April 17, 2003, 10; Benson-Haering interview, April 5, 2011; Graham Warwick, F-5E Shapes up to Change Sonic Boom, Flight International, August 5, 2003, 30. Sweetman, Whooshhh! Popular Science (July 2004); Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, Aerospace America (September 2004): 30. Sweetman, article cited above. A new Moon had set the previous evening and would not rise until after 0600: Time&Date.com, Moonrise and Moonset in Los Angeles, August 2003, accessed August 26, 2011, http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/astronomy. html?n=137&month=8&year=2003&obj=moon&a=-11&day=1. CFD Used in Sonic Boom Test Program, CFD Review, September 3, 2003; Kenneth Plotkin et al., Ground Measurements of a Shaped Sonic Boom, AIAA paper no. 2004-2923 (May 2004), 34. Time&Date.com, Sunrise and Sunset in Los Angeles. Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, 30. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-9, August 27, 2003. As quoted by Sweetman in Whooshh! http://www.popsci.com. Figure 8-2 copied from Coen and Martin, Fixing the Sound Barrier, slide 21. Benson-Plotkin interview, May 2, 2011; Croft, Engineering through the Sound Barrier, 24, 31. Madison et al., Test Plan QSP SSBD Data Collection, as of April 17, 2003, 910. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-10, August 27, 2003, with attached pilot report by Cmdr. Spike Long attached; Plotkin et al., Ground Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2004-2923, 4. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-11, August 28, 2003. Plotkin, SSBD Ground Boom Data, slide no. 7. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-12, August 29, 2003, with attached pilot report by Cmdr. Spike Long (quoted); Plotkin et al., Ground Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2004-2923, 4.
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45. Jim Hart (NGC), Jan Walker (DARPA), Kathy Barnstor (NASA Langley), and Gray Creech (NASA Dryden), Northrop Grumman/ Government Team Shapes Aviation History with Sonic Boom Tests, news release, August 28, 2003, accessed ca. September 1, 2011, http://www.irconnect.com/noc/press/pages/news_releases.html?d=44396. 46. Science Blog, news advisory, DARPA, Northrop Grumman, NASA to Brief Media on Results Achieved in Supersonic Boom Reduction Demo, August 28, 2003, accessed August 23, 2011, http://www. scienceblog.com/community/older/archives/K/1/pub1157.html. 47. Northrop Grumman, Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (SSBD) Program, PowerPoint presentation, Washington Press Club, September 3, 2003. 48. NG, NASA, DARPA Announce Successful Sonic Boom Reduction, Aerospace Daily (September 4, 2003): 6. 49. Ibid. 50. Kathy Barnstor, Jan Walker, and Jim Hart, NASA Opens New Chapter in Supersonic Flight, news release, September 4, 2003, accessed ca. September 1, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/ news/releases/2003/03-060.html; F-5SSBD Press Conference, http:// sonicbooms.org/News/F5SSBD_PressConf.html. 51. Andrew Bridges (AP Science Writer), Changing Jets Shape Takes the Bang out of Sonic Booms (September 4, 2004); Videos of CNBCs Tech Watch with Jane Wells, September 10, 2003, provided to author by Joe Pawlowski. 52. National Research Council, Commercial Supersonic Technology: The Way Ahead (Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2001), 4143. 53. James R. Asker, FAA Seeks Information on Sonic Boom Research, Aviation Week (June 2, 2003): 21; David Bond, The Time is Right, Aviation Week (October 20, 2003): 5758. 54. Steve Komadina, Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP), PowerPoint presentation, FAA Civil Supersonic Aircraft Technical Workshop, Arlington, VA, November 13, 2003; David Graham, Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator Program, same venue, November 13, 2003. Presentations accessed September 5, 2011, http://www.faa.gov/about/ oce_org/headquarters_oces/apl/noise_emissions/supersonic_aircraft_ noise/. Spokespersons for Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Gulfstream, Raytheon, General Electric, and Pratt & Whitney also made one or more presentations.
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55. Richard G. Smith III, NETJETS, PowerPoint presentation, FAA Civil Supersonic Aircraft Technical Workshop, Arlington, VA, November 13, 2003. 56. Peter G. Coen (for Kevin P. Shepherd), Human Response to Sonic Booms (November 13, 2003); Brenda M. Sullivan, Metrics for Human Response to Sonic Booms (November. 13, 2003); Peter G. Coen, Supersonic Vehicles Technology: Sonic Boom Technology Development and Demonstration November 13, 2003 (all presented at FAA Civil Supersonic Aircraft Workshop, November 13, 2003); Aimee Cunningham, Sonic Booms and Human Ears: How Much Can the Public Tolerate, Popular Science (July 30, 2004) accessed ca. September 10, 2011, http://www.popsci.com/ military-aviation-space/article/2004-07/sonic-booms-and-human-ears. 57. Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, 10. 58. Martin and Coen, Fixing the Sound Barrier, slide no. 22, Lessons Learned from Initial Tests. 59. Benson-Boccadoro interview, August 20, 2011. 60. Irene Mona Klotz, Test Shows Shape Sheds Sonic Booms Bang (September 26, 2003), accessed ca. September 10, 2011, http://www. upi.com/Science_News/203/09/26/UPI-32491064603528/. 61. NGC-NASA, Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Program Overview, ca. September 2004, 1. 62. SSBD/SSBE Team Roster. 63. SSBE Overview, 12; Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator Data Collection Test Plan Addendum, Quiet Supersonic Platform Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment (ca. December 2003), 35, 7. 64. SSBE Overview, 12; Test Plan Addendum SSBE, 56. 65. SSBE Overview, 3; Tom McCoy, Flight Readiness Review for Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment (January 6, 2004). 66. SSBE Overview, 5; Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 34; Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, Kenneth J. Plotkin, and Brenda Sullivan, NASA Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment, Ground Sensors and Data Final Data Review, PowerPoint presentation, August 17, 2004, gure 8-3 copied from slide no. 9. 67. Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors, slide nos. 1011. 68. Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 45; Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors, slide nos. 1517. 69. Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors, slide nos. 1014.
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Proof at Last
70. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 7; Haering and Murray, SSBD/E Airborne Data, slide nos. 1516. 71. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 6; Haering and Murray, SSBD/E Airborne Data, slide nos. 1516. 72. Benson-Martin interview, April 7, 2011; Benson-Purifoy interview, April 8, 2011; QSP Flight Reports, January 1222, 2004; SSBD/ SSBE Team Roster, slide no. 6, Test Pilots (SSBE). 73. Martin and Coen, Fixing the Sound Barrier, slide no. 25, Revised Ground Track; Authors review of Flight Reports QSP-13 through QSP-33, January 1222, 2004. 74. NGC, Flight Report, QSP-14, January 12, 2004. 75. NGC, Flight Reports, QSP-15, QSP-16, and QSP-17, January 13, 2004. 76. NGC, Flight Reports, QSP 18 and QSP 19, January 14, 2004. 77. NGC, Flight Reports, QSP 20 and QSP 21, January 15, 2004. 78. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 33. 79. NGC, Flight Report QSP 21, January 15, 2004. 80. NASA-NGC, SSBD Program Overview, 5. 81. NGC, Flight Reports, QSP-24, 25, and 26, January 17, 2004. The last report noted that the data run was made at Mach 1.43, but the speed was later revised to Mach 1.45 in the SSBE Flight Test Summary matrix used in NGC-NASA briengs during 2004. This would equate to a true airspeed of over 950 mph, based on http:// www.hochwarth.com/misc/AviationCalculator.html. 82. As this was the Martin Luther King Federal holiday, the team had to get special permission to conduct operations. 83. NGC, Flight Reports, QSP-27, 28, and 29, January 19, 2001. 84. Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 5; Haering et al., NASA SSBD Ground Sensors, August 17, 2004, slide 84. 85. Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, 3. 86. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 13. 87. Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors, August 17, 2004, slide no. 87 used for gure 8-5. 88. Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, Dana Purifoy, David H. Graham, Keith B. Meredith, Christopher E. Ashburn, and Lt. Col. Mark Stucky, Airborne Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration
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89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99.
100.
101. 102.
Pressure Measurements with Computational Fluid Dynamics Comparisons, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 1011 (also source for gure 8-6). NGC Flight Reports, QSP-30 and 31, January 21, 2001; SSBE Flight Test Summary. NGC Flight Reports, QSP-32 and 33, January 22, 2001; SSBE Flight Test Summary; Purifoy to Benson, October 6, 2011. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements with CFD, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 3, 15. Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, 1. NASA/NGC, SSBE Program Overview Benson-Graham-Pawlowski interview, April 12, 2011. SSBE Flight Test Summary; NASA-NGC, SSBE Program Overview, 5; Benson-Martin interview, April 7, 2011. Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 5. NASA-NGC, SSBE Program Overview, 3; Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 1415. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 810. These included the University of Southern California on March 17; the Society of Experimental Test Pilots (SETP) in San Diego, CA, on March 26; the Society of Automotive Engineers in Wichita, KS, on April 21; the SETP in Annapolis, MD, on April 22; the Confederation of European Aerospace Societies in Manchester, England, on May 11; and the Experimental Aircraft Association in Oshkosh, WI, in July. Agenda, Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Closeout Workshop, Pearl Young Theater, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004. As evident in the footnotes, briengs from this workshop and the papers published by the AIAA have been essential sources for writing this and the three previous chapters. Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors (August 17, 2004), slide nos. 2556; Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 1, 5, 8. Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 5, 89; Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors (August 17, 2004), slide nos. 8889.
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Proof at Last
103. John M. Morgenstern, Alan Arslan, Victor Lyman, and Joseph Vadyak, F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrators Persistence of Boom Shaping Reduction Through Turbulence, AIAA paper no. 2005-12, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 1, 79, 14. 104. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 13. 105. Plotkin et al., Ground Data Collection of SSBE, AIAA paper no. 205-10, 510; Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors (August 17, 2004), slide nos. 5889, with gure 8-7 copied from slide no. 88. 106. Kenneth J. Plotkin, Domenic J. Maglieri, and Brenda M. Sullivan, Measured Eects of Turbulence on the Loudness and Waveforms of Conventional and Shaped Minimized Sonic Booms, AIAA paper no. 2005-2949, 26th AIAA Aeroacoustics Conference, Monterey, CA, May 2325, 2005, 56. Figure 8-8 copied from Haering et al., NASA SSBE Ground Sensors (August 17, 2004), slide nos. 76 and 77. 107. Brenda M. Sullivan, Sonic Boom Loudness Results for Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment, SSBE Closeout Workshop, August 17, 2004. 108. Plotkin, Maglieri, and Sullivan, Measured Eects of Turbulence on Loudness, AIAA paper no. 2005-2949, 7-8. 109. Domenic Maglieri to Lawrence Benson, Re: SSBD Chapter 8 for Review, e-mail, October 16, 2011. 110. Kenneth J. Plotkin and Roy Martin, NASA Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment: Pushover Focus Maneuver, Final Data Review, PowerPoint presentation, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004, with gure 8-9 copied from slide no. 6; Kenneth J. Plotkin, Roy Martin, Domenic J. Maglieri, Edward A. Haering, and James E. Murray, Pushover Focus Booms from the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator, AIAA paper no. 2005-11, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005, 13. 111. Plotkin et al., Pushover Focus Booms from the SSBD, AIAA paper no. 2005-11, 414, 45 quoted. 112. Ibid. 113. Morgenstern et al, F-5 SSBDs Persistence Through Turbulence, AIAA paper no. 2005-12, 1011. 114. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, gure 8-10 extracted from 16.
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115. Ibid.; Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, 1. 116. Haering et al., Airborne SSBD Pressure Measurements, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 33 quoted. 117. Haering, Draft SSBD Lessons Learned, 2. 118. Keith Meredith, SSBEFlight Test to CFD Comparison, PowerPoint presentation, Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004, gure 8-11 extracted from slide nos. 14 and 16. 119. Pawlowski et al., Overview of the SSBD Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 13. 120. Meredith, SSBECFD Comparison, slide no. 9 used for gure 8-12. 121. 2004 Aircraft Design Award, Aviation Week (October 4, 2004): 11; NASA Turning Goals into Reality 2004 Awards, accessed August 25, 2011, http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/events/tgir/2004/2004_award_ winners.pdf. 122. Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum, Unscramble [bulletin], August/September 2004 and July 2006; Museum Gallery, accessed October 18, 2011, http://www.vacwarbirds.org/.
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F/A-18B no. 852, used to perfect Low Boom/No Boom ight maneuvers. (NASA)
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CHAPTER 9
Exactly 2 weeks after the Federal Aviation Administration held its civil supersonic technical workshop in Arlington, a Concorde airliner ew for the last time. It touched down in Bristol, England, on November 26, 20033 weeks before the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers rst ight.1 The Concordes retirement after more than 30 years of Mach 2 service marked the rst time in modern history that the trend toward ever-faster modes of transportation had gone into reverse. Although the causes of the Concordes demise were primarily economic, its inherently loud sonic boom was the main reason it had been unable to oer airlines a suitable route structure. Its absence now left the market for high-speed travel open solely to smaller and intrinsically quieter supersonic business jets for the foreseeable future.
Project (known by its French acronym, HISAC)comprised of more than 30 companies such as EADS (parent company of Airbus), Dassault, and Sukhoi as well as universities and other organizations; and the Supersonic Cruise Industry Alliance (SCIA)referred to as the Super Ten. The SCIA included airframe manufacturers Boeing, Cessna, Gulfstream, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon; engine builders Rolls-Royce, GE, and Pratt & Whitney; and the fractional ownership company NetJets. This groups ambitious goal was supersonic civilian ight within 10 years.3 To make this possible, the SCIA told NASA that its top priority was to solve the issue of sonic boom noise over populated areas as soon as possible, something that would almost certainly require ight tests with an experimental low-boom aircraft.4 Meanwhile, acoustics specialists at NASA Langley including Kevin Shepherd and Brenda Sullivan had resumed an active program of studies and experiments on the human response to sonic booms. They upgraded the HSR-era simulator booth with an improved computer-controlled playback system, new loudspeakers, and other equipment to more accurately replicate the sound of various boom signatures, such as those recorded at Edwards (described later in this chapter). In 2005, they also added predicted boom shapes from several low-boom aircraft designs.5 At the same time, Gulfstream was creating its own new mobile sonic boom simulator to help demonstrate the dierence between traditional and shaped sonic booms to a wider audience. Although Gulfstreams folded-horn design could not reproduce the extremely low frequencies of Langleys simulator booth (with its rack of large subwoofers), it created a traveling pressure wave that moved past the listener and resonated with postboom noises, features that were judged more realistic than other simulators.6 In September 2003, 2 months before holding its civil supersonics workshop, the FAA had started the Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction (PARTNER) Center of Excellence along with NASA and a number of universities. One of the centers purposes was to conduct and share research into sonic boom acceptability. After having begun the process for considering a new American metric on acceptable sonic booms, the FAA then helped prompt the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and its Committee for Aviation Environmental Protection to put the issue on its agenda in the interest of global consistency. Addressing existing SST-era noise restrictions for a new generation of smaller supersonic airplanes would require international agreements and probable action by the U.S. Congress. Doing this would necessarily be time consuming. Carl Burleson, the director of the FAAs Oce of Environment and Energy, warned, Its one thing to develop a new scientic metric. Its another to develop a public consensus.7 In addition to the major aircraft companies, sometimes referred to as original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), two new privately held companies
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were also making signicant progress on SSBJ designs. These were Supersonic Aerospace International (SAI), led by J. Michael Paulson, son of Gulfstream founder Allen E. Paulson, and Aerion Corporation, led by former Learjet President Brian Barents and chaired by its chief benefactor, billionaire investor Robert M. Bass. In October 2004, both companies revealed their SSBJ concepts at a conference of the National Business Aviation Association (NBAA).8 In 2000, just before his death, Allen Paulson bequeathed $25 million to his son to form SAI and contract with Lockheed Martins Skunk Works to design a low-boom SSBJ. The resulting design, rened over the next several years, was a 132-foot-long, two-engine, 12-passenger aircraft featuring canards and an inverted V-tail capable of ying up to Mach 1.8. SAI called it the Quiet Small Supersonic Transport (QSST). Based on extensive CFD and wind tunnel testing, its sonic boom was estimated to be only 1 percent as loud as the Concordes.9 Aerion Corporation was formed in 2002. Its 8-to-12-passenger design, which the company continued to rene in future years, featured a 136-foot fuselage and tapered biconvex wings (similar to those of the F-104 ghter) with natural laminar ow. Richard Tracy, the companys chief technology ocer, had owned Reno Aeronautical, which worked on the wings design as one of DARPAs contractors during the QSP. Not being a low-boom concept, Aerions SSBJ was optimized for cruising both supersonically at about Mach 1.6 and transonically at up to Mach 1.15.10 Because of the Mach cuto eect, the latter option was intended to allow it to y as fast as possible over land while costing less than competing designs.11 Although ying at transonic speeds might be permitted under the ICAOs rule, which prohibits the creation of a disturbing sonic boom,12 the FAAs blanket ban on civilian aircraft ying more than Mach 1 would still have to be relaxed to meet this goal. Despite their progress in sonic boom research and ecient low-boom designs, both SAI and Aerion would have to negotiate joint ventures with major aircraft corporations before they could begin any serious development work. On their part, the OEMssome of which were pursuing their own SSBJ design eortscontinued to await the kind of sonic boom research and testing by NASA that would lead to relaxation of the onerous national and international noise regulations. They wanted such assurance before making the multibillion dollar commitment needed to develop and produce an SSBJ. In this context of both renewed enthusiasm and continued uncertainty within the aviation industry, as well as nite Government funding, NASAs aeronautics organizations hoped to sustain the momentum in developing supersonic technologies fostered by DARPAs Quiet Supersonic Platform program and the SSBD-SSBE. The next step most desired by both the aviation industry and NASA proponents was an X-plane, preferably one designed from nose to tail for generating sonic booms quiet enough to satisfy the public and thereby
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help lead to changes in the Federal Aviation Administrations supersonic rule. Despite a reduction in overall aeronautical research, NASAs FY 2006 budget included projects in four areas that focused narrowly on breakthrough technology demonstrations of benet to the public, including sonic boom mitigation. NASA Vehicle Systems Program Manager Richard Wlezien (referring to the SSBD) explained the objective as follows: The F-5 boom was shaped, but not mitigated.... The next step is to show [an] acceptable sonic boom.13 Although it was a relatively modest proposal compared to many NASA programs, sustaining funds would not be easy. The Agencys budget requests for aeronautics declined steadily: $959 million for FY 2004, $919 million for FY 2005, and $852 million for FY 2006.14 The aeronautics budget request was only $593.8 million for FY 2007, but this largely reected a change in accounting procedures for operations at NASAs research centers.15 Based perhaps on only the raw data, an article in Aviation Week & Space Technology lamented that NASA is attempting to absorb a 40% cut in its aircraft technology development programs without a clear national aeronautics policy to guide it.16 In any case, it was clear that new programs needed to pursue President George W. Bushs goal of establishing a lunar base as a stair step for an eventual piloted mission to Mars, in addition to the ongoing demands of the Space Shuttle program and International Space Station, were forcing NASA to make some hard choices. Even so, the prospects for pursuing a new sonic boom demonstrator continued to move forward during the rst half of 2005 with strong backing from the Supersonic Cruise Industry Alliance.17 In July 2005, NASA announced the Sonic Boom Mitigation Project. It inherited recently awarded contracts of approximately $1 million each for 5-month concept explorations on the feasibility of either modifying another existing aircraft or (more likely) designing a new demonstrator. The participating companies were Boeing Phantom Works, Raytheon Aircraft, Northrop Grumman teamed with Gulfstream, and Lockheed Martin teamed with Cessna. The best of the concepts would provide the basis for the experimental low-boom aircraft that, if successful, could be used for human response surveys. Robert E. Meyer, Drydens associate director for programs, was named as mitigation project manager.18 As summarized by Peter Coen, NASAs supersonic vehicle sector manager, these studies will determine whether a low sonic boom demonstrator can be built at an aordable cost in a reasonable amount of time.19 With the support of most of the aerospace industry, the Sonic Boom Mitigation Project appeared to be on a fast track. NASA specialists were already reviewing the companies existing research to help draft an RFP for building the demonstrator. Preston Pres Henne, a Gulfstream senior vice president who had long been a strong SSBJ advocate, expected a selection to be made by early 2006 and the experimental airplane to be ying before the end of 2008.20 His
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forecast was corroborated by Drydens Robert Meyer. It will probably be an X-plane, although we dont have a designation for it yet.... Were approaching this fairly aggressively. We hope to award the contract to the winning company early next year and perform ight tests in 2008.21 These predictions soon proved to be premature. On August 30, 2005, Lisa Porter, NASAs newly appointed associate administrator for aeronautics, informed participants that NASA could no longer fund the new demonstrator. After less than 2 months of gestation, the Sonic Boom Mitigation Project was terminated while still in its rst trimester.22 In retrospect, just as the technological capabilities and business case for an experimental low-boom airplane seemed to be reaching a critical mass, its cancellation postponed any chance of resolving the ban on civilian supersonic ight for at least another decade. Although NASA would explore cheaper alternatives while continuing other avenues of sonic boom research, the demise of the mitigation project marked a major detour in the quest for quiet supersonic ight. Despite this setback, there was still one signicant boom-lowering experiment in the making. Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation, which had been teamed with Northrop-Grumman in one of the stillborn mitigation studies, had already patented a new sonic boom mitigation technique.23 Testing this inventiona retractable lance-shaped device to extend the eective length of an aircrafts nose sectionwould be the next major sonic boom ight demonstration at Edwards AFB.
measurement of a low sonic boom from a sounding rocket returning to Earth at a steep angle and low Mach number. NASA Drydens Ed Haering used PCBoom4 to model a ight prole that could emulate this result with an F/A-18 Hornet. In essence, the prole applied Frank Walkdens 1958 theory on how an airplanes lift aects the strength of its sonic boom, which had rst been measured by NASAs in-ight probes made above and below a B-58 in 1963 (gure 1-4). This meant that the weaker shock waves from an aircrafts upper surfaces could propagate a quieter sonic boom signature when ying upside down. Jim Smolka, applying his piloting skills, then rened Haerings modeling into a yable maneuver in a series of ight tests using NASA F/A-18B number 852 equipped with an Ashtech Z-12 dierential GPS unit and a Research Quick Data System (RQDS) that converted normal air data into pulse-code modulated data for transmission to the ground stations. With its precise telemetry and an extensive ground array of BASS and BADS pressure sensors and microphones, these ight tests were able to determine exactly how to create controlled sonic booms. The new technique allowed F/A-18s to generate shaped (low boom) signatures. It also could produce the evanescent sound waves (no boom) that remain after the refraction and absorption of shock waves generated at low Mach speeds before they reach the surface.25 The basic Low Boom/No Boom technique (depicted later in gure 9-6) involves cruising just below Mach 1 at about 50,000 feet, rolling into an inverted position, diving at a 53-degree angle, keeping the aircrafts speed at Mach 1.1 during a portion of the dive, and pulling out to recover at about 32,000 feet. This ight prole took advantage of four attributes that contribute to reduced overpressures: a long propagation distance (the relatively high altitude of the dive), the weaker shock waves generated from the upper surfaces of an aircraft (by beginning the dive while inverted), low airframe weight and volume (the relatively small size of an F/A-18), and a low Mach number. This technique allowed Drydens F/A-18s, which normally generate overpressures of 1.5 psf in level ight, to produce overpressures under 0.1 psf. Using these maneuvers, Drydens test pilots could place these focused quiet booms precisely on specic locations, such as those with observers and sensors. Not only were their overpressures low, but they also had a longer rise time than the typical N-shaped signature. High-delity recordings of these reduced booms would be used in the new generation of acoustic simulators.26
results from Langleys 4-foot-by4-foot supersonic wind tunnel in 2002, company experts were convinced that its patented Quiet Spike device could mitigate a sonic boom greatly by creating only mild nose shock from its narrow tip followed by weak shocks from the cross-section Figure 9-1. Specications of Quiet Spike F-15 nose transitions between adjacent extension. (Gulfstream) telescoping sections, asymmetrically shaped to propagate less powerful pressure waves in parallel to the ground.27 However, the company needed a way to test the structural and aerodynamic suitability of the device and also obtain supersonic ight data on its shock-scattering abilities. NASAs Dryden Flight Research Center had all the capabilities to accomplish these tasks. Under this latest public-private partnership, Gulfstream fabricated a telescoping 470-pound nose boom (made of molded graphite epoxy over an aluminum frame) to attach to the radar bulkhead of Drydens frequently modied F-15B number 836. As shown in gure 9-1, a motorized cable and pulley system could extend the spike up to 24 feet and retract it back to 14 feet. After extensive static testing at Gulfstreams Savannah, GA, facility, Gulfstream and NASA technicians at Dryden attached the specially instrumented spike to the radar bulkhead of the F-15B in April 2006 and began conducting further ground tests (see photo). Michael Toberman was Drydens project manager. Key engineers included Drydens Leslie Molzahn and Thomas Grindle and Gulfstreams Frank Simmons III, Donald D. Freund, and Robert A. Robbie Cowart.28 After safety reviews, aerodynamic assessments, and six baseline ights to measure the F-15Bs ight data with its standard air-data nose boom, Dryden conducted 32 Quiet Spike ight tests from August 10, 2006, to February 14, 2007.29 After carefully verifying the Quiet Spikes behavior during several subsonic envelope-expansion ights completed on October 3, veteran NASA test pilot Jim Smolka took it to Mach 1.2 on October 20 to begin incrementally expanding its supersonic ight envelope up to Mach 1.4 and 45,000 feet. On December 13, NASA Drydens F-15B number 837 began inight pressure-measurement probes of its spike-equipped counterpart. Aerial refueling by AFFTCs KC-135 Stratotankerwith the Quiet Spike fully extendedallowed a longer mission within the R2508 restricted area and along an extended high-altitude supersonic corridor in coordination with the FAAs Los Angeles Center. The chase F-15B, own by Thomas Hill of AFFTCs
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F-15B no. 836 during vibration testing of Gulfstreams Quiet Spike at the Dryden Flight Research Center. (NASA)
F-15B number 836 in ight with Quiet Spike, September 2006. (NASA)
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46th Test Group, collected data at distances of 100 feet to 700 feet from the Quiet Spike during 31 successful probes at Mach 1.4. On January 19, 2007, Smolka nished expanding the Quiet Spikes supersonic envelope by testing it at Mach 1.8. Except during supersonic sideslip maneuvers, the only discrepancy between the F-15B with and without Quiet Spike was reduced directional stability at speeds above Mach 1.4. The spike itself proved to be structurally sound in all ight conditions, and it even went beyond expectations by being extended to its full length while ying supersonically.30 It was known from the outset that the weak shock waves generated by the Quiet Spike would rather quickly coalesce with the more powerful shock waves generated farther back on the F-15s unmodied high-boom airframe. Therefore, the in-ight probes collected pressure signatures from less than 1,000 feet away using similar techniques as during the SSBD-SSBE tests. Figure 9-2 shows one of these signatures, made from 95 feet directly below the Quiet Spike F-15B ying at Mach 1.4, compared with a CFD prediction. The ight test conrmed the Quiet Spikes ability to generate a relatively weak saw-tooth pattern. Also as anticipated, the powerful fth shock wave (generated from the F-15Bs inlets and wings) resulted in a sonic boom at ground level similar to that from a standard F-15B.31 As Pres Henne put it, Frankly, the F-15, compared to what we would have in [our] airplane, is a ying brick. It has strong shocks Figure 9-2. CFD prediction and in-ight coming o of it, and there is no way pressure measurement with shock waves we can stay ahead of that.32 Analyses, from Quiet Spike nose boom and F-15B however, indicated that by themselves, radome circled. (NASA) the weak shock waves from the front of the aircraft would not have coalesced, and only a mued sonic boom would have been heard from them on the ground. As with the SSBE, the data collected from the Quiet Spike tests would be of continuing value for developing and rening CFD capabilities.33 On February 13 and February 14, 2007, with all the major test objectives having been accomplished, the Quiet Spike F-15B ew to the former Kelly AFB, TX, and then on to Savannah, where Gulfstream and NASA technicians restored the aircraft to its normal conguration. A report to the Society of Experimental Test Pilots in September, prepared by 10 of the NASA Dryden and AFFTC personnel involved in the project as well as Gulfstreams Cowart, concluded, The Gulfstream and NASA experience working on [this] joint
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ight research project was very good. The project took longer than expected, but once the ying started, it progressed rapidly and achieved all test objectives.34 For this successful test of an innovative design concept for a future SSBJ, James Smolka and Leslie Molzahn of NASA Dryden and Robbie Cowart, Donald Howe, and Frank Simmons of Gulfstream subsequently received Aviation Week & Space Technologys Laureate Award in Aeronautics and Propulsion in March 2008. (Just 1 month after celebrating this honor, both Gulfstream and Dryden were saddened by the death in an aircraft accident of Gerard Schkolnik, Gulfstreams director of supersonic technology programs since 2006, who before that had been a Dryden engineer for 15 years.)35
innovative multidiscipline solutions within the areas of eciency, performance, systems integration, and environmental impactincluding the sonic boom. Milestones in each area were projected over 5 years. To serve as longer range goals on which to focus this research, the Supersonics Project projected capabilities for the next three generations of supersonic civil aircraft. The rst was an SSBJ (designated N+1) that could carry 6 to 20 passengers 4,000 nautical miles at Mach 1.6Mach 1.8 by 2015. The next generation, projected for 2020, was a small airliner (N+2) that could carry up to 70 passengers at the same speed and range. Furthest in the future, between 2030 and 2035, was an ecient multi-Mach aircraft that could carry 100 to 200 passengers 6,000 nm at Mach 1.6 with an acceptable boom, and at Mach 2.0 without sonic boom restrictions. The acceptable sonic boom metric for all three aircraft was a noise that measured less than 70 PLdB.40 In December 2007, the White House released the rst National Plan for Aeronautics Research and Development. It implemented Executive Order 13419 of December 20, 2006, and an accompanying National Aeronautics Research and Development Policy released with the Executive order. Among various future aircraft capabilities, economically viable aircraft capable of supersonic speeds over land (with an acceptable sonic boom impact) are also envisioned.41 Apparently, however, this was not an explicitly stated objective. In addressing R&D for the near term (less than 5 years), midterm (5 to 10 years), and far-term (more than 10 years), the interagency plan listed specic goals for improving supersonic cruise eciency, reducing high-altitude emissions, and lowering supersonic jet noise, but as regards sonic boom, it called for reductions only as regards military aircraft.42 This, however, did not preclude NASAs Supersonics Project from actively continuing research for the eventual design of low-boom civilian aircraft. One of the Supersonics Projects major technical challenges was to accurately model the propagation of sonic booms all the way from an aircraft to the ground incorporating all relevant physical phenomena and all ight conditions. These included realistic atmospheric conditions, especially turbulence, during which the resultant variability in ground signatures is profound and important to the quantication of boom impact.43 Another challenging goal was to model the eects of acoustic vibrations on structures and the people inside (an issue for which military ring ranges and the use of explosives had been the focus of most recent research). Developing these models would require continued advances in CFD capabilities, wind tunnel improvements, exploitation of existing databases, and additional ight tests.44 The ARMD solicited proposals on meeting the goals of the Fundamental Aeronautics Program from both industry and academia.45 Meanwhile, an extensive in-house study by experts at the Langley and Ames Centers on the
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potential of CFD tools (which to date had been mainly developed for aerodynamic eciency purposes) to make better sonic boom simulations would nd reasons for optimism. Given the encouraging nature of the preliminary results...it is reasonable to expect the expeditious development of an ecient sonic boom prediction methodology that will eventually become compatible with a [shaped boom] optimization environment.46 During this period, NASAs aeronautics budget continued to contract with requested funding dropping from $511.7 million for FY 2008 to $446 million for FY 2009. The bulk of this 13-percent reduction was for Aerospace Systems, down $26 million, and Fundamental Aeronautics, down $34 million.47 Meanwhile, the Fundamental Aeronautics Program actively continued to establish collaborative projects with the private sector, academia, and other Federal agencies. Many of these were through partnerships established in response to NASA Research Announcements (NRAs) under its Research Opportunities in Aviation (ROA) program.48 In support of this outreach, the ARMD hosted 600 attendees at the second meeting on Fundamental Aeronautics in Atlanta from October 7 to October 9, 2008, timed to precede the 61st anniversary of Chuck Yeagers historic ight. Jaiwon Shin, associate administrator for aeronautics since January, emphasized how the program was beneting from innovative precompetitive research with approximately 100 industry and academic partners working on 219 studies and projects. The meeting included more than a dozen reports on sonic boom experimentation and modeling, most of them by experts from the Langley and Ames Centers.49 The Supersonics Projects many activities included continued research on ways to assess human responses to sonic booms.50 Based on multiple studies that had long cited the more bothersome eects of booms experienced indoors, Langley began in the summer of 2008 to build one of the most sophisticated sonic boom simulation systems yet. Completed in 2009, it consisted of a carefully constructed 12-foot-by-14-foot room with sound and pressure systems that would replicate all the noises and vibrations caused by various levels and types of sonic booms.51 Such studies would be vital if most concepts for supersonic business jets were ever to be realized. During the same month as the second Fundamental Aeronautics conference in Atlanta, NASA awarded advanced study contracts for the N+2 and N+3 quiet supersonic airplane concepts, each worth about $2 million, to teams led by Boeing and Lockheed Martin. It also began working with Japans Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) on supersonic research, including sonic boom modeling.52 Although not yet resurrecting any rm plans for a new low-boom supersonic research airplane, NASA supported
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an application to the Air Force by its research partner Gulfstream that reserved the designation X-54A for when this might be done in the future.53 Reecting Gulfstreams progress toward a low-boom design, the company also trademarked The Whisper as a name for a future SSBJ. Despite its progress on controlling the sonic boom, Gulfstreams management did not believe there would be a business case for proceeding with an SSBJ until FAA and ICAO regulations were relaxed. Some of the other aircraft manufacturers, as well as Aerion and SAI, continued to work on their SSBJ concepts during 2008, but none were yet willing or able to invest the funding necessary to move beyond research and design activities.54 One of the most unusual and challenging concept explorations completed at this time (not part of the Supersonics Project) was a DARPA program, nicknamed Switchblade, to determine the feasibility of a supersonic oblique ying wing. Although the potential advantages of such a conguration were primarily militarythe ability to loiter at slow speeds but y eciently at supersonic speeds by changing its anglean oblique wing might also propagate a weaker-than-normal sonic boom carpet, projecting its strongest signature o to one side of its ightpath.55 In March 2006, DARPA awarded $10.3 million to Northrop Grumman Integrated Systems for a Phase 1 preliminary design review, which the company hoped would lead to an experimental unpiloted technology demonstrator during Phase 2.56 Controlling a tailless ying wing, with its engine pods kept pointing straight ahead as the rest of the airplane swiveled above, would have been one of an oblique ying wings most dicult challenges.57 Having to absorb cuts to its FY 2009 budget, DARPA decided not to continue Switchblade beyond the rst phase, which by October 2008 had included more than 1,000 subsonic and supersonic wind tunnel runs.58 Shortly after the October 2008 Fundamental Aeronautics conference, the FAAciting continued inquiries from the aircraft manufacturers and designersslightly updated its policy on certication standards for supersonic aircraft noise. Although still putting o any changes to the supersonic prohibition pending future research and public participation, the FAA claried that future supersonic aircraft ying at subsonic speeds would have to meet the same noise restrictions (Stage 4) as subsonic aircraft.59 Unfortunately for the near-term prospects of civilian supersonic ight, the autumn of 2008 also brought the near collapse of the American nancial system, leading into a global recession followed by years of economic and scal problems in the United States and Europe. These developments negatively aected many industries not the least being air carriers and aircraft manufacturers. The impact on those recently thriving companies making business jets was aggravated by a populist and political backlash at
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American corporate executives, some of them subsidized temporarily by the Federal Government, for their continued use of company jets. Lamenting this unsought negative publicity, Aviation Week & Space Technology examined the plight of the small-jet manufacturers in a story with this descriptive subheading: As if the economy were not enough, business aviation becomes a scapegoat for executive excess.60 Ironically, one early consequence of the recession was $150 million in stimulus funding added to NASAs FY 2009 aeronautics budget as an element in the Obama administrations American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.61 NASAs Fundamental Aeronautics Program kept its primary focus on the more distant future. Almost 600 people attended its third conference, held again in Atlanta from September 29 to October 1, 2009. The Supersonics Project had by now awarded more than $43 million in contracts to 68 commercial and educational partners for a wide variety of research projects. In the next year, the Supersonics Project planned to focus on several areas: designing simultaneously for both low boom and low drag; doing more ight testing and modeling of boom impacts on structures and people, especially for developing modeling capabilities; working with the FAA, ICAO, and other organizations on a roadmap for sonic boom acceptability; and continuing to explore approaches for large-scale sonic boom testing.62 As regards the latter possibility, Boeingunder a Supersonics Project contractstudied low-boom modications for one of NASAs F-16XL aircraft (being kept in storage at Dryden) as a possible way to obtain a reduced-boom demonstrator. This relatively low-cost idea had been one of the options being considered during NASAs short-lived Sonic Boom Mitigation Project in 2005. In the case of the F-16XL, the modications proposed by Boeing included an extended nose glove (reminiscent of the SSBD), lateral chines that blend into the wings (as with the SR-71), a sharpened V-shaped front canopy (like those of the F-106 and SR-71), an expanded nozzle for its jet engine (similar to those of F-15B number 837 described below), and a dorsal extension (called a stinger) to lengthen the rear of the airplane. Although such add-ons would not oer the low-drag characteristics also desired in a demonstrator, Boeing felt that its initial design studies have been encouraging with respect to shock mitigation of the forebody, canopy, inlet, wing leading edge, and aft lift/volume distribution features.63 Additional design work rened this concept with more extensive modications, including a large horizontal stabilizer (shown in gure 9-3) to achieve the desired Figure 9-3. Proposed low-boom results.64 The study did much to advance the modications to an F-16XL. (NASA)
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F-15B number 836 ying with F-15B number 837 in January 2009. (NASA)
application of CFD and geometry shape optimization for a low-boom design, which in this case was achieved at a slightly higher undertrack noise level than desired. NASA deemed the extent of the required modications (of which the H-tail was one option) to be too complex, expensive, and taxing on the ight control system of the F-16XL to pursue beyond the initial study.65
NASA Dryden had just the airplane with which to do this: the F-15B number 837. Originally built in 1973 as the Air Forces rst preproduction TF-15A two-seat trainer (soon redesignated F-15B), it had been extensively modied for various experiments over its long lifespan. These included the Short Takeo and Landing (STOL) Maneuvering Technology Demonstration, the High-Stability Engine Control project, the Advanced Control for Integrated Vehicles Experiment (ACTIVE), and the Intelligent Flight Control Systems (IFCS). This unique F-15 Eagle had the following special features: digital yby-wire controls, canards on the forebody (that could be used for adjusting longitudinal lift distribution), and thrust-vectoring variable area-ratio nozzles on its twin jet engines to change the pitch and yaw of the exhaust ow (that could also be used to constrict and expand plumes).67 Researchers planned to use these capabilities for validating computational tools developed at Langley, Ames, and Dryden to predict the interactions between shocks from the tail and exhaust under various lift and plume conditions. Tim Moes, one of the Supersonics Projects associate managers, was the LaNCETS project manager at Dryden. Jim Smolka, who had own most of F-15B number 837s previous missions at Dryden, was its test pilot. He and Nils Larson in F-15B number 836 conducted Phase 1 of the test program with three missions from June 17 to June 19, 2008. They gathered high-quality baseline measurements with 29 probes, all at 40,000 feet and speeds of Mach 1.2, 1.4, and 1.6.68 Figure 9-4 shows the shock wave pattern measured by one of these probes in relation to the tested F-15s modied airframe.69 Phase 2 of the project began on November 24, 2008. The LaNCETS team ew nine ight tests by December 11 before being interrupted by a freak snowstorm during the third week of December and then having Figure 9-4. Shock wave signature of the to break for the holiday season.70 The highly modied F-15B number 837. (NASA) LaNCETS team completed the project with ight tests on January 12, 15, and 30, 2009. In all, Jim Smolka and ight engineer Mike Thomson ew a total of 13 missions in F-15B number 837, 11 of which included in-ight shock wave measurements by number 836 at distances of 100 feet to 500 feet. Nils Larson piloted the probing ights with Jason Cudnik or Carrie Rhoades in the back seat. The aircrews tested the eects of positive and negative canard trim at Mach 1.2, Mach 1.4, and Mach 1.6 as well as thrust vectoring at Mach 1.2 and Mach 1.4. They also gathered
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Test pilot James Smolka, ight engineers Mike Thomson and Jason Cudnik, and test pilot Nils Larson in front of F-15Bs used for LaNCETS project. (NASA)
supersonic data on plume eects with dierent nozzle areas and exit-pressure ratios. Once again, Drydens sophisticated GPS equipment recorded the exact locations of the two aircraft for each of the datasets.71 On January 30, 2009, with Jim Smolka at the controls one more time, number 837 made its 251st NASA ight, the last before a well-earned retirement among the other historic aircraft on display at Dryden.72 In addition to its own researchers at the Langley, Ames, and Dryden Centers, NASA also made the large amount of data collected available to industry and academia as part of the Supersonics Project. For the rst time, analysts and engineers would be able to use actual ight-test results to validate and improve CFD models on tail shocks and exhaust plumestaking another important step toward the design of a truly low-boom supersonic airplane.73
and around a ranch-style house built at Edwards AFB in about 1960 and slated for demolition. As indicated by gure 9-5, the instrumentation installed inside the house was very extensive (as was that outdoors). During 6 days between June 13 and June Figure 9-5. Some of the sensors in one room of the 22, Dryden F/A-18Bs conducted house used for sonic boom testing at Edwards AFB 19 ight tests (with two aircraft in 2006. (NASA) ying on each mission) to produce a total of 98 low-amplitude (0.05 psf to 0.8 psf ) and 14 louder (0.84 psf to 1.8 psf ) sonic booms. The ights resulted in the collection of a vast amount of detailed structural data as well as recordings for sonic boom simulations.74 The researchers also recruited 77 volunteer listeners (divided into groups of about 20 per day) for a human-response survey. With two F/A-18s in the air at once, they were able to deliver a sonic boom every 3 minutes to help the volunteers compare one to another. By contrast to similar surveys in the past, immediately after listening to the sonic booms, the volunteers tended to give comparable annoyance ratings whether they were seated in the living room or outdoors in the backyard. When lling out questionnaires at the end of each days tests, however, 63 percent of the volunteers concluded that the booms experienced inside the house, which was in rather poor repair, were more annoying.75 NASA and other participating researchers learned how sonic booms of varying intensity aected a more substantial home in a similar experiment, during July 2007, given the nickname House Variable Intensity Boom Eect on Structures (House VIBES). Acoustics specialists from Langley installed 112 sensors (again, a mix of accelerometers and microphones) inside the unoccupied half of a modern (late 1990s) duplex house. Other sensors were placed on and around the house and up a nearby 35-foot tower. These measured pressures and vibrations from 12 normal-intensity N-shaped booms (up to 2.2 psf ) created by F/A-18s in steady and level ight at Mach 1.25 and 32,000 feet as well as 31 shaped booms (registering 0.08 psf to 0.7 psf ) from F/A-18s using the Low Boom/No Boom ight prole (illustrated in gure 9-6 with a photograph showing one of their contrails).76 The quieter booms were similar to those that would be expected from an acceptable supersonic business jet. The specially instrumented F/A-18B number 852, with the RQDS air-data transmission system, performed six of the ights and an F/A-18A made one. As during the SSBE, an instrumented L-23 sailplane from the Air Force Test Pilot School recorded shock waves at precise locations in the path of the focused booms above the surface boundary layer
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to account for atmospheric eects. The data from the indoor sensors conrmed considerably lower vibrations and noise levels in the modern house than had been the case with the older house. At the same time, data gathered by the outdoor sensors added signicantly to NASAs Figure 9-6. Flight prole used to deliver reduced sonic variable-intensity sonic boom booms. (NASA) database. This would help to program and validate sonic boom propagation codes for years to come, including more advanced three-dimensional versions of PCBoom.77 In 2009, NASA Dryden began a series of analogous tests in an experiment called Sonic Booms on Big Structures (SonicBOBS), the purpose of which was clearly indicated by its name. Sponsored by NASAs Supersonics Project, participants included Gulfstream Aerospace, Penn State University, and the Air Force Flight Test Center. The rst phase, conducted on June 11, consisted of ights to calibrate a variety of sensors installed in and around the Air Force Flight Test Museum, which oered a large volume of interior space. As in previous testing, two F/A-18s ew both straight and level ights and looping Low Boom/No Boom proles to create nine normal and nine quiet sonic booms.78 These proles were repeated with similar ights on September 9 and September 12 for Phase I of SonicBOBS. NASA Dryden, NASA Langley, and Gulfstream provided a variety of sensors, including special microphones placed inside mannequin heads to better mimic what a person would hear. As a follow-on to House VIBES, the rst days experiment gathered data from an unoccupied residence in the base housing area. The second day focused on measurements at the Base Consolidated Support Facility, the Environmental Services oce, and the Flight Test Museum.79 Dryden later made the data recorded by its microphones and pressure sensors available to other researchers on a DVD. (This database also included a coincidental recording of the sonic boom from Discovery on its approach to Edwards AFB for the 48th and last Space Shuttle landing there.)80 Of special signicance during the ight tests on September 9, the dierences between normal and quiet sonic booms were experienced by a large delegation from the ICAOs Committee on Aviation Environmental Protection, including its Aircraft Noise Working Group and Supersonic Task Group. Peter Coen, who was there for the tests, thought the visit was immensely successful.... From the perspective of sonic boom research and the prospect of potentially establishing a noise-based rule for supersonic overland ight, the visit was a major milestone.81
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The Center resumed Sonic BOBS testing on October 14 and October 16, 2010, with the rst days ights being conducted on the 63rd anniversary of the XS-1 breaking the sound barrier. This time, the sensors were installed only in and near the bases consolidated support building. Although analysis of the data would require some time, what was being learned from the all these tests and other research led Peter Coen to observe, Im more convinced our big issue will be disturbances in large structures rather than houses.82 NASA Dryden continued to perform a variety of tests and experiments related to sonic booms into the centurys second decade. In January 2011, the Center was involved in an unusual sonic boom research project: the Sonic Boom Resistant Earthquake Warning System (SonicBREWS). In anticipation of the installation of advanced seismic monitors called QuakeGuard, made by Seismic Warning Systems, Inc., in the Lancaster-Palmdale area, NASA Dryden installed some of the monitors in its main oce building. This would help determine whether or not these ultrasensitive monitors would be able to lter out vibrations from the frequent sonic booms produced at Edwards AFB.83 The technology for in-ight measurements of shock waves also continued to advance. In February 2011, for example, NASA Dryden began ight testing two sophisticated prototype probe devices attached to the centerline pylon of an F-15B. Designed by Eagle Aeronautics and built by Triumph Aerospace Systems as part of the NASA Supersonics Project, one of the probes was conical for mounting on the nose of the trailing aircraft and the other was wedge-shaped for mounting on the generating aircraft. Combined with high-response transducers that could nearly instantaneously measure shock waves from the probed aircraft, the new devices could also monitor ight conditions such as Mach number, angle of attack, sideslip angle, temperature, and pressure without the lag time and other discrepancies encountered during existing probing missions.84 In a twist from the low-boom testing of recent years, in May 2011, Dryden began a major new ight test that could create louder than normal booms. Sponsored by the Supersonics Project, it was named the Superboom Caustic Analysis and Measurement Program (SCAMP). Its main purpose was to examine the critical transition from subsonic to supersonic speeds, which could create a focused boom two to ve times louder than when cruising. A recently completed study of maneuver eects on a generic low-boom SSBJ using the latest computational and modeling techniques found that the focus boom can be minimized by initiating transition and higher altitude and increasing climb angle. Acceleration rates have been found to have little inuence.85 More still needed to be learned about how to predict focused boom signatures and their locations and then design ways that quiet supersonic aircraft of the future could avoid them. The SCAMP testing provided empirical data on this phenomenon. Researchers strung out an array of 81 microphones to record 70 localized sonic
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booms from 13 ights by an accelerating F/A-18B own by Nils Larsen in the remote Black Mountain supersonic corridor north of Boron. As in other recent ight tests at Edwards, additional measurements were made above the ground this time by a motorized glider ying at 4,000 feet to 10,000 feet and a 35-foot blimp tethered at 3,500 feet. The project involved a large team that included members from NASA Langley, Wyle Labs, Eagle, Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Gulfstream, Cessna, Penn State, Central Washington University, MetroLaser Inc., and Seismic Warning Systems. In some ways, the SCAMP was reminiscent of the SSBD and SSBE projectsand it certainly beneted from lessons learned then. According to Thomas Jones, Drydens SCAMP manager, It was operationally complex, given the number of team members, and logistically complicated, given the remote location of the microphone array, the unpaved roads leading to the site, and the communications between all the players, assets, and the control room at Dryden.... However, given the challenges, the SCAMP team worked together to gather one of the most interesting sets of supersonic ight research data...in some time.86 Future analysis of this data could assist in the development of CFD codes for helping develop ight proles and rene low-boom aircraft designs for mitigating transition focused booms.87 It was clear that, even without any immediate prospects for development of a new low-boom test bed, NASAs Supersonics Project was sustaining research on the acceptability of sonic booms. For example, in the fall of 2011, Dryden hosted a project dubbed Waveforms and Sonic Boom Perception and Response (WSPR) in conjunction with Langley, Wyle Labs, Gulfstream, Penn State, Fidell Associates, and Tetra Tech. Drydens Larry Cliatt was the principal investigator. The WSPR projects primary purpose was developing data-collection methods and test protocols for future public perception studies in other communities where (unlike at Edwards) the residents were not used to hearing sonic booms. With data being recorded by 13 sensors in the base housing area, Drydens F/A-18s ew 22 specied proles from November 4 to November 18, generating 82 reduced and 5 normal sonic booms ranging from 0.08 psf up to 1.4 psf. Using a standard questionnaire, more than 100 volunteer residents reported their responses upon hearing these sonic booms on paper forms, at a Web site, or from smartphones using a special app supplied by Dryden.88
longer active, but a few of its original members such as Sukhoi and Dassault continued some research on potential designs and discussions on joint developmental arrangements.90 The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, a collaborator with NASA in sonic boom acceptability research, was also working on its own supersonic transport concept and an unpiloted sonic boom demonstrator.91 In the United States, Gulfstream remained one of NASAs most active partners in the Supersonics Project while keeping its SSBJ design on the drawing board. As explained by Gulfstreams president, Joe Lombardo, We believe we have the technology to limit the boom to a non-discernable level, but you will still have to change regulations that prohibit supersonic ight over land.92 Boeing, although it had no announced plans for an SSBJ, continued to be interested in technology breakthroughs that might pave the way for a future SST.93 Aerion, with its SSBJ designed for transonic cruise over land, was continuing research and seeking a manufacturing partner, but the company also began promoting its expertise in subsonic laminar ow technology.94 NASA held its fourth Fundamental Aeronautics meeting in Cleveland from March 15 to March 17, 2011.95 Over the past 5 years, the Supersonics Project had supported a wide range of analysis capabilities and technologies. In addition to sonic boom research, these included advances in the following areas: aerodynamic design tools for more ecient supersonic cruise, powerful yet fuel-ecient engine technologies that addressed high-altitude emissions while making less noise around airports, advanced lightweight materials for innovative airframe construction, improved multidiscipline system-level design techniques, and (if the sonic boom issue could be solved) the integration of future supersonic airplanes into the FAAs next-generation (NextGen) air trac control system.96 As regards ndings about how to achieve a truly quiet sonic boom signature, Peter Coen disclosed one preliminary result when interviewed for an article published the same month as the conference. Were coming to the conclusion that the best thing to do is really try not to get that completely smooth pressure rise on the back end, but break the shock on the back end into several pieces so you can get the attenuation without the coalescing.97 NASA and its Supersonics Project partners were also making signicant progress in designing high-speed propulsion systems for both lower boom and quieter engines.98 As mentioned above, the Supersonics Projects sonic boom research had been a beneciary of the portion of supplemental FY 2009 funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act that went to Fundamental Aeronautics. These funds helped support sonic boom design validations by teams led by Boeing and Lockheed Martin, additional wind tunnel testing, focused boom research, and a new community-response pilot project. A number of previous projects recently had been completed, including the N+2 system-level study for a small supersonic airliner by 20202025. Boeing, in partnership with Pratt &
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Figure 9-7. Some of the concepts for the Supersonics Projects N+1 SSBJ, N+2 small supersonic airliner, and N+3 supersonic transport. (NASA)
Whitney, Rolls-Royce, and Georgia Tech, had come up with two promising if still-conceptual congurations: a 100-passenger design optimized for cruise eciency and a more extensively studied 30-passenger design optimized for a quieter sonic boom (65 PLdB to 70 PLdB).99 The system-level studies by Boeing and Lockheed Martin for the N+3 supersonic transport were perhaps the most futuristic of all the research sponsored by the Supersonics Project. By the targeted timeframe of 2030 to 2035 (three decades after the retirement of the Concorde), the companies thought both the necessary technologies and the air travel market could be ready for a new and economically supportable SST. Building upon their work during the QSP program and progress since then, both companies came up with interesting Mach 1.8 design concepts featuring long streamlined airframes with special sonic boom shaping, advanced materials, laminar ow, variable-cycle engines, and bleedless inlets. Boeing designed its more conventional conguration to carry 120 passengers. It included small canards, swept wings in the rear, a large upright V-tail, and two top-mounted engines.100 Lockheed Martins concept for carrying 100 passengers had larger canards and an inverted V-tail joined to swept wings, with four engines mounted below.101 Although the shaped sonic booms from both were predicted to be at least 30 dB quieter than those from the similarly sized Concorde, neither would be as quiet as called for in NASAs N+3 goals.102 Size still mattered when it came to sonic boom signatures, but by 2012, continuing advances in CFD began showing great promise for designing N+2size supersonic airliners able to carry 30 to 80 passengers while generating a sonic boom level of only 70 PLdB.103 A brieng by the Supersonics Program manager highlighted this achievement as follows: Breakthrough Knowledge Advancement: Methodologies for the development of aircraft with shaped sonic boom signatures, particularly in the aft end of the vehicle where complex interaction between lift and volume eects takes place, have been applied to integrated systems level designs and validated through wind tunnel testing. Low boom targets for N+2 congurations have been met; methods are applicable to N+1 and N+3 vehicles as well.104
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Although not yet budgeted, NASA had begun planning to have a low-boom experimental vehicle (LBEV) that would be available for ight testing by the end of FY 2018.105 The successful wind tunnel validations of the latest design concepts increased interest in moving ahead with this aircraft, which, as mentioned previously, would be designated the X-54.106 A study by the National Research Council that was completed in early 2012 strongly recommended that NASA resume focusing much of its diminished aeronautics budget on the development of X-planes, such as the sonic boom demonstrator.107 Meanwhile, no matter how many advances some of the Nations best aeronautical engineers were making on designing supersonic aircraft with quieter booms, the most immediate issues remained public acceptance and related national and international aviation regulations. Here too, there had been some signs of progress, if still very tentative. The Federal Aviation Administration, with the support of NASA and other members of the Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction, held its rst formal public forum on supersonic noise restrictions on October 24, 2008, in Chicago during a symposium on aircraft noise at OHare International Airport. Subsequently, the FAA held Public Meetings on Advanced Technologies and Supersonics in each of the next 3 years: on March 1, 2009, in Palm Springs, CA, along with an annual University of California symposium on aviation noise and air quality issues; on April 21, 2010, as part of an Acoustical Society of America conference in Baltimore; and on July 14, 2011, at DOT headquarters in Washington, DC.108 These meetings, attended by professionals and anyone else who was interested in the issues, included presentations by experts from NASA, Penn State (representing the PARTNER Center), and four prospective supersonic manufacturers: Gulfstream, Aerion, Lockheed Martin, and Boeing. In addition to briengs on the recent progress in sonic boom research and discussions on the need for quality data with reliable evidence of acceptable sonic boom mitigation levels to justify amending the rules to allow the development of any future supersonic aircraft, the meetings featured realistic demonstrations of various types and amplitudes of sonic booms in Gulfstreams latest mobile audio booth, the Supersonic Acoustics Signature Simulator II (SASSII).109 At the meeting in July 2011, Lourdes Maurice of the FAA emphasized how the FAA, NASA, and the ICAO had initiated the development of a roadmap for researching public response to sonic booms. Her presentation dened key steps needed to assure a rm technical basis and noise standards for determining sonic boom acceptability.110 Aerion and Gulfstream representatives gave details on their progress in researching and designing a quiet SSBJ, much of it in partnership with NASA, with the sonic boom whisper expected from Gulfstreams design demonstrated in the SASSII parked outside.111 The NASA
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presentation on advancements being made in sonic boom research showed how recent designs could exponentially lower the perceived sound of sonic booms (gure 9-8), hopefully making them acceptable to the public.112 Until a truly low-boom experimental airplane became available to give Figure 9-8. Effects of sonic boom shaping live demonstrations of the progress and pressure rise on sound levels. (NASA) that designers had been making for the past decade, gaining this acceptance from the public would be dicult. In a recent article, Peter Coen summed up the impasse. Its a real challenge for us moving forward to clearly identify and explain to the public that the sonic boom were talking about now is completely dierent from what has ever been heard in the past.113 An environment of anemic economic activity and unstable nancial markets continued to threaten much of the aerospace industry, including the business jet sector.114 And with the Federal Government facing a looming scal crisis in a period of political deadlock in Washington, NASAs future budgets remained under threat.115 Nevertheless, understandably cautious aircraft companies and a nancially constrained NASA kept pressing on toward the ultimate goal of supersonic civilian ight. It was clear that the more than six decades of discoveries about sonic booms and the lessons learned on how to control them had begun to pay real dividends. Meanwhile, supersonic specialists in NASA and the private sector remained patiently committed to nding a way to follow up on Northrop Grummans Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator with an airplane that could demonstrate the quietness of a carefully shaped and mitigated sonic boom.
As documented by this book, past expectations for a civilian supersonic airplane with an acceptable sonic boom to y over populated areas have repeatedly run up against scientic, technical, economic, and political hurdles too high to overcome. That is why such an airplane has yet to y almost three quarters of a century into the jet age. Yet the knowledge gained and lessons learned from each attempt attest to the value of persistence in pursuing both basic and applied research. Recent progress in controlling sonic booms builds upon the meticulous research, careful testing, and inventive experimentation by NASA and its partners in Government, industry, and academia over more
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The F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator on display at the Valiant Air Command Museum in Titusville, FL. (Photo courtesy of the museum)
than six decades; the data and documentation preserved through NASAs scientic and technical information program; and the special facilities and test resources maintained and operated by NASAs research Centers. This book has emphasized one of the most important milestones on this long journey: Northrop Grummans F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator. The success of the DARPA-sponsored Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration and NASAs follow-on Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment exemplies how a truly cooperative eort among Government agencies, private corporations, and academic institutions can produce noteworthy results in a short time at a reasonable cost. Since the dawn of civilization, conquering the twin tyrannies of time and distance has been a powerful human aspiration, one that served as a catalyst for many technological innovations. It seems reasonable to assume that this need for speed may eventually break down the barriers in the way of practical supersonic transportation to include solving the problem of the sonic boom. If that time nally does come, a worn out former ghter plane, with the front of its fuselage modied to resemble a long pelicans beak, will have helped lead the way.
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Endnotes
1. For a compendium of articles, photos, and videos in commemoration of the Concordes last ights, see the British Broadcasting Corporations (BBCs) In Depth Farewell to Concorde, last updated August 15, 2007, accessed September 21, 2011, http://news. bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/uk/2003/concorde_retirement/default.stm. 2. Stuart F. Brown and Edward H. Phillips, Mines Faster than Yours, Fortune (June 28, 2004), accessed ca. September 1, 2011, http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_ archive/2004/06/28/374394/index.htm. For other examples, see Graham Warwick, Quiet Progress: Aircraft Designers Believe They Can Take the Loud Boom Out of Supersonic Travel, Flight International (October 20, 2004): 3233; Edward H. Phillips, Boom Could Doom: Debate Over Hybrid SSBJ Versus Pure Supersonic is Heating Up, Aviation Week (June 13, 2005): 8485; Francis Fiorino, Lowering the Boom, Aviation Week (November 7, 2005): 72; Supersonic Private Jets in Development, Business Travel News Online (October 26, 2006); John Wiley, The SuperSlow Emergence of Supersonic, Business and Commercial Aviation (September 1, 2007): 4850; Edward H. Phillips, Shock Wave: Flying Faster Than Sound is The Holy Grail of Business Aviation, Aviation Week (October 8, 2007): 5051. 3. Mark Huber, Mach 1 for Millionaires, Air & Space Magazine (MarchApril 2006), accessed February 20, 2009, http://www. airspacemag.com/ight-today/millionaire.html. 4. David Collogan, Manufacturers, NASA Working on Bizjet Sonic Boom Project, The Weekly of Business Aviation, July 18, 2005, 21. 5. Brenda M. Sullivan, Research on Subjective Response to Simulated Sonic Booms at NASA Langley Research Center, paper presented at International Sonic Boom Forum, State College, PA, July 2122, 2005. 6. Brenda M. Sullivan, Patricia Davis, Kathleen Hodgdon, Joseph A. Salamone, and Anthony Pilon, Realism Assessment of Sonic Boom Simulators, CASI document no. 200800022677, January 2008. 7. Graham Warwick, Quiet Progress: Aircraft Designers Believe They Can Take the Loud Boom Out...but Can They Convince Regulators? Flight International (October 12, 2004): 32; Frances Fiorino, Lowering the Boom, Aviation Week (November 7, 2005): 72.
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8. Fast Money: Concepts Unveiled at...NBAA, Flight International (October 19, 2004): 3; David Collogan, Two Groups Vie To Develop Supersonic Business Jets, Aviation Week (October 18, 2004), accessed November 18, 2008, http://www.aviationweek. com/aw/generic/story_generic.jsp?channel=businessweekly&id=news/ SUPER10184.xml. 9. Eric Hagerman, All Sonic, No Boom, Popular Science (March 2007), accessed July 8, 2011, http://www.popsci.com/militaryaviation-space/article/2007-03/all-sonic-no-boom; Huber, Mach 1 for Millionaires; Supersonic Business Jet (Web site), Quiet Supersonic Transport (QSST), accessed October 10, 2011, http://www. supersonic-business-jet.com/prototypes/quiet_supersonic_transport.php. SAIs own Web site apparently went oine before mid-2011. 10. Edward H. Phillips, Revised Design: Aerion Aims for Improvements in Aerodynamics and Cabin Comfort, Aviation Week (November 7, 2005): 70; Huber, Mach 1 for Millionaires; Aerion Renes Business Case for Supersonic Jet, Flight International (August 1, 2006): 19; Aerion Corporation, accessed October 22, 2011, http://aerioncorp.com/; Supersonic Business Jet (Web site), Aerion SBJ, accessed October 22, 2011, http://www.supersonicbusiness-jet.com/prototypes/quiet_supersonic_transport.php. 11. See Kenneth J. Plotkin, Jason R. Matisheck, and Richard R. Tracy, Sonic Boom Cuto Across the United States, AIAA paper no. 2008-3033, 14th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, Vancouver, B.C., May 57, 2008. 12. Peter Coen to Lawrence Benson, Re: Chapter 9 of SSBD Book, e-mail, November 8, 2011. 13. Jeerson Morris, NASA Budget Boosts Space Exploration, Cuts Aeronautics, Aviation Week (February 8, 2005), accessed ca. October 15, 2011, http://www.aviationweek.com/aw =news/ NASABUDGET02085.xml (site discontinued); Graham Warwick, NASA Narrows R&D Agenda, Flight International (February 15, 2005): 28. 14. NASA Budget Request Summaries, FYs 20042007, accessed October 25, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/news/budget/index.html. Congressional appropriations usually added funding to these requests. 15. Coen to Benson, November 8, 2011. 16. Frank Morring, Rudderless: NASA Aeronautics Chief Hopes New Administrator Will Push for Clear Policy To Guide Facility Closings, Aviation Week (March 7, 2005): 38.
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17. Collogan, Manufacturers, NASA Working on Bizjet Sonic Boom Project, 21. 18. Ellen H. Thompson (NASA HQ), Gary Creech (Dryden), and Kathy Barnstor (Langley), NASA Funds Studies for Quieter Supersonic Boom, NASA news release 05-176, July 8, 2005; Biography, Robert E. Meyer Jr., accessed October 22, 2011, http:// www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/Biographies/Management/meyer. html; Northrop Grumman to Help NASA Dene Requirements for Quiet Sonic Boom Research Aircraft, Northrop Grumman news release, July 12, 2005. 19. Collogan, Manufacturers, NASA Working on Bizjet Sonic Boom Project, 21. 20. Ibid. For Gulfstreams analysis of SSBJ prospects at the time, see Preston A. Henne, Case for a Small Supersonic Civil Aircraft, Journal of Aircraft 42, no. 3 (MayJune 2005): 765774. 21. T.A. Heppenheimer, The Boom Stops Here, Air & Space Magazine (OctoberNovember 2005), accessed January 3, 2009, http://www. airspacemag.com/ight-today/boom.html. 22. David Mould and Dean Acosta, NASA Names New Associate Administrator, NASA news release 05-348, October 24, 2005; Michael A. Dornheim, Will Low Boom Fly? NASA Cutbacks Delay Flight Test of Shaped Demonstrator, Aviation Week (November 7, 2005): 6869. There were no NASA news releases on the cancellation of the Sonic Boom Mitigation Project. 23. Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation, supersonic aircraft with spike for controlling and reducing sonic boom. US Patent 6,698,684, issued March 2, 2004, http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6698684/ description.html. 24. Jay Levine, Lowering the Boom, X-Press (July 29, 2005), accessed January 4, 2009, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/X-Press/ stories/2005/072905. 25. Edward A. Haering, James W. Smolka, James E. Murray, and Kenneth J. Plotkin, Flight Demonstration of Low Overpressure N-Wave Sonic Booms and Evanescent Waves, 17th International Symposium on Nonlinear Acoustics, International Sonic Boom Forum, State College, PA, July 2122, 2005. 26. Ibid.; Jay Levine, Lowering the Boom. 27. US Patent 6,698,684 (previously cited); Graham Warwick, Gulfstream Design Spikes Sonic Boom, Flight International (March 23, 2004): 32; Donald C. Howe et al., Development of the Gulfstream Quiet Spike for Sonic Boom Minimization, AIAA
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Robert Wall, Gulfstream Sees Need To Demonstrate Low-Noise Supersonic Flight before 2013, Aviation Week (May 28, 2007): 34; Graham Warwick, Making Waves, Aviation Week (June 30, 2008): 44; Supersonics Face Funding Barrier, Flight International (October 14, 2008), accessed ca. October 1, 2011, http://business. highbeam.com/411058/article-1G1-186885117/. For example: Ilan Kroo and Alex VanDerVelden, The Sonic Boom of an Oblique Flying Wing, AIAA paper no. 90-4002 (October 1990), and Sonic Boom of the Oblique Flying Wing, Journal of Aircraft 31, no. 1 (JanuaryFebruary 1994): 1925; Christopher A. Lee, Design and Testing of Low Sonic Boom Congurations and an Oblique All-Wing Supersonic Transport, NASA CR 197744 (February 1995). Jim Hart, Northrop Grumman Selected...to Design First-Ever Supersonic Oblique Flying Wing Aircraft, Northrop Grumman news release, March 23, 2006. Graham Warwick, Flying Sideways, Flight International (April 18, 2006), accessed August 22, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/news/ articles/ying-sideways-206034/. Graham Warwick, DARPA Kills Oblique Flying Wing, Aviation Week (October 1, 2008), accessed October 10, 2011, http://www. aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story.jsp?id=news/OBLI10018c.xml. FAA Updates Policy on SST Noise Certication, The Weekly of Business Aviation 87, no. 17 (October 27, 2008): 195. Graham Warwick, Open Season, Aviation Week (March 2, 2009): 2021. Peter Coen, Fundamental Aeronautics Program Supersonics Project, PowerPoint presentation, NASA Fundamental Aeronautics Technical Conference, Cleveland, OH, March 1517, 2011, accessed October 23, 2011, http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/pdf/ supersonics.pdf, slide no. 21. Peter Coen, Fundamental Aeronautics Program Supersonics Project, NASA Fundamental Aeronautics Program 2009 Annual Meeting, September 29, 2009, accessed October 22, 2011, http:// www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/fap/SUP-Atlanta-2009-v2.pdf, slide nos. 10, 3436. Graham Warwick, Beyond the N-Wave: Modifying NASAs ArrowWing F-16XL Could Help Pave the Way for Low-Boom Supersonic Transports, Aviation Week (March 23, 2009): 52. Coen, Supersonics Project, September 29, 2009, slide no. 38 (source for gure 9-3).
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65. Coen to Benson, November 8, 2011. 66. Supersonics Project Reference Document, 43. The acronym LaNCETS was devised by Ed Haering: Interview by Lawrence Benson, Dryden Flight Research Center, December 12, 2008. 67. Dryden Flight Research Center, F-15B #837, accessed February 15, 2009, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/ aircraft/F-15B-837/ index.html. 68. Larry Cliatt et al., Overview of the LaNCETS Flight Experiment and CFD Analysis, PowerPoint presentation, Fundamental Aeronautics Annual Meeting, Atlanta, October 2, 2008. 69. Tim Moes, Objectives and Flight Results of the Lift and Nozzle Change Eects on Tail Shock (LaNCETS) Project, PowerPoint presentation, International Test & Evaluation Association, Antelope Valley Chapter, February 24, 2009, with gure 9-4 copied from slide no. 23. 70. Single sorties were own on November 24 and 25 and December 2, 3, 9, and 11. Three sorties were own on December 4. Timothy Moes to Lawrence Benson, Re: More Details on LaNCETS, e-mail, March 11, 2009. 71. Guy Norris, Sonic Solutions: NASA Uses Unique F-15B To Complete Design Tools for Quiet Supersonic Aircraft, Aviation Week (January 5, 2009): 53; Gray Creech and Beth Dickey, Lancets Flights Probe Supersonic Shockwaves, Dryden news release 09-04, January 22, 2009; Moes, Flight Results of LaNCETS Project, February 24, 2009. 72. NASA NF-15B Research Aircraft, fact sheet, as of March 11, 2009, accessed December 14, 2009, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ dryden/news/FactSheets/FS-048-DFRC_prt.htm. 73. For an early analysis, see Trong T. Bui, CFD Analysis of Nozzle Jet Plume Eects on Sonic Boom Signature, AIAA paper no. 20091054, 47th Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Orlando, FL, January 58, 2009. 74. Jacob Klos and R.D. Bruel, Vibro-Acoustical Response of Buildings Due to Sonic Boom Exposure: June 2006 Field Test, NASA TM 2007-214900 (September 2007), with gure 9-5 extracted from 309 and 310; Denise M. Miller and Victor W. Sparrow, Assessing Sonic Boom Responses to Changes in Listening Environment, Signature Type, and Testing Methodology, JASA 127, issue 3 (2010): 1898. 75. Brenda Sullivan et al., Human Response to Low-Intensity Sonic Booms Heard Indoors and Outdoors, NASA TM 2010-216685 (April 2010).
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76. Figure 9-6 copied from Edward A. Haering et al., Initial Results from the Variable Intensity Sonic Boom Propagation Database, PowerPoint presentation, May 7, 2008, slide no. 4. 77. Gary Creech, Sonic Boom Tests Scheduled, Dryden news release 07-38, July 5, 2007; Guy Norris, Sonic Spike, Aviation Week (October 8, 2007): 52; Jacob Klos, Vibro-Acoustic Response of Buildings Due to Sonic Boom Exposure: July 2007 Field Test, NASA TM 2008-215349 (September 2008); Edward A. Haering et al., Initial Results from the Variable Intensity Sonic Boom Propagation Database, AIAA paper no. 2008-3034, presented at the 14th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, Vancouver, May 57, 2008. Accompanied by a PowerPoint brieng with the same title. 78. Gray Creech, Supersonic Diving: Quieting the Boom, Dryden Web page feature, June 18, 2009, accessed January 22, 2011, http:// www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/sonicbobs.html. 79. Alan Brown, NASA To Conduct Sonic Boom Research Over Edwards Next Week, Dryden news release 09-54, September 4, 2009. 80. Edward A. Haering and Sarah Renee Arnac, Sonic Booms on Big Structures (SonicBOBS) Phase I Database, DFRC-2020, CASI document no. 20100024301, March 2010; Space Shuttle: End of Mission Landings, accessed October 29, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/ mission_pages/shuttle/launch/eomland.html. 81. Gray Creech, ICAO Team Witnesses Sonic Boom Research Flights, Dryden Web page feature, September 29, 2009, accessed October 21, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/ icao_sonic_booms.html; Gray Creech, Dryden news release 09-75, 2009Another Year of Accomplishments at NASA Dryden, December 21, 2009. 82. SonicBOBS: NASA Researching Reducing Intensity of Sonic Booms, Dryden Web page feature, October 7, 2010, accessed January 22, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/sonic_ bobs_tests.html; John Croft, NASA Furthers Sonic Boom Irritation Studies, Flight International (November 24, 2010), accessed October 22, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/news/articles/350137/. 83. Gray Creech, SonicBREWS Brewing Up an Earthquake Warning System, January 11, 2011, accessed October 22, 2011, http://www. nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/SonicBREWS.html. 84. NASA Dryden Flies New Supersonic Shockwave Probes, Aerotech News and Review (February 25, 2011): 1, 11; Domenic Maglieri to
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85.
86. 87.
88.
89.
90.
91.
92.
Lawrence Benson, Comments on Chapter 9, e-mail, October 31, 2011. Domenic J. Maglieri, Percy J. Bobbitt, Steven J. Massey, Kenneth J. Plotkin, Osama A. Kandil, and Xudong Zheng, Focused and Steady-State Characteristics of Shaped Sonic Boom Signatures: Prediction and Analysis, NASA CR 2011-217156 (June 2011), 12. Gray Creech, Getting Loud Now: Enjoy Peace and Quiet Then, May 27, 2011, accessed July 20, 2011, http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ dryden/Features/scamp.html. Domenic Maglieri to Lawrence Benson, Comments on Chap. 9, e-mail, October 31, 2011. Preliminary data indicated that the overpressure of the most powerful of the super booms was probably 11 psf: Kenneth Plotkin to Lawrence Benson, Fw: AVTIP and SCAMP, e-mail, October 30, 2011. Sonic Boom Research Study Recruitment Begins, Dryden Web page feature, June 23, 2011, accessed July 26, 2011, http://www. nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/sonic_boom_recruit_orig.html; More Edwards Residents Needed for Sonic Boom Study, Dryden Web page feature, August 4, 2011, accessed August 5, 2011, http:// www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/sonic_boom_recruit.html; Gray Creech, NASA Quiet Sonic Boom Research Eort Ends with a Whisper, December 1, 2011, Dryden Web page feature, http:// www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/Features/WSPR_research_complete.html. Deliveries had dropped from 1,139 in 2008 to 732 in 2010 with as few as 600 projected for 2011. Joseph C. Anselmo and William Garvey, Prolonged Pain: Honeywells Bizjet Forecast Corks Any Premature Celebration, Aviation Week (October 10, 2011): 5455. Graham Warwick, Sonic Overture: European Researchers Test the Waters on International Supersonic Collaboration, Aviation Week (July 13, 2009): 5354; Bob Coppinger, A Distant Boom, Flight International (April 27, 2010), accessed ca. September 15, 2011, http://www.ightglobal.com/news/articles/ebace-a-distantboom-340971/; Robert Wall and Guy Norris, Filling A Gap: Interest Rises in High-Speed Premium Air Travel, Aviation Week (June 27, 2011): 38. Giko Sehata and Yomiuri Shimbun, Can SSTs Be Made Quieter?: JAXA Advancing in Development of High-Speed Commercial Aircraft, Daily Yomiuri (Tokyo), May 9, 2010, 3; Quiet Booms, Aviation Week (May 23, 2011): 13. Turbulent Times: Face to FaceJoe Lombardo, Aviation Week (October 18, 2010): 6162.
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93. Warwick, Sonic Overture, 54; Graham Warwick, Key Developments, Aviation Week (January 25, 2010), 104. 94. Aerion, Order Book at $4 Billion as Aerion Nears Decision on Manufacturing Partner, news releases, June 15, 2009; Aerion Taps SHS to Promote Development of New Supersonic Business Jet, March 15, 2010; Aerion Diversies to Meet Demand for Subsonic Natural Laminar Flow, May 16, 2011, http://aerioncorp.com/ media#press. During July and August 2010, one of NASA Drydens F-15Bs carried a scale model of Aerions latest supersonic laminar ow wing design under its centerline on ve ights at speeds up to Mach 2. Aeron, Aerion Announces Details of Recent Supersonic Flight Tests, news release, October 18, 2011; Guy Norris, Aerion Ambitions, Aviation Week (October 18, 2010): 42; William Garvey, Looking for a Home: A Fast Promise After a Slow Start, Aviation Week (April 9, 2012): 16. By 2012, Aerion estimated that up to $3 billion would be needed to develop and produce its SSBJ. 95. NASA, 2011 Fundamental Aeronautics Technical Conference Recap, Cleveland, OH, March 1517, 2011, accessed October 23, 2011, http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/fap/meeting_recap_2011.html. Just under 400 people were in attendance. 96. Peter Coen, Fundamental Aeronautics Program Supersonics Project, 2011 Technical Conference, Cleveland, OH, March 1517, 2011, accessed October 23, 2011, http://www.aeronautics. nasa.gov/pdf/supersonics.pdf. 97. Jim Banke, Quieter Flight: A Balancing Act, Aerospace America (March 2011): 4243. 98. Guy Norris and Graham Warwick, Sound Barrier: Propulsion Integration Holds the Key to Low-Noise, Low-Boom Supersonic Transports, Aviation Week (June 4/11, 2012): 5053. 99. Coen, Supersonics Project, March 15, 2011; Harry R. Wedge et al., N+2 Supersonic Concept Development and System Integration, NASA CR 2010-216842 (August 2010). 100. Robert H. Wedge et al. (incl. Kenneth Plotkin and Juliet Page), N Plus 3 Advanced Concept Studies for Supersonic Commercial Transport Aircraft Entering Service in the 20302035 Period, NASA CR 2011-217084 (April 2011). 101. John Morgenstern, Nicole Norstrud, Marc Stelnack, and Craig Skoch, Final Report for the Advanced Concept Studies for Supersonic Commercial Transports Entering Service in the 2030 to 2035 Period, N+3 Supersonic Program, NASA CR 2010-216796 (October 25, 2010).
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102. Coen, Supersonics Project, March 15, 2011, gure 9-7 extracted from slide no. 9; Graham Warwick, Mach Work: Advances in Aerodynamics, Structures, and Engines Hold Promise for Quiet, Ecient Supersonic Transports, Aviation Week (May 17, 2010): 43. 103. By the spring of 2012, wind tunnel tests had veried the success of these improved CFD-aided designs. As explained by Peter Coen, That was really a breakthrough for us. Not only that the tools worked, but that our tests show we could do even better in terms of reducing noise than we thought at the start of the eort. Jim Banke, Sonic Boom Heads for a Thump, NASA Web Feature, May 8, 2012, accessed May 11, 2112, http://www.nasa.gov/topics/aeronautics/ features/sonic_boom_thump.html. 104. Peter Coen, Supersonics Project Overview, PowerPoint Presentation, Fundamental Aeronautics Program 2012 Technical Conference, Cleveland, OH, March 1315, 2012, accessed April 15, 2012, http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/fap/2012-PRESENTATIONS/ SUP_2012_508.pdf, slide no. 15. 105. Graham Warwick, Raise the Limit: Research to Dene Acceptable Boom Limit Paces Return of Supersonic Travel, Aviation Week (July 18/25, 2011): 57. 106. Graham Warwick, Boom Time: Demonstrator Needed To Convince Regulators Shaped Booms Allow Quiet Supersonic Flight, Aviation Week (April 23/30, 2012): 5455. 107. National Research Council, Recapturing NASAs Aeronautics Flight Research Capabilities (Washington DC: the National Academies Press, 2012), 3236, accessed May 11, 2012, http://www.nap.edu/ catalog.php?record_id=13384. As shown on page 9 of this report, NASAs recent aeronautics budgets had been $512 million in FY 2008, $500 million in FY 2009, $507 million in FY 2010, and $534 million in 2011. 108. FAA, Supersonic Aircraft Noise, accessed October 15, 2011, http:// www.faa.gov/about/oce_org/headquarters_oces/apl/noise_emissions/ supersonic_aircraft_noise/. This Web site has links to all the papers presented at the Civil Supersonic Aircraft Technical Workshop in 2003 and the FAA Public Meetings on Advanced Technologies and Supersonics in October 2009, March 2010, and July 2011. 109. Ibid.; FAA, Civil Supersonic Aircraft Panel Discussion, Federal Register 76, no. 100 (May 24, 2011): 30231. 110. Lourdes Maurice, Civil Supersonic Aircraft Advanced Noise Research, PowerPoint presentation at FAA Public Meeting on
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112.
Advanced Technologies and Supersonics, Washington, DC, July 14, 2011. Richard Tracy, Aerion Supersonic Business Jet, and Robbie Cowart, Supersonic Technology Development, PowerPoint presentations at FAA Public Meeting on Advanced Technologies and Supersonics, Washington, DC, July 14, 2011. Peter Coen, Fixing the Sound Barrier: Three Generations of U.S. Research into Sonic Boom Reduction...and What it Means to the Future, PowerPoint presentation at FAA Public Meeting on Advanced Technologies and Supersonics, Washington, DC, July 14, 2011, gure 9-8 copied from slide no. 18. The signature identied as a ramp can be described more completely as a symmetrical initial shock ramp and the low boom as a symmetrical ramp. Maglieri to Benson, October 31, 2011. Banke, Quieter Flight, 42. Joseph C. Anselmo and William Garvey, Prolonged Pain: Honeywells Bizjet Forecast Corks any Premature Celebration, Aviation Week (October 10, 2011): 5455. In response to these budgetary pressures, the Fundamental Aeronautics Program merged the air-breathing portion of the Hypersonics Project with the Supersonics Project while research on Entry, Landing, and Descent (EDL) vehicles was transferred to the Space Technology Program. See Jaiwon Shin, NASA Aeronautics Fundamental Aeronautics Program Technical Conference, PowerPoint presentation, 2012 Fundamental Aeronautics Technical Conference, Cleveland, OH, March 1315, 2012, accessed April 15, http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/fap/meeting_recap_2012.html; Graham Warwick, Cut To the Bone: Aeronautics Research Funding Decline Makes It Harder To Take Technologies to the Next Level, Aviation Week (February 27, 2012): 35.
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A color-coded illustration of high-pressure shock waves and lower pressure expansions based on imagery that was generated by the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) program used by its SSBD team in designing the F-5s modications. A photo of the modied aircraft in ight has been inserted to complete the illustration. (Illustration: NGC, Photo: NASA)
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APPENDIX A
Domenic Maglieri Percy Bobbitt Ken Plotkin Juliet Page Todd Magee Peter Hartwich Tom Porter Joe Salamone Rob Wolz Tony Pilon John Morgenstern Joe Vadyak Sam Bruner Cathy Downen Kurt Schueler James Poncer
Eagle Aeronautics Eagle Aeronautics Wyle Laboratories Wyle Laboratories Boeing Boeing Gulfstream Gulfstream Gulfstream Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Raytheon Aircraft Raytheon Aircraft Raytheon Aircraft AFRL
NASA Langley NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC NASA Dryden
Gerard Schkolnik Dave McCurdy Brenda Sullivan David Hilliard Kevin Shepherd Domenic Maglieri Percy Bobbitt Ken Plotkin Juliet Page Todd Magee Tom Porter Joe Salamone Rob Wolz Victor Lyman Tony Pilon John Morgenstern Joe Vadyak Sam Bruner Cathy Downen Adam Harder Keith Numbers
NASA Dryden NASA Langley NASA Langley NASA Langley NASA Langley Eagle Aeronautics Eagle Aeronautics Wyle Laboratories Wyle Laboratories Boeing Gulfstream Gulfstream Gulfstream Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Raytheon Aircraft Raytheon Aircraft AFRL AFRL
Mark Forger Stucky Robert Critter Malacrida Vince Opus Sei Gary Aldrich
USAF Test Pilot School USAF Test Pilot School USAF Test Pilot School USAF Test Pilot School
Test Conductor Loads & Dynamics Stability & Control Instrumentation Instrumentation Operations Mgr. Flt. Test Engineer Crew Chief Flt. Test Support
W.D. Thorne Diane Barnes Nate McKendrick Merv Burne John Garry Larry Stencel
Flt. Test Support Quality Assurance Flight Dispatch Instrumentation Instrumentation Instrumentation
Test Conductor Loads & Dynamics Stability & Control Instrumentation Instrumentation Crew Chief Test Support Quality Assurance Test Support Test Support Test Support F-5E Plane Capt.
Carl Booker Other Support: Patricia Kinn Nancy Wilcox Tracy Ackeret Kathleen Howell Russell James Rich Rood Carla Thomas Jim Ross Tony Landis Thomas Tschida
Inspector Acft. Scheduling Acft. Scheduling Range Control Control Room Control Room Frequency Mgt. Photography Photography Photography Photography
NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Dryden NASA Langley NASA Langley Wyle Labs Wyle Labs Wyle Labs Gulfstream Boeing NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC
Robert Ganguin Leslie Smith Rich Wasson Bryan Westra Joan Yazejian Alan Arslan Herb Kuntz John Morgenstern Tony Pilon
NGC NGC NGC NGC NGC Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin Lockheed Martin
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APPENDIX B
Flight Date (and Takeoff Capsule Number Time if Flight Test) Summary St. Augustine and Jacksonville, FL Piloted by Roy Martin, NGC QSP-1 July 24, 2003 Functional Check Flight (FCF), St. Johns Airport to Cecil Field, with Boeing T-38 chase plane. QSP-2 July 27, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion, with T-38 chase. QSP-3 July 28, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion, with T-38 chase. Cross-Country to California Piloted by Roy Martin, NGC Ferry 1 & 2 July 28, 2003 Ferry 3 & 4 July 29, 2003
Cecil Field via Huntsville, AL, to Tinker AFB, OK, with T-38. Tinker AFB via Roswell, NM, to Palmdale, CA, with T-38.
Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration All own from Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, to Edwards AFB restricted areas QSP-4 August 2, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion piloted by Martin, with NASA F/A-18 chase. QSP-5 August 2, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion by Martin, with F/A-18 chase; ground data measurements practice. QSP-6 August 4, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion by Cmdr. Darryl Long, USN, with F/A-18 chase; ground data measurements practice. QSP-7 August 15, 2003 FCF/envelope expansion by Martin, with F/A-18 chase; ground data measurements practice. QSP-8 August 25, 2003, First sonic boom ight test, own by Long, with F/A1030 18 chase; practice NASA F-15B probe at Mach 1.38 and ground data measurements. QSP-9 August 27, 2003, Flown by Martin with Navy F-5E over ground array 0626 at Mach 1.36 and 32,000 feet; historic rst shaped sonic boom measurement. QSP-10 August 27, 2003, Flown by Long with F-5E, sonic boom run at Mach 0905 1.38 over ground array.
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QSP-11 QSP-12
August 28, 2003, Flown by Martin with F-5E over ground array. 0620 August 29, 2003, Flown by Long with F-15B for in-ight probe at Mach 0830 1.34; F-5E had departed for NAS Fallon after photos by F/A-18B chase.
Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment All piloted by Roy Martin from Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, to Edwards AFB restricted areas All measured by ground sensor array QSP-13 January 12, FCF with F/A-18B chase and L-23 sailplane; included 2004, 0940 Mach 1.4 practice focus boom from 32,000 feet. QSP-14 January 12, F/A-15B in-ight probe aborted; Mach 1.4 run at 2004, 1318 32,000 feet; Air Force L-23 below. QSP-15 January 13, Mach 1.4 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E; L-23 below. 2004, 0656 QSP-16 January 13, Mach 1.4 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E; L-23 below; 2004, 1000 F/A-18B chase. QSP-17 January 13, Mach 1.4 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E; L-23 below. 2004, 1300 QSP-18 January 14, Mach 1.43 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E; L-23 below. 2004, 0957 QSP-19 January 14, Mach 1.35 run with F-5E; L-23 below; F/A-18B chase 2004, 1327 QSP-20 January 15, Mach 1.43 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E, L-23 below. 2004, 0655 QSP-21 January 15, Mach 1.35 run at 32,000 feet with F-5E; L-23 below. 2004, 0957 QSP-22 January 15, Mach 1.35 close formation run at 32,000 feet with F-5E 2004, 1257 before it continued on to NAS Fallon; L-23 below. QSP-23 January 16, Solo run at Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet; L-23 below. 2004, 1503 QSP-24 January 17, Solo run at Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet to create 2004, 0703 focus boom. QSP-25 January 17, Solo run at Mach 1.375 and 36,000 feet. 2004, 0945 QSP-26 January 17, Solo run at Mach 1.45 and 36,000 feet. 2004, 1138 QSP-27 January 19, Solo run at Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet to create 2004, 0659 focus boom; L-23 below. QSP-28 January 19, Two solo runs: Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet; Mach 2004, 0954 1.33 and 31,000 feet; L-23 below.
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January 19, 2004, 1159 January 21, 2004, 0702 January 22, 2004, 1124 January 22, 2004, 1342 January 22, 2004, 1534
Two solo runs: Mach 1.40 and 32,000 feet; Mach 1.31 and 32,000 feet; L-23 below. Two F-15B probing runs: Mach 1.4 and 32,000 feet; Mach 1.35 and 32,000 feet. Two F-15B probing runs: both at Mach 1.375 and 32,000 feet. Two F-15B probing runs: Mach 1.4 and Mach 1.35, both at 32,000 feet. Two F-15B probing runs: Mach 1.375 and Mach 1.4, both at 32,000 feet.
Cross-Country to Florida Piloted by Roy Martin Ferry 5 January 23, &6 2004 Ferry 7 January 24, 2004 Ferry 8 January 27, 2004
From Palmdale via Albuquerque to Tinker AFB; accompanied by F/A-18 from NAWS China Lake. From Tinker AFB to Birmingham; F/A-18 diverted to Memphis for maintenance. From Birmingham to St. Augustine after weather delay; accompanied by NGC Citation XL corporate jet.
Northrop Grumman SSBD/SSBE postight reports; PowerPoint tables: Shaped Sonic Boom Demo Flight Test Program, and Shaped Sonic Boom Flight Test Summary, August 17, 2004; Telephonic interviews of Roy Martin by Lawrence Benson, May 31 and November 6, 2011.
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APPENDIX C
297
298
Source of drawings: David Graham and Roy Martin, Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD Aircraft, PowerPoint presentation, Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Closeout Workshop, Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004.
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APPENDIX D
Kenneth J. Plotkin, Juliet Page, David H. Graham, Joseph W. Pawlowski, David B. Schein, Peter G. Coen, David A. McGurdy, Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, L.J. Ehernberger, Domenic J. Maglieri, Percy J. Bobbitt, Anthony Pilon, and Joe Salamone, Ground Measurements of a Shaped Sonic Boom, AIAA paper no. 2004-2923, 10th AIAA-CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, Manchester, England, May 1012, 2004. Joseph W. Pawlowski, David H. Graham, Charles H. Boccadoro, Peter G. Coen, and Domenic J. Maglieri, Origins and Overview of the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Program, AIAA paper no. 2005-5, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005. Keith B. Meredith, John A. Dahlin, David H. Graham, Michael B. Malone, Edward A. Haering, Juliet A. Page, and Kenneth J. Plotkin, Computational Fluid Dynamics Comparison and Flight Test Measurement of F-5E O-Body Pressures, AIAA paper no. 2005-6, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005. David H. Graham, John A. Dahlin, Juliet A. Page, Kenneth J. Plotkin, and Peter G. Coen, Wind Tunnel Validation of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft Design, AIAA paper no. 2005-7, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 10-13, 2005. David H. Graham, John A. Dahlin, Keith B. Meredith, and Jay L. Vadnais, Aerodynamic Design of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft, AIAA paper no. 2005-8, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005. Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, Dana D. Purifoy, David H. Graham, Keith B. Meredith, Christopher E. Ashburn, and Lt. Col. Mark Stucky, Airborne Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Pressure Measurements with Computational Fluid Dynamics, AIAA paper no. 2005-9, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005.
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Kenneth J. Plotkin, Edward A. Haering, James E. Murray, Domenic J. Maglieri, Joseph Salamone, Brenda M. Sullivan, and David Schein, Ground Data Collection of Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Aircraft Pressure Signatures, AIAA paper no. 2005-10, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005. Kenneth J. Plotkin, Roy Martin, Domenic J. Maglieri, Edward A. Haering, and James E. Murray, Pushover Focus Booms from the Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator, AIAA paper no. 2005-11, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013, 2005. John M. Morgenstern, Alan Arslan, Victor Lyman, and Joseph Vadyak, F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Persistence of Boom Shaping Reduction through the Atmosphere, AIAA paper no. 2005-12, 43rd Aerospace Sciences Meeting, Reno, NV, January 1013 2005. Kenneth J. Plotkin, Domenic Maglieri, and Brenda M. Sullivan, Measured Eects of Turbulence on the Loudness and Waveforms of Conventional and Shaped Minimized Sonic Booms, AIAA paper no. 2005-2949, 11th AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference, Monterey, CA, May 2325, 2005.
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Graham, David H., and Roy Martin. Aerodynamic Design and Validation of SSBD Aircraft. Northrop Grumman Corp. PowerPoint presentation. Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Closeout Workshop, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004. Graham, David H., John A. Dahlin, Juliet A. Page, Kenneth J. Plotkin, and Peter G. Coen. Wind Tunnel Validation of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft Design. AIAA paper no. 2005-7 (January 2005). Graham, David H., John A. Dahlin, Keith B. Meredith, and Jay L. Vadnais, Aerodynamic Design of Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Aircraft. AIAA paper no. 2005-8 (January 2005). Green, Karen S., and Terrill W. Putnam. Measurements of Sonic Booms Generated by an Airplane Flying at Mach 3.5 and 4.8. NASA TM X-3126 (October 1974). Greene, Randall, and Richard Seebass. A Corporate Supersonic Transport. In Huebner et al., Transportation Beyond 2000: Technologies Needed for Engineering Design, Proceedings of a Workshop Held in Hampton, Virginia, September 2628, 1995. Pt. 1. NASA CP-10184 (February 1996), 491508. Guiraud, J.P. Focalization in Short Non-Linear Waves, NASA Technical Translation F-12,442 (September 1969). Haering, Edward A., and James E. Murray. Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration/Experiment Airborne Data: SSBD Final Review. PowerPoint presentation. Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment Closeout Workshop. NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, August 17, 2004. Haering, Edward A., James E. Murray, Dana D. Purifoy, David H. Graham, Keith B. Meredith, Christopher E. Ashburn, and Lt. Col. Mark Stucky. Airborne Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Pressure Measurements with Computational Fluid Dynamics. AIAA paper no. 2005-9 (January 2005). Haering, Edward A., James W. Smolka, James E. Murray, and Kenneth J. Plotkin. Flight Demonstration of Low Overpressure N-Wave
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335
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340
Acronyms List
ACTIVE AEDC AFFTC AFRL AGARD AIAA AMRL AOA ARAP ARC3D ARMD ASA AST AVTIP B&K BAC BADS BASS BBC BEAR BLM BREN BUNO CAD CASA CASI CDR CFD CFR CP CR CRADA DACT DAQ Advanced Control for Integrated Vehicles Experiment Arnold Engineering Development Center Air Force Flight Test Center Air Force Research Laboratory Advisory Group for Aerospace Research and Development American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory angle of attack Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton Ames Research Center 3-Dimensional (CFD code) Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate Acoustical Society of America Advanced Supersonic Technology Air Vehicles Technology Integration Program Brl and Kjaer British Aircraft Corporation Boom Amplitude and Direction Sensor Boom Amplitude and Shape Sensor British Broadcasting Corporation Boom Event Analyzer Recorder Bureau of Land Management Bare Reactor Experiment Nevada Bureau Number computer-aided design Construcciones Aeronauticas Sociedad Anonima Center for AeroSpace Information critical design review computational uid dynamics Code of Federal Regulations Conference Publication Contractor Report Cooperative Research and Development Agreement Dissimilar Air Combat Tactics data acquisition
341
DARPA DAT dB DFRC DGPS DOD DOT DTIC EAA ECS EIS F FAA FAR FCC FCF FORTRAN FRC FRR FY GASL GCNSfv GPO GPS HISAC HLFC HPCCP HSCT HSFRS HSR HUD Hz IBM ICAO IDR IFCS IFF IHONORS
342
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency digital audio tape decibel Dryden Flight Research Center Dierential Global Positioning System U.S. Department of Defense U.S. Department of Transportation Defense Technical Information Center Experimental Aircraft Association environmental control system environmental impact statement Fahrenheit Federal Aviation Agency, later Administration Federal Aviation Regulation Federal Communications Commission functional check ight Formula Translation Flight Research Center ight readiness review scal year General Applied Sciences Laboratories Generalized Compressible Navier-Stokes Finite Volume (CFD code) Government Printing Oce Global Positioning System French acronym for High-Speed Aircraft Industrial Project hybrid laminar ow control High Performance Computing and Communications Program High-Speed Civil Transport High-Speed Flight Research Station High-Speed Research heads-up display hertz formerly International Business Machines International Civil Aviation Organization interim design review Intelligent Flight Control Systems identication friend or foe In-Home Noise Generation/Response System
Acronyms List
IPT IRIG IRIS ISSM JAPE JASA JAXA km kph L/D LaNCETS lb/ft2 LEX MCAS MIL-STD MIM3D-SB MIT MLT NACA NAS NASP NAVAIR NAWS NBAA NGC NGSA NOAA NORAD NRA NRL NSBEO NSBIT NTRS NYU OAST OEM OML OST PAC
integrated product team Inter-Range Instrumentation Group Information Retrieval and Indexing System Inlet Spillage Shock Measurement Joint Acoustic Propagation Experiment Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency kilometers kilometers per hour lift-to-drag ratio Lift and Nozzle Change Eects on Tail Shocks LBEV low-boom experimental vehicle pounds per square foot leading edge extension Marine Corps Air Station Military Standard Multigrid Implicit Marching in Three Dimensions for Sonic Booms Massachusetts Institute of Technology modied linear theory National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Naval Air Station National Aerospace Plane Naval Air Systems Command Naval Air Weapons Station National Business Aviation Association Northrop Grumman Corporation Northrop Grumman [facility], St. Augustine National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration North American Air Defense Command NASA Research Announcement Naval Research Laboratory National Sonic Boom Evaluation Oce Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology NASA Technical Reports Server New York University Oce of Aeronautics and Space Technology original equipment manufacturer outer mold line Oce of Science and Technology Presidential Advisory Committee
343
PARTNER PDR PDT PE PLdB PNdB psf QSP QSST R&D RAF RFI RFP ROA RP RPV RQDS SABER SAC SAI SASS SBDWG SCAMP SCAR SCAT SCIA SCR SETP SonicBOBS SonicBREWS SP SPF/DB SRI SSBD SSBDWG SSBE SSBJ SST STOL STS
344
Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction preliminary design review Pacic daylight time program element perceived-level decibel perceived noise decibel pounds per square foot Quiet Supersonic Platform Quiet Small Supersonic Transport Research and Development Royal Air Force Request for Information Request for Proposal Research Opportunities in Aviation Reference Publication remotely piloted vehicle Research Quick Data System Small Airborne Boom Event Recorder Strategic Air Command Supersonic Aerospace International Supersonic Acoustics Signature Simulator Sonic Boom Demonstration Working Group Superboom Caustic Analysis and Measurement Program Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research Supersonic Commercial Air Transport Supersonic Cruise Industry Alliance Supersonic Cruise Research Society of Experimental Test Pilots Sonic Booms on Big Structures Sonic Boom Resistant Earthquake Warning System Special Publication superplastic forming and diusion bonding Stanford Research Institute Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator/Demonstration Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration Working Group Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment supersonic business jet Supersonic Transport (program) short takeo and landing Space Transportation System (Shuttle)
Acronyms List
TACTS TEAC TEAM TM TM-X TN TP TPS TR TRAPS TYCOM UHF UK UPS3D USAF VCE VFC VIBES WSPR
Tactical Air Combat Training System formerly Tokyo Electro Acoustic Company Three-dimensional Euler/Navier-Stokes Aerodynamic Method Technical Memorandum formerly classied Technical Memorandum Technical Note Technical Paper Test Pilot School Technical Report Tracing Rays and Aging Pressure Signatures Type Command (U.S. Navy) ultrahigh frequency United Kingdom Universal Parabolized Simplied Navier-Stokes Code United States Air Force variable cycle engine Composite Fighter Squadron Variable Intensity Boom Eect on Structures Waveforms and Sonic Booms Perception and Response
345
Lawrence R. Benson attended the University of Maryland at College Park, where he received a masters degree in 1967 specializing in military and diplomatic history. After serving in the U.S. Army with a tour in Vietnam, Mr. Benson became a civilian employee of the Air Force in 1971. During the next 30 years, he worked in a variety of administrative positions and as a historian at 10 locations in the United States, Turkey, and Germany. He has researched and written numerous ocial histories, monographs, articles, book reviews, and studies on a range of topics related to military operations, international relations, and aerospace technology. After retiring in 2000 as chief of the Air Force Historians Pentagon Oce, he coauthored Reections of a Technocrat: Managing Defense, Air, and Space Programs during the Cold War with former Secretary of the Air Force John. L. McLucas. Most recently, Benson wrote Softening the Sonic Boom: 50 Years of NASA Research in NASAs Contributions to Aeronautics, a case study that laid the foundation for writing this book. He and his wife, Carolyn, live in Albuquerque, NM.
346
Index
Numbers in bold indicate pages with photos or gures
A
A-4 rockets, 27n5 A-4 Skyhawk, 153, 154 A-12/YF-12 aircraft, 43 academic community funding for research, 73 HISAC participation, 248 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 43, 50 Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction (PARTNER) Center of Excellence, 248, 251 QSP sonic boom minimization research, 134 SCR/SCAR/AST program role, 68 sonic boom acceptability, responsibility for, 125 sonic boom conference participation, 91 SSBJ studies and proposals, 124 Ackeret, Tracy, 292 Acoustical Society of America (ASA), 39, 4546, 11819n83, 270 acoustical wave front, 77, 77 acoustic rays, 54, 55, 56, 64n68, 71, 231, 231 acronyms list, 34145 AD-1 program, 85n48 Adamson, Eric, 293 Advanced Control for Integrated Vehicles Experiment (ACTIVE) project, 262 Advanced Subsonic Transport, 109 Advanced Supersonic Platform Industry Day, 130, 132, 144n65 Advanced Supersonic Technology (AST) program, 67. See also Supersonic Cruise Research
(SCR)/Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research (SCAR)/Advanced Supersonic Technology (AST) program Advisory Group for Aerospace Research & Development (AGARD, NATO), 4950 Aerion Corporation laminar ow technology development and testing, 283n94 sonic boom conference participation, 270 SSBJ studies and proposals, 249, 259, 268, 270 aerodynamics aerodynamic minimization calculations, computer program for, 74 boundary conditions, 73 equivalent bodies of revolution, 41 uid dynamics, relationship to, 40 high-speed frictionless ow computations, 74, 79 low-boom, high-drag paradox, 75, 75, 91 numerical calculations correlation with ight test data, 4849 sonic booms and, 1112 SST research and development, 1112, 4250 wind tunnel research on shock waves, 12 Aerodyne, 133 Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton (ARAP), 48 Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton (ARAP) Program, 4849, 71, 72, 7879, 89 Aeronautical Research Institute of Sweden, 47, 71
347
Aeronautical Research Laboratory, 4 Aeronautical Systems Corporation, 13839 Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate (ARMD), 256, 25758 Aerospace Defense Command, 78 Aerospace Industries Association, 214 Airbus, 248 aircraft and jet aircraft advances in design of, 9, 27172 afterburners and fuel consumption, 8 business (corporate) jets, 128, 25960, 267, 282n89 Century series ghters and interceptors, 4, 5, 68 CFD analysis and low-boom aircraft congurations, 49 design for sonic boom minimization, xxi, 6, 912, 4250, 53, 53, 5658, 6973, 72, 7576, 7880, 79, 80, 27071, 271, 285n112 distances own by early supersonic aircraft, 8 global recession effects on manufacturing of, 25960 naming of, 29n19 noise and sonic boom rules and regulations, 4950, 53, 6869, 7273, 77, 78, 82n7, 122, 21415, 248, 24950, 259 transonic and supersonic aircraft development, 2, 39, 5, 7 weight of aircraft and sonic booms, 15, 123, 139 See also civilian aircraft; military aircraft; supersonic business jets (SSBJs); Supersonic Transport (SST) aircraft industry design of commercial aircraft, 39 global recession effects on, 25960, 271 HSR communication problems and competition issues, 107
information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 43, 50 noise and sonic boom rules and regulations and viability of SSBJs, 21415, 259 Request for Proposals for SST, 44 SCR/SCAR/AST program role, 68 sonic boom acceptability, responsibility for, 125 sonic boom conference participation, 91 sonic boom research, 7273 SSBJ studies and proposals, 12428 air defense aircraft and exercises, 79 Air Force, U.S. (USAF) advanced ghter trainer aircraft, ix Aeronautical Research Laboratory, 4 Aerospace Medical Division, Biomedical Laboratory, 1415 bomber roadmap and technology development, 12829, 139 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 DACT and aggressor squadrons, 15354 information sharing and research partnerships, 39 International Fighter Aircraft competition, 15253 long-range-strike platform study and proposals, 139 museum, 21 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Ofce (NSBEO), 22 Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology (NSBIT) program, 89 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 QSP capacity, range, and specications, 131 sonic boom research, 1319 Tactical Air Command, 153 Test Pilot School, 217, 219, 221, 264 transonic and supersonic aircraft development, 39, 12
348
Index
transonic and supersonic ight development, 2, 4, 5 White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819 X-54A concept, 259 Air Force Academy, 52 Air Force Flight Test Center (AFFTC) atmospheric effects, measurement of, 1516 Blackbird sonic boom research, 21 Century series aircraft testing, 4 Little Boom project, 15 SonicBOBS project, 265 sonic boom research, 25 XB-70 Valkyrie sonic boom research, 2021, 3435nn6566 Air Force Flight Test Museum, 265 Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, 15, 2045, 204 Air Force Propulsion Laboratory, 133 Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), 139, 157, 216 Air France Concorde ights, 84n34 AIRPLANE code, 98, 99, 114n32 air trafc control system, 268 Air Vehicles Technology Integration Program (AVTIP), 216 Aldrich, Gary, 221, 22425, 228, 290 Alford, William, 10, 31n36 Allan, Jack, 199n70 altitude atmospheric changes and, 6970 sonic boom production and, 4, 1516, 108 aluminum construction materials, 43, 138 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) conferences and meetings, 79, 86n55, 137, 14546n91, 229, 242n100 honors and tributes for SSBD participants, 235 information sharing and research partnerships, 39
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, 260, 268 Ames Research Center ARC3D code, 16263, 195n17 CFD and oblique-wing aircraft research, 100 CFD and sonic boom minimization research, 95100 CFD research, 49 HSR communication problems and competition issues, 107 NFBoom program, 173 Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation Facility, 95 simulation improvement through CFD, 25758 sonic boom research, 12, 55, 71 supersonic ight research, 12 supersonic transport research and development, 910 Supersonic Wind Tunnel, 139 Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, 95, 96 wind tunnel research on sonic booms, 95, 96 Anderson, Robert, 92 angle of attack (AOA), 40 animals chicken eggs sonic boom study, 19 shock wave effects on, 12, 76, 77, 107 sonic boom effects on, 12, 14, 24, 76, 77, 89 Apollo program, 25, 36n82, 51, 76 Applewhite, Keith, 180, 200n85, 236n2, 236n4, 290, 291 ARAP (Aeronautical Research Associates of Princeton) Program, 4849, 71, 72, 7879, 89 ARC3D (Ames Research Center 3-Dimensional) code, 16263, 195n17 area rule, 6, 41, 46 Arizona State University, 134, 137, 138 Army, U.S., White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819
349
Arnold Engineering Development Center (AEDC), 18283 Arslan, Alan, 293 artillery shells and rearms, 1, 3 Ashburn, Chris, 292, 293 Ashtech and Ashtech Z-12 GPS receiver, 159 60, 189, 193, 199n74, 207, 210, 223, 252 Atlanta, public opinion surveys in, 2425 atmosphere and atmospheric conditions altitude and changes in, 6970 digital images of shock waves, 117n63 freezing signature through effects in atmosphere, 49 isothermal atmosphere, 6970, 7476 measurement of atmospheric effects, 1516 schlieren imaging system photos of shock waves in, 104, 105 shock wave characteristics and, 64n68 sonic boom behavior and variations in, 1516, 56, 108 sonic boom research, overpressure measurements, and, 18, 2324, 24 speed of sound, shock waves, and atmospheric conditions, 12, 27n2 turbulence and sonic booms, 18, 18, 22, 26, 49, 54, 56, 1035, 104, 108, 108, 217, 225, 22931, 230, 232 visibility of shock waves and, 16162 wind, N-wave signatures, and strenth of sonic booms, 19, 19, 56 Atomic Energy Commission, Jackass Flats BREN Tower research, 2526, 25, 26, 49, 54 avalanche studies, 19 Aviation Week and Space Technology, 235, 250, 256, 260
B
B-1B Lancers, 129 B-2 Spirit bomber, 129, 132, 205 B-52/B-52H Stratofortress bomber, 16, 129 B-58 Hustler bomber
characteristics and capabilities, 7, 8 in-ight shock wave measurement, 16, 16 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 N-wave signature, 2324, 24 public opinions and complaints about sonic booms from, 8, 17, 18, 19, 19 refueling of, 8, 31n32 sonic boom carpets, 8, 21, 31n32 sonic boom research, 13, 15, 17, 20, 3435nn6566 White Sands Missile Range tests, 19 wind tunnel research, 41 B-70 bomber, 10. See also XB-70 Valkyrie BADS (Boom Amplitude and Direction Sensor) system, 209, 210, 212, 219, 227, 252 Baize, Donald, 100101, 101 Baldini, Larry, 291 ballistic cracks and waves, 1, 3 Barents, Brian, 249 Bare Reactor Experiment Nevada (BREN) Tower sonic boom research, 2526, 25, 26, 54 Barger, Raymond, 7172, 77, 77, 94 Barnes, Diane, 291 BASS (Boom Amplitude and Shape Sensor), 219, 227, 252 Bass, Henry, 104, 116n61 Bass, Robert M., 249 Batteas, Frank, 226 Battelle Memorial Institute, Center for HighSpeed Commercial Flight, 90 Baxter, Tom, 292, 293 BEARs (Boom Event Analyzer Recorders), 89, 104, 106 Beck, Mike, 208 Beech C-45 aircraft, 17 Beechcraft aircraft, 133, 144n69 Bell XS-1/X-1 aircraft, xii, 2, 3, 2728nn68, 28n10, 209, 256, 266 Bender, Anne, 292 Berger, David, 209, 292
350
Index
Biegner, Rich, 287 Big Boom, Project, 15 Biomedical Laboratory (USAF Aerospace Medical Division), 1415 Birmingham, 227, 296 Blackstock, David, 104, 116n61 Blanik sailplane. See L-23 Blanik sailplane Bobbitt, Percy Bud CFD applications, 97 QSP program sonic boom strategy, 130 SSBD design, 172, 175 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 288 SSBE Working Group member, 289 Boccadoro, Charles W. accident and injury of, 188 CRADA for F-5E SSBD, 185 DARPA industry day participation, 132 education and career of, 132 honors and tributes for SSBD research, 235 Martin and role in QSP program, 156 QSP design concept, 13637 QSP program, team-oriented approach to, 133 QSP program participation, 132 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14950, 156 SSBD ight postponement consideration, 206 SSBD ight tests, 207 SSBD ight to Palmdale, 191 SSBD Management Team member, 157, 215, 287 SSBD modications oversight role, 188 SSBD proposal, 149 SSBD success, presentation about, 214 SSBE Program Management Team member, 288 strike aircraft concept, 132 bodies of revolution, 3, 41 Boeing 2707-200 SST, 48 Boeing 2707-300 SST, 48, 53, 53, 55, 124
Boeing Company aircraft design and sonic boom minimization, 26869 Air Force Plant 42 facility, 205 computer programs and data analysis for boom minimization, 4445 F-16XL low-boom modications, 26061, 260 FAA workshop presentation, 239n54 nancial problems of, 53 HSCT development costs, 109 HSCT program, 90, 91, 106, 125 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 107 information sharing and research partnerships, 50 long-range-strike platform proposals, 139 low-boom transport concepts, 72 McDonnell Douglas, absorption of, 106, 132 N+2 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 257, 258, 26869, 269 N+3 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 258, 269, 269 QSP design concept, 13435, 138, 146n96, 269 QSP program and advances in research and skills, 139 QSP program participation, 130 SCAMP project, 267 SCAR demonstrator, 80 sonic boom conference participation, 270 SSBD design and CFD analysis, 174 SSBD ight and T-38 chase plane, ixx, x, 19091 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20910 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219 SSBE participation, 216 SSBJ studies and proposals, 124, 126, 248, 268
351
SST contract award, 46 SST designs, 48, 53, 53 SST proposal, 44 Boeing Phantom Works QSP proposal and contract, 132 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051, 260 Bomben, Craig, 226 Bongo operation (Community and Structural Response Program, St. Louis), 17, 18 Bongo II operation (Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study), 18 Booker, Carl, 291 Boom Amplitude and Direction Sensor (BADS) system, 209, 210, 212, 219, 227, 252 Boom Amplitude and Shape Sensor (BASS), 219, 227, 252 BOOMAP2 program, 89 Boom Event Analyzer Recorders (BEARs), 89, 104, 106 Boomle database, 89, 103, 111n2 Boron, California, 21 BQM-34E Firebee II remotely piloted vehicles, 101, 102, 107, 115n50, 130, 150, 155 BREN (Bare Reactor Experiment Nevada) Tower sonic boom research, 2526, 25, 26, 54 Briggs, Steven R., 18485 British Aerospace, 121 British Overseas Airways Corporation Concorde ight, 84n34 Britt, Terry, 290 Brownlow, Dale, 186, 190, 290 Bruner, Sam, 288, 289 Bryan, Mike, viii, ixx, 19091, 2035, 289 buildings. See structures (buildings) Burleson, Carl, 248 Burne, Merv, 291 Busemann, Adolf, 6, 47, 61n37 Bush administration and George W. Bush, 250, 257
business (corporate) jets, 128, 25960, 267, 282n89. See also supersonic business jets (SSBJs)
C
C-45 aircraft, 17 C-47 transport, 1314 C-131B aircraft, 22 Campos, Norma, 292 Canada, 152 canards, 10, 11, 72, 249, 262, 269 Carlson, Harry W. aircraft design and sonic boom minimization, 55, 7172, 78, 79 B-58 wind tunnel research, 41 ight plan phases and severity of sonic booms, 41 ight tests, importance of, 26 SCAT-15F concept, 45, 45 sonic boom characteristics prediction method, 76, 89 sonic boom conference participation, 45, 46, 47, 48 sonic boom research, 12 SST design and wind tunnel research, 4142 SST feasibility studies review, 43 wind tunnel data correlation with ight test data, 4142, 47, 47 wind tunnel research, 4042, 59n4 caustics, 26, 26, 49, 54, 55, 77, 231, 231, 26667, 282n87 Cecil Commerce Center/Cecil Field, ix, 184, 2034, 294 Center for AeroSpace Information (CASI), 30n23, 85 Center for High-Speed Commercial Flight, Battelle Memorial Institute, 90 Central Washington University, 267 Century series ghters and interceptors, 4, 5, 68
352
Index
Cessna, 248, 25051, 267 Cessna 150 aircraft, 22 Chance Vought F8U-3 aircraft, 13, 14 Chapman, Dean R., 73 Chapman, Rob, 144n65 Cheung, Samson, 9596, 98 Chicago B-58 bomber sonic boom tests, 19, 19 public opinion surveys in, 2425 China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station (NAWS) Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 31 (VX-31), 227 atmospheric and weather conditions data from, 228 ight to St. Augustine from, 296 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms, 107 test pilot from, 205, 221, 289 civilian aircraft design of commercial aircraft, 39 Hustler performance and feasibility of supersonic transport, 89 hypersonic ight for, 90 QSP program applications, 131, 13738, 139 supersonic aircraft development, 9, 39, 271 supersonic aircraft development, support for, 90 See also supersonic business jets (SSBJs) Cliatt, Larry, 267 Cliff, Susan, 98 Clinton administration and William J. Clinton, 109 Coen, Peter G. CRADA for F-5E SSBD, 185 HSCT low-boom congurations, assessment of, 100101, 101 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 94 ISSM ights, 162 public opinions about sonic booms, 271 QSP program sonic boom strategy, 130
quiet sonic boom signature, conditions for, 268 SonicBOBS project, 26566 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 250 sonic boom simulation research, 215 SSBD design success, 214 SSBD program role, 157, 287, 292 SSBD success and attened signature shape, 212 SSBE program role, 21617, 228, 288, 293 Supersonics Project, 256 Cold War and aircraft development and deployment, 4, 15152, 154 Cole, W.J., 54, 184 Collard, Mark, 291 Colorado Rockies sonic boom research, 19 Colt aircraft, 17 Columbia University, 47, 54 Community and Structural Response Program, St. Louis (Bongo operation), 17, 18 computational uid dynamics (CFD) acoustic vibrations, development of model of, 257 advances in, 98, 99, 100, 269, 284n103 aircraft design applications, 49 Ames research on, 49 benets and importance of, 7374, 9394, 1067 codes for, 9698, 99, 100, 100, 114n32, 16263, 195n17 computer graphics and ow-eld analysis, 49, 54 design process for sonic boom minimization, 100, 100 development of, 7374 F-5E shock waves, CFD-generated image of, 171, 172 ight test data correlation with CFD calculations, 1013, 102, 103, 115 16n53, 16263, 163, 23334, 233
353
HSCT design and sonic boom minimization research, 95101, 97, 98, 101 ISSM ight data analysis, 159, 16263, 162, 163 limitations of, 99, 109 N+2 quiet supersonic airplane design and, 269, 284n103 oblique-wing aircraft research, 100 power of computers to run, 97 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 25253, 255, 255 research on, 49, 73, 25758 sonic boom minimization research and, 9394, 95101 sonic boom propagation, development of model, 257 sonic boom signature through turbulence and, 22930, 230 sonic boom simulation research, 25758 SSBD design, 17175, 195n22 wind tunnel data correlation with CFD codes, 96, 9798, 17580, 177, 18283 computers and computer programs aerodynamic minimization calculations, computer program for, 74 ARAP Program, 4849, 71, 72, 7879, 89 computer graphics and ow-eld analysis, 49, 54 high-speed frictionless ow computations, 74, 79 programs and data analysis for boom prediction and minimization, 28n8, 4445, 46, 47, 4849, 56, 71, 72, 76, 8990, 102, 11516n53, 172, 173 SEEB program, 172, 173 shock wave research and analysis, 54 super computers and parallel processors, development of, 49, 97 TRAPS program, 89, 102 waveform parameter program, 71, 76, 8990, 96, 98, 102
Concorde airliner aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 50, 78 British-French agreement for development of, 4344, 122 economic success and viability of, 122, 247 engines, 125 environmental impact issues, 107 ight routes, 75, 84n34 HSCT compared to, 9091 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 50 materials for and construction of, 43, 138 operating costs of, 75, 80 opposition to ights of, 78 overight regions, limitations on, 75, 77, 247 passenger loads to support, 122 retirement of, 247, 269 secondary booms, 78 sonic boom measurement study, 77 technical success of, 122 conferences and symposia, 4344, 4550, 5253, 91, 9293, 106, 11819n83, 229, 242nn99100, 27071 Congress, U.S. complaints to about sonic booms, 7 NASA budget and funding, 274n14 SCR/SCAR/AST program funding, 69 SST program funding, 55, 57, 67 supersonic ight research, funding for, 67 Construcciones Aeronauticas Sociedad Anonima (CASA), 124, 141n22 Convair B-58 Hustler. See B-58 Hustler bomber Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA), 18486, 216 Coordinating Committee on Sonic Boom Studies, 22 Corda, Steven, 288 Cornell University, 46, 47, 53, 70, 74, 77, 85n47, 140n1, 212
354
Index
corporate (business) jets, 128, 25960, 267, 282n89. See also supersonic business jets (SSBJs) Corskery, John, 290 Council of of European Aerospace Societies/ Confederation of European Aerospace Societies, 229, 242n99 Cowart, Robert A. Robbie, 253, 25556 Croxton, Malcolm, 199n70 Cruickshank, Dennis, 291 Crusader ghter, 13 Cudnik, Jason, 262, 263 Cutler, Tim, 291
D
DACT (Dissimilar Air Combat Tactics), 15354 Dahlin, John A., 16263 Dallas, public opinion surveys in, 2425 Darden, Christine M. aircraft design and sonic boom minimization, 7576, 7880, 79, 80 CFD and HSCT sonic boom minimization, 96 education and background of, 75, 84n33 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 94 low-boom, high-drag paradox, 75, 75 minimization theory, revision of, 7476, 7880 SCAR conference presentation, 75 sonic boom conference participation, 91, 106 sonic boom estimation charts, 81 sonic boom minimization computer program (SEEB), 172, 173 SSBD ground sensor positioning, 209 wind tunnel research, limitations of, 97 Dassault Aviation HISAC participation, 248, 268 SSBJ study and proposal, 12728 Dassault Aviation Falcon, 128 Dassault Aviation Mirage III, 165n17 data collection and analysis
Boomle database, 89, 103, 111n2 Chicago B-58 bomber tests, 19, 19 Community and Structural Response Program, St. Louis (Bongo operation), 17, 18 computer programs and data analysis for boom minimization, 28n8, 4445, 46, 47, 4849, 56, 71, 72, 76, 8990, 102, 11516n53, 172, 173 in-ight shock wave measurement, 16 ight test data correlation with CFD calculations, 1013, 102, 103, 115 16n53, 16263, 163 ight test data correlation with numerical calculations, 4849 ight test data correlation with wind tunnel data, 4142, 4445, 47 ISSM data-collection equipment, 15758, 15960, 161 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224, 217 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 precision in collection, 233 SR-71 shock wave measurement ights, 108, 108 SSBD data-collection instruments, 18990, 189, 193, 2067, 22021 SSBD data sharing requirement, 157 SSBD ight test plan development, 19192 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 206, 20710, 210, 212, 213, 237n26 SSBD team, x, 29293 SSBE data analysis and signicance of ndings, 22935, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234 SSBE data collection equipment, arrangements, and capabilities, 217, 21821, 218, 219, 220, 22324, 225, 225, 22729, 230
355
SSBE team, 227, 228, 293 White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819 wind tunnel data correlation with CFD codes, 96, 9798, 17580, 177, 18283 XB-70 data and records, restoration and digitization of, 103 XB-70 Valkyrie sonic boom research, 21 Defense, U.S. Department of (DOD) East Coast mystery boom research, 78 JASON scientic advisory group, 78 public response to sonic booms, awareness of, 44 SST research and development, 10 supersonic bomber development, 12829 X-30 NASP program, 9091 Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Advanced Supersonic Platform Industry Day, 130, 132, 144n65 data sharing requirement, 157 hypersonic ight technology development, 90 mission of, 128 QSP program development, 12930 SSBD program role, ix, x SSBD success, publicity and news release about, 21314 Supersonic Aircraft Noise Mitigation program, 129 Switchblade oblique-wing study, 139, 259 Tactical Technology Ofce, 130, 131 See also Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) program Denver, public opinion surveys in, 2425 Desert Storm, 154 Dick, Dwight Tricky expertise of, 213 F-5E return to Fallon, 213, 224 SSBD chase plane pilot, 207, 21113, 289 SSBE chase plane pilot, 221, 22224, 289 Difenderfer, Jim, 291
Directed Technologies, 133 Discovery, 265 Dissimilar Air Combat Tactics (DACT), 15354 Douglas A-4 Skyhawk, 153, 154 Douglas Aircraft Company, 90, 91, 92, 125 Downen, Cathy, 288, 289 drag CFD and measurement of effects of, 99 computer programs and data analysis for boom minimization, 46 nose design and, 79 QSP lift-to-drag ratio, 131, 136 sonic booms and, 139 wind tunnel research, 40 Driver, Cornelius Neil, 10, 66, 68 Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC)/Flight Research Center (FRC)/High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) AD-1 program, 85n48 Blackbird sonic boom research, 21 F/A-18 near-eld shock wave experiments, 103, 155 ghter aircraft and repeatable reduced sonic booms, 140n12 in-ight shock wave measurement probes, 266 ight test support personnel, 29192 ISSM ights, 16062 laminar ow research, 13334 LaNCETS project, 26163, 261, 262, 263, 280n66, 280n70 Low Boom/No Boom maneuver, 246, 251 52, 26365, 265 naming of, 12 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 25356, 254, 276n29 renaming of, 77 SCAMP project, 26667, 282n87 SCR/SCAR/AST program ights, 77 SonicBOBS project, 26566 sonic boom database, 265
356
Index
sonic boom research, 15, 25, 77, 85n48 SonicBREWS project, 266 SR-71 low-boom modication and ight tests, 88, 1023, 103 SR-71 shock wave measurement ights, 1078, 108 SSBD ight test and data collection role, 211 SSBD ight test plan development, 191 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20710, 210, 22021 SSBE ight-readiness reviews and ight clearance, 218 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 21921, 227 SSBE participation, 216 structures, research on sonic boom effects on, 26366, 264 supersonic aircraft research and development, 24, 12 WSPR project, 267 X-15 sonic boom research, 16, 33n53 XB-70 Valkyrie sonic boom research, 2021, 3435nn6566 Dulles International Airport, 78 Durston, Donald A., 173 Dyer, Joseph, 185, 198n61
E
EADS (European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company), 141n22, 248 Eagle Aeronautics/Eagle Engineering F-5 nose modications, 171 Firebee sonic boom research, 101, 155 in-ight shock wave measurement probes, 266 Maglieri role at, 97, 124 QSP program sonic boom strategy, 130 QSP subcontractor relationship with NGC, 132, 133, 150 SCAMP project, 267 sonic boom expertise at, 133
sonic boom minimization and demonstrator selection, 14950 SSBD design, 175 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219 SSBE participation, 216 XB-70 records, restoration of, 103 East Coast mystery booms, 78 Edwards, Glen, 3 Edwards, Thomas, 9596, 98 Edwards Air Force Base atmospheric and weather conditions data from, 228 Boomle database, 89, 111n2 Century series ghters and interceptors, 4, 5, 68 environmental concerns at SSBD test area, 2089, 211 naming of, 3 shock wave research, 16 sonic boom ight tests, 4, 1316, 17, 19 Space Shuttle sonic boom effects over, 7677 SSBD ight chronology, 29496 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 206, 20710, 210, 212, 213, 237n26 SSBD test area, xi, 20710, 208, 211 SSBE test area, 217, 22122 structures, research on sonic boom effects on, 264, 264 supersonic ight testing at, 3 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms, 107 XB-70 Valkyrie sonic boom research, 21 See also Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC)/Flight Research Center (FRC)/HighSpeed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) Eggers, Alfred, 10 Eglin Air Force Base, 6 Ehernberger, L.J. Jack, 102, 292
357
Eisenhower administration and Dwight D. Eisenhower, 10 engine inlet shock waves CFD and prediction of, 1067, 150 F-5E inlet location and, 155 inlet-canopy formation ight test, 103 inlets located under airframe and, 150 measurement of, 15758 prevention of, 99100 SSBD modications and, 23435, 234 top-mounted inlets and, 133, 13637, 137, 138 engine nacelles CFD and analysis of effects of, 98, 98 QSP design concept, 137 wind tunnel research, 9495, 99100 engines F-5E engines, 153 QSP contract awards, 138 QSP program development, 133, 135, 135, 13637, 137 sound suppression and weight of, 122 turbofan engines, 126, 133 turbojet development, 151 variable cycle engine (VCE) program, 68, 122 English Electric Aviation, 43 Entry, Landing, and Descent (ELD) vehicle, 285n115 environmental impact issues Concorde airliner, 107 High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT), 9192, 107 noise and sonic boom rules and regulations, 49, 53, 6869, 7273, 77, 78, 82n7, 122, 21415, 248, 24950, 259 Space Shuttle/Space Transportation System (STS), 7677, 85n43 SSBD test area concerns, 2089, 211 SST design, 39 environmental impact of aircraft designs, 39
Environmental Protection Agency/Environmental Science Services Administration, 25 Epke, Greg, 293 equivalent bodies of revolution, 41 Euler, Leonhard, 73, 74 Euler code, 96, 98, 114n32, 172 Euler/Navier-Stokes code, 98, 114n32 Europe economic and scal problems in, 25960 High-Speed Aircraft Industrial Project (HISAC), 24748, 26768 European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS), 141n22, 248 Ewers, Richard Dick, 213, 221, 289 Experimental Aircraft Association, 242n99
F
F-4/F-4C/F-4H Phantom II Air Force use of, 152, 153 Boomle database information, 111n2 DACT training, 154 maintenance of, 152 sonic boom complaints, 17 strength of sonic booms produced, 15 F-5-21 aircraft, 152 F-5 aircraft building of, 124 Cold War and development of, 15152 DACT and aggressor squadrons, 15354 design and development of, 15154 production of, 152, 153 tail surfaces, 196n28, 198n53 Vietnam War and development and deployment of, 15254 F-5A/B Freedom Fighter, 152, 153 F-5E Inlet Spillage Shock Measurements (ISSM) atmospheric conditions and visibility of shock waves, 16162 CFD and analysis of data, 159, 16263, 162, 163
358
Index
data-collection equipment, 15758, 15960, 161 ight tests and data collection, 15962, 161, 175 probe aircraft, 158, 159, 16061, 161 purpose of tests, 158, 159 success of tests, 163 test pilots, 16061, 289 F-5E Tiger II ghters capabilities, range, and specications, ix, 15051, 151, 153, 15455 contract for, 152 DACT and aggressor squadrons, 15354 development of, 15253 engines, 153 re control systems and radar, 153 maintenance of, 154 Marine Corps use of, 154 naming of, 153 Navy aircraft, 148, 154, 156, 161, 178, 21112, 212 operating costs of, 155 shock waves, CFD-generated image of, 171, 172 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 15051, 151, 15455, 156, 158 SSBD data-collection ight chase plane, 202, 207, 21113, 212, 29495 SSBD preliminary ight tests, 158 SSBE data-collection ight chase plane, 218, 221, 22224, 295 test pilot, 289 F-5F Tiger II trainer, 150, 151, 15253, 155, 172, 174, 179, 183 F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (SSBD) audible difference in sonic booms, 212, 214 availability of aircraft to modify for, 155, 157, 18386 contributions to technology and research, 23435 CRADA for loan of, 18486, 216
Critical Design Review, 178, 180 data-collection ights, 202, 2056 design of and nose modications, ixxi, x, 15051, 151, 155, 17175, 173, 174, 17879, 179, 183, 195n22, 23435, 234, 286 engine tuneup for maximum thrust, 206, 207 envelope-expansion ights, 190, 191, 193, 2034, 2056 exterior paint and pinstripes, x, xi, 190, 212 ight and data-collection instruments, 189 90, 189, 193, 2067, 22021 ight from St. Augustine to Palmdale, viii, ixxi, x, 19091, 2035, 294 ight-readiness reviews and ight clearance, 19293 ight test area, xi, 20710, 208, 211 ight test numbering, 204 ight test plan and number of ights, 19192, 212 ight tests, 2067, 21113, 212, 238n32, 29496 ight tests, length of, 204 ight tests and weather, 205, 206, 207, 226 ight to St. Augustine, 221, 227, 296 functional check ights, 186, 2034, 2056, 294 ground checkouts, 193 ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 206, 20710, 210, 212, 213, 237n26 Interim Design Review, 16162, 175 Mach number parameters and air temperature, 186, 205, 206, 207, 213 museum home for, 235, 272 nose glove and fairings, fabrication and installation of, 18082, 181, 18691, 187, 188, 190 nose glove and fairings, materials for, 180, 181, 18687, 188
359
nose landing gear door component, 19091, 190, 193 Pelican nickname, 192, 203 photos of, viii, x postponement of ights, recommendation for, 206 Preliminary Design Review, 178, 185 redesignation of F-5E, 190 restoration to original condition and return of after demonstration, 185, 186, 216, 218 selection of, 15051, 151, 15455, 156 shock wave generation by, 286 specications and modications, 158, 29799, 298, 299 stability and control after modications to, 181, 183, 192, 203 success of, publicity and news release about, 21314 success of tests, 212, 212, 21314, 216, 23435, 234, 247, 272 test pilots, viii, 192, 205, 289 wind tunnel testing, 170, 17580, 176, 177, 18283, 183 See also Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment (SSBE) F8U-3 aircraft, 13, 14 F-14 aircraft, 111n2 F-15 aircraft Boomle database information, 111n2 DACT training, 154 ISSM probe aircraft, 158 JAPE ight tests, 104 F-15B aircraft experiments with and modications to, 262 in-ight shock wave measurement probes, 266 ight test support personnel, 29192 ISSM probe aircraft, 159, 16061, 161, 2067 laminar ow technology development and testing, 283n94
LaNCETS project, 26163, 261, 262, 263, 280n66, 280n70 landing gear problem, 222 near-eld shock wave research, 23233, 233 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 25356, 253, 254, 255, 276n29 SSBD data-collection ight chase planes, 202, 2067, 210, 213, 22021, 29495 SSBE data-collection equipment, 22021, 220 SSBE data-collection ight chase plane, 220, 221, 222, 22526, 226, 23233, 233, 29596 test pilot, 221, 289 F-15E Strike Eagle, 102 F-16 aircraft, 102, 111n2, 154 F-16A aircraft, 154 F-16N aircraft, 154 F-16XL aircraft design and capabilities of, 102, 121 low-boom modications to, 26061, 260 shock wave measurement ights, 88, 102, 1078, 108, 159, 217 F-20 Tigershark, 156 F-21 (Kr C.1) ghters, 154, 165n17 F-86 Sabre, 56 F-100 Super Sabre, 4, 5, 13, 16, 152 F-101 Voodoo air defense exercises, 8 design of, 5 ight testing, 4 sonic boom research, 13, 18 F-102/YF-102 Delta Dagger, 4, 5, 6, 8 F-104/XF-104 Starghter air defense exercises, 8 BREN Tower sonic boom research, 26, 26 design of, 5, 6, 133 in-ight shock wave measurement, 16 ight testing, 4
360
Index
National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 N-wave signature, 2324, 24 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 sonic boom research, 13, 15, 17 turbulence and sonic boom carpets, 18, 18 White Sands Missile Range tests, 19 F-105/YF-105 Thunderchief design of, 5, 6 ight testing, 4 sonic boom damage from, 52 sonic boom research, 13 F-106 Delta Dart air defense exercises, 8 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 design of, 4, 6 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 Safe Slide project, 19 sonic booms from, 78 F-111 aircraft, 104, 111n2, 154 F/A-18 Hornets Boomle database information, 111n2 ISSM probe aircraft, 158, 159, 161 Low Boom/No Boom maneuver, 246, 251 52, 26365, 265 Navy aircraft, 154 near-eld shock wave experiments, 103, 155 SCAMP project, 267 shaped sonic boom demonstration with, 155 SSBD ights chase plane, 205, 206, 213, 29495 SSBD ight to St. Augustine, 227, 296 SSBE ights chase plane, 221, 222, 295, 296
structures, research on sonic boom effects on, 26465, 265 test pilots, 289 WSPR project, 267 F/A-18E/F Super Hornet, 139 Fairchild Swearingen SSBJ, 121, 12425 Fallica, Jim, 290 Fallon Naval Air Station adversary training at, 154 Composite Fighter Squadron Thirteen (VFC13), 154, 158, 16062, 184, 207, 213, 21718, 221 Dick and F-5E return to, 213, 224 ISSM ight support from, 158, 16062 Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center, 154 SSBD support from, 184 far-eld shock waves, 4041, 44, 71, 108, 234 Federal Aviation Administration/Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) air defense exercises, 8 BREN Tower research, 2526, 25, 26 Colorado Rockies sonic boom research, 19 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 East Coast mystery boom research, 78 information sharing and research partnerships, 39 meetings and workshops, 21415, 217, 247, 248, 27071, 284n108 NextGen air trafc control system, 268 noise and sonic boom rules and regulations, 49, 53, 6869, 7273, 77, 78, 82n7, 122, 21415, 248, 24950, 259 Ofce of Environment and Energy, 248 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction (PARTNER) Center of Excellence, 248, 251, 270 public response to sonic booms, awareness of, 44
361
sonic boom acceptability, responsibility for, 125 sonic boom research, 17, 2426 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219, 227 SST research and development, 1011 supersonic ight research, funding for, 67 supersonic transport development, support for, 910 Supersonic Transport Development Ofce, 18 White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819 workshop on jet noise and sonic booms, 21415, 239n54, 247 Federation of American Scientists, 78 Ferri, Antonio background of, 48 death of, 71 GASL role, 51 near-eld shock wave research, 71 sonic boom conference participation, 48 SST design and sonic boom minimization, 48, 5354 supersonic overight regions, limitations on, 5455 F-function theory and results, 4, 16, 46, 48, 56, 71 Fidell Associates, 267 eld tests, scope of research with, 12 rearms and artillery shells, 1, 3 Firebee II BQM-34E remotely piloted vehicles, 101, 102, 107, 115n50, 130, 150, 155 Flight Research Center (FRC). See Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC)/Flight Research Center (FRC)/High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) ight tests Big Boom project, 15 CFD calculations correlation with ight test data, 1013, 102, 103, 11516n53, 16263, 163, 23334, 233 contributions from and importance of, 26
F/A-18 near-eld shock wave experiments, 103, 155 in-ight shock wave measurement, 4, 16, 16, 22, 266 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 1015, 102, 103, 104 isolated areas for, 1617 JAPE ight tests, 1034 Little Boom project, 1314 Littleman project, 17 numerical calculations correlation with ight test data, 4849 scope of research with, 12, 1321, 2426, 3435nn6566 shock wave measurement ights, 4, 16, 16, 22, 88, 102, 1078, 108, 159 SR-71 low-boom modication and ight tests, 88, 1023, 103 SR-71 shock wave measurement ights, 1078, 108, 159 strength of sonic booms produced, 15 wind tunnel data correlation with ight test data, 4142, 4445, 47 See also F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (SSBD); Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment (SSBE) Florida, Space Shuttle sonic boom effects over, 7677 uid dynamics, aerodynamics relationship to, 40 focused boom research, 77, 8990, 217, 222, 223, 224, 23132, 231, 26667, 282n87 Forest Service, U.S., 19 Foster, Pat, 290, 291 Foxgrover, Mike, 291 France aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 50 Concorde development agreement with Great Britain, 4344, 122 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 50
362
Index
supersonic airliner development, 9 Freund, Donald D., 253 Friedman, M.B., 54 Fundamental Aeronautics Program, 25661, 268, 283n95, 285n115 fuselages design of for supersonic ight, 6 SCAT congurations, 10, 11
G
Ganguin, Robert, 293 Garry, John, 291 GCNSfv (Generalized Compressible NavierStokes Finite Volume) CFD program, 16263, 174, 179, 195n17, 234 Geiger Field, 19 General American Research Division sonic boom research, 50 General Applied Sciences Laboratories (GASL) sonic boom simulation, 5152 General Aviation Manufactures Association, 214 General Dynamics, 128 General Dynamics F-16 aircraft, 102, 111n2, 154 General Dynamics F-16XL aircraft. See F-16XL aircraft General Electric F-5 aircraft engines, 153 FAA workshop presentation, 239n54 jet engine publicity ight, 21 QSP contract award, 133, 138 QSP subcontractor relationship with NGC, 133 SSBD engine maintenance for maximum thrust, 206 SSBJ studies and proposals, 248 turbojet development, 151 Generalized Compressible Navier-Stokes Finite Volume (GCNSfv) CFD program, 16263, 174, 179, 195n17, 234 General Motors Allison Transmission, 133
George, Albert R. bow and tail wave lowering and sonic boom reduction, 54, 6364n65 contributions of, 7071 minimization research, 46, 53 minimization theory, conrmation of, 212 minimization theory and aircraft design, 5758, 6971, 7880, 134 photo of, 70 sonic boom conference participation, 46, 47, 91 SSBD success and attened signature shape, 212 turbulence and sonic boom research, 54 Georgia Tech, 269 Germany, 2, 27n5 Glacier National Park Safe Slide project, 19 Glennan, T. Keith, 11 Glenn Research Center/Lewis Research Center Fundamental Aeronautics meeting, 268, 283n95 naming of, 10 SSBD wind tunnel testing, 170, 17580, 176, 177 supersonic transport research and development, 910 Goldin, Daniel S. Dan, 109, 131 Goodlin, Chalmers Slick, 28n10 Goodyear blimp (Mayower), 15, 22, 217 Graham, David H. Dave data collection equipment, 15758 experience and expertise of, 155 FAA workshop presentation, 215 honors and tributes for SSBD research, 235 ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 ISSM ights, 159 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14950, 156 SSBD data collection role, 211, 215, 292 SSBD design, 172 SSBD design success, interviews about, 214
363
SSBD stability and control concerns, 181 SSBD success and attened signature shape, 212 SSBD wind tunnel testing, 175 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 287 SSBE program role, 228, 288, 293 Great Britain (United Kingdom) aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 50 Concorde development agreement with France, 4344, 122 F-5E aggressor squadrons, 154 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 50 supersonic airliner development, 9 Greene, Randall, 12122 Grindle, Thomas, 253 Grumman Aerospace Corporation Gulfstream Aerospace and, 125 high-speed frictionless ow computations, 74, 79 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 107 Northrop Corporation, merger with, 107 See also Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Grumman Corporate Research Center, 96 Guiraud, John Pierre, 77 Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation FAA workshop presentation, 215, 239n54 founder of, 249 General Dynamics acquisition of, 128 mobile sonic boom simulator research, 248, 270 noise mitigation program, lobbying for, 129 QSP sonic boom minimization research, 133, 13637 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 251, 25256, 253, 254, 255, 276n29 SCAMP project, 267 SonicBOBS project, 265
sonic boom conference participation, 270 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051 SSBD data-collection ight chase planes, 210, 212 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20910 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219, 227 SSBE participation, 216 SSBJ studies and proposals, 125, 128, 215, 248, 259, 268, 270 Sukhoi Design Bureau relationship with, 125 Supersonics Project, 268 The Whisper SSBJ, 259 WSPR project, 267 X-54A concept, 259 Gulfstream G-V aircraft, 210, 212 Gustafson, Mark, 157, 287
H
Haering, Edward A. Ed BADS system design, 209 CFD calculations correlation with ight test data, 23334, 233 data collection equipment, 15758 environmental concerns at SSBD test area, 2089 experience and expertise of, 15758 ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 ISSM ights, 15962 LaNCETS project, 280n66 Low Boom/No Boom maneuver, 252 SR-71 low-boom modication and ight tests, 102 SR-71 shock wave measurement ights, 108, 159 SSBD ight instrumentation, 189 SSBD ight tests, 158 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 208, 209 SSBD program role, 157, 287, 292
364
Index
SSBE data collection and analysis role, 228, 230, 293 SSBE Program Management Team member, 288 SSBE Working Group member, 288 Haglund, George, 99, 107 Halaby, Najeeb E., 11 Hamilton, H. Harris, 74 Harder, Adam, 288, 289 Harper Dry Lake, 208, 211, 217, 237n22, 237n26 Hartwich, Peter, 288 Hasseem, Habeeb, 290 Hawaii, Space Shuttle sonic boom effects over, 85n43 Hawker aircraft, 133, 144n69 Hawker Beechcraft Corporation, 144n69 Hayes, Wallace D. aerodynamics research and expertise of, 46 ARAP program, 4849, 71 bow and tail wave lowering and sonic boom reduction, 6364n65 inescapability of sonic booms, 46 minimization research, 46, 53 shock wave theory and sonic boom mitigation, 49 sonic boom conference participation, 46, 48, 91 Heely, Timothy, 185 Henderson, Herbert R., 25, 36n82, 53 Henne, Preston Pres, 250, 255 HFL03 Euler time-relaxation code, 99 Higgins, Edgar Sting, 16061, 289 High Performance Computing and Communications Program (HPCCP), 96 High-Speed Aircraft Industrial Project (HISAC), 24748, 26768 High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT) capacity, range, and specications, 9091, 92, 107, 108
CFD and sonic boom minimization research, 95101, 97, 98, 101 CFD design process, 100, 100 cost for development of, 109 design and development of, 9095, 9899, 100101, 101, 121 environmental impact issues, 9192, 107 ight tests, 1015, 102, 103, 104 sonic boom minimization research, 9195, 93, 94, 1067, 128 sonic booms and overight restrictions, 91, 92, 106, 107 speed and fuel characteristics, 90 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms and, 1056, 107 technology development to support, 90 weight and size of, 107 wind tunnel research, 9495, 94, 96 See also High-Speed Research (HSR) program High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS), 23. See also Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC)/Flight Research Center (FRC)/HighSpeed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) High-Speed Research (HSR) program aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 12223 approval for, 91 CFD and sonic boom minimization research, 9394, 95101, 97, 98, 101 challenges and problems associated with, 107, 109, 121 contributions to supersonic ight research, 10810, 118n78, 11819n83 ight tests, 1015, 102, 103, 104 focus of research, 91, 92, 93, 10610 funding for, 91, 106 meetings and workshops, 9293, 95100, 106, 1089, 112n15, 118n78 Phase I, 9195 Phase II, 92, 10610
365
sonic boom minimization research, 9294, 93, 1067 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms and, 1056, 107 termination of program, 109 XB-70 boom signature database use, 3435n66 See also High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT) High-Stability Engine Control project, 262 Hill, Thomas, 253, 255 Hilliard, David, 287, 289 Hilton, David A., 25, 36n82 HLFC (hybrid laminar ow control), 97 Holloman Air Force Base, 19 Honeywell, 133 Hong, Dick, 290 House Variable Intensity Boom Effect on Structures (House VIBES), 264, 265 Howe, Donald, 256 Howell, Kathleen, 292 Hubbard, Harvey H. F-106 sonic boom study, 78 ight plan phases and severity of sonic booms, 43 NSBIT program role, 89 photo of, 12 sonic boom conference participation, 45 sonic boom research, 12 SST feasibility studies review, 43 humans. See people/humans Hunton, Lynn, 55 Huntsville, ix, 294 hybrid laminar ow control (HLFC), 97 hypersonic ight for civilian aircraft, 90 interest in and support for, 90, 111n9 shock wave reduction, 70 sonic boom carpets, 55 Hypersonics Project, 285n115
I
IBM (International Business Machines), 44 Ikawa, Hideo, 151, 172 impulses, 53, 57, 57, 65n77, 6970, 141n17, 22930 Indian Springs, Nevada, 1314 indoor vibrations, annoyance about, 57, 58, 12324, 141n17 Ingalls, Mike, 156, 18485, 291 In-Home Noise Generation/Response System (IHONORS), 105, 105 Institute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto, 76 Intelligent Flight Control Systems (IFCS), 262 International Business Machines (IBM), 44 International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Committee for Aviation Environmental Protection, 248, 249, 259, 260, 265, 270 International Fighter Aircraft competition, 15253
J
Jackass Flats BREN Tower research, 2526, 25, 26, 49, 54 Jacksonville, Cecil Commerce Center/Cecil Field, ix, 184, 2034, 294 James, Russell, 292 Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), 258, 268 jet aircraft. See aircraft and jet aircraft Johnson, Lyndon, 49 John Volpe Center, U.S. Department of Transportation, 227 Joint Acoustic Propagation Experiment (JAPE, NATO), 1034 Joint Chiefs of Staff, 14 Joint Task Force II, 14 Jones, J. Lloyd, 73 Jones, L.B., 43, 54 Jones, Thomas, 151, 267 Jordan, Gareth, 15
366
Index
K
Kane, Edward J., 47, 72, 78 KC-135 Stratotanker, 22, 253 Kelly, Robert, 80 Kennedy administration and John F. Kennedy, 10, 12 Kennedy International Airport, 78 Kentron International SSBJ studies and proposals, 12627, 127 Kr C.1 (F-21) ghters, 154, 165n17 King, Jonathan, 292 Kinn, Patricia, 292 Klingbeil, Ellen, 292 Komadina, Steve DARPA industry day participation, 132 FAA workshop presentation, 215 QSP design concept, 137 QSP program participation, 132 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14950 SSBD data collection team member, 215, 292 Korea, 153 Krake, Keith, 291 Kuntz, Herb, 293
L
L-23 Blanik sailplane SSBE data-collection equipment, 21920, 220 SSBE data-collection ights, 217, 221, 222, 223, 22425, 230, 230, 29596 structures, research on sonic boom effects on, 26465 test pilots, 290 laboratory devices. See simulators and laboratory devices laminar ow active laminar ow, 133 funding for research, 138 hybrid laminar ow control (HLFC), 97 natural laminar ow, 129, 13334, 137
QSP program goals, 136 QSP program timeline and activities, 135 technology development and testing, 268, 283n94 LaNCETS (Lift and Nozzle Change Effects on Tail Shocks) project, 26163, 261, 262, 263, 280n66, 280n70 Landis, Tony, 292 Langley Research Center Acoustics Division, 15, 93, 1035, 20910 Aeronautical Systems Division, 68 CFD and sonic boom minimization research, 96101 CFD research, 73 Chicago B-58 bomber sonic boom tests, 19, 19 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 eld test research on sonic booms, 12 in-ight ow-eld measurement probe, 22 ight test research on sonic booms, 12 House VIBES, 265 HSCT low-boom congurations, assessment of, 100101, 101 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 91, 93101, 107 HSR communication problems and competition issues, 107 Low-Frequency Noise Facility, 51, 51 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 reports and technical publications on SST program, 5556, 56 SCAMP project, 267 SCAT-15F concept, 45, 45 SCR/SCAR/AST conference, 75, 80 SCR/SCAR/AST program role, 68 shock wave research, 16 simulation improvement through CFD, 25758
367
simulators and laboratory devices, 5052, 51, 105, 105, 215, 258 SonicBOBS project, 265 sonic boom conference participation, 4546, 91, 93 sonic boom ight tests, 15 sonic boom research, 6, 12, 13, 53, 7172 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20710 SSBE closeout workshop, 229 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219, 227 SSBE participation, 216 SSBJ studies and proposals, 12526 SST feasibility studies review, 4344 SST sonic boom level goal, 39 structures, research on sonic boom effects on, 264 supersonic ight research, 12, 13 Supersonic Pressure Tunnel (4-by-4-foot) testing, 17, 4041, 59n4 supersonic transport research and development, 910 Supersonic Vehicles Technology program, 215 turbulence and sonic boom research, 1035, 104 Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, 38, 7880, 95, 99100 VORLAX methodology, 173 wind tunnel research on sonic booms, 12, 38, 47, 47, 7880, 9495, 96 WSPR project, 267 Larson, Nils, 262, 263, 267 Lavoie, Joseph, 290 Learjet, 249 Leatherwood, Jack, 105 Lewis Research Center. See Glenn Research Center/Lewis Research Center lift CFD and prediction of effects of, 99
compression lift and B-70 design, 10 computer programs and data analysis for boom minimization, 46 QSP lift-to-drag ratio, 131, 136 sonic booms and, 6, 15, 16, 123, 139, 252 SST design and sonic boom minimization, 48 SST design and wind tunnel research, 4142 wind tunnel research, 40 Lift and Nozzle Change Effects on Tail Shocks (LaNCETS) project, 26163, 261, 262, 263, 280n66, 280n70 Limon, Andy, 290 Ling-Temco-Vought, 50, 152 Little Boom, Project, 1314 Littleman, Project, 17 Lockheed Engineering & Sciences Company, 100101, 101, 1034 Lockheed Martin/Lockheed aircraft design and sonic boom minimization, 26869 Air Force Plant 42 facility, 205 AST program and model, 66, 82n6 FAA workshop presentation, 239n54 International Fighter Aircraft competition, 152 long-range-strike platform proposals, 139 N+2 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 257, 258, 26869, 269 N+3 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 258, 269, 269 noise mitigation program, lobbying for, 129 QSP design concept, 13435, 269 QSP program participation, 130 sonic boom conference participation, 270 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051 SSBD design and CFD analysis, 17475, 195n22 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20910
368
Index
SSBE ight-readiness reviews and ight clearance, 218 SSBE participation, 216 SSBJ development, interest in, 121 SSBJ studies and proposals, 128, 248 SST contract award, 46 SST proposal, 44, 48 Lockheed Martin/Lockheed Skunk Works (Lockheed Advanced Development Company) Air Force Plant 42 facility, 205 low-boom aircraft designs, 128, 249 QSP concept funding, 138 QSP design concept, 138, 139 QSP proposal and contract, 132, 138 SSBJ studies and proposals, 249 stealth technology development, 128 Lockheed YF-12 Blackbird. See YF-12 Blackbird Lomax, Harvard, 49 Lombardo, Joe, 268 London, bombing of and sonic bangs, 2 Long, Darryl Spike SSBD ight chronology, 29495 SSBD test ights, 205, 2067, 21213, 289 SSBE test pilot, 221 Los Angeles, public opinion surveys in, 2425 Low Boom/No Boom maneuver, 246, 25152, 26365, 265 Low-Frequency Noise Facility (Langley Research Center), 51, 51 Lundberg, B.K.O., 63n54 Lung, Joseph Liu, 74 Lux, David, 102 Lyman, Victor, 289 Lynn, Roger, 291
M
Mach, Ernst, 1 Mach number Mach cutoff signature, 26, 26, 54, 56, 64n75 naming of, 1
speed of sound, shock waves, and sonic booms, 12, 45, 2728nn58, 28n10 SSBD Mach number parameters and air temperature, 186, 205, 206, 207, 213 transonic ight, 2, 28n10 Mack, Robert aircraft design and sonic boom minimization, 7172, 7576, 7880, 79, 80 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 94, 99100, 107 low-boom, high-drag paradox, 75, 75 SCAR conference presentation, 75 wind tunnel research, limitations of, 97 Madison, Steve, 191, 287, 288, 290, 291 Magee, Todd, 174, 288, 289, 292 Magellan Navigation/Magellan Corporation, 199n74 Maglieri, Domenic J. AST/SCAR program role, 68 BREN Tower sonic boom research, 25 Eagle Engineering role, 97, 124 F-106 sonic boom study, 78 ight plan phases and severity of sonic booms, 43, 46 focused boom research, 23132 NSBIT program role, 89 photo of, 12 QSP program sonic boom strategy, 130 reports and technical publications by, 64n73 RPV ight tests, 101, 102, 115n50, 150 sonic boom conference participation, 45, 46 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14950 sonic boom research, 12 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 288 SSBE data collection and analysis role, 228, 230, 293 SSBE Working Group member, 289 SSBJ proposals, summary of, 124, 141n21 SST feasibility studies review, 43 XB-70 records, restoration of, 103 Malacrida, Robert Critter, 221, 290
369
Malone, Michael, 16263 Mangus, John, 292 Marconi, Frank, 74 Marine Corps, U.S. aggressor squadron at Yuma (Marine Fighter Training Squadron 40), 154, 185 F-5E aircraft, 154, 18586 Mars, mission to, 250 Marshall Space Flight Center, ix, 77 Martin, M.L. Roy airport runway length for landing F-5E, 184 experience and expertise of, 15556 ISSM ights, 15960 QSP program participation, 156 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 156, 158 SSBD design, 174 SSBD design success, interviews about, 214 SSBD F-5 functional check ights, 186 SSBD ight chronology, 29496 SSBD ight test plan development, 192 SSBD ight to Palmdale, ixx, 19091, 2035 SSBD ight to St. Augustine, 221, 227, 296 SSBD ground checkouts, 193 SSBD Mach number parameters and air temperature, 186, 205, 206 SSBD preliminary ight tests, 158 SSBD test ights, viii, 192, 205, 21112, 213, 215, 289 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 287 SSBE test ights, 22126, 241nn8182, 289 SSBE Working Group member, 288 storms near home of, 205 VFC-13 support for SSBD, 184 Martin Marietta Corporation, 128. See also Lockheed Martin/Lockheed Mascitti, Vincent R., 66, 68, 12526 Maskiell, Andrew, 292
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Gas Turbine Laboratory, 133 Maurice, Lourdes, 270 Mayower (Goodyear blimp), 15, 22, 217 McCleskey, Steve, 290 McCurdy, David Dave, 105, 287, 289, 292 McDonnell Douglas Boeing absorption of, 106, 132 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 107 International Fighter Aircraft competition, 152 low-boom aircraft congurations, 99 SSBJ development, interest in, 121 McDonnell Douglas Aerospace West, 103 McDonnell Douglas F-15E aircraft. See F-15E Strike Eagle McKee, William F. Bozo, 11 McKendrick, Nate, 291 McLean, F. Edward AST/SCAR program role, 66, 68 minimization research, 53 Request for Proposals for SST, 44 SCAT-15F concept, 45, 45 shock wave theory and sonic boom mitigation, 44, 49 sonic boom conference participation, 4546, 48 McLucas, John L., 85n50 McNamara, Robert, 11, 44 McPhillips, Darren, 290 MDBOOM program, 102, 11516n53 Memphis, 227, 296 Meredith, Keith B. CFD calculations correlation with ight test data, 23334, 233 ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 SSBD design, 172, 174 SSBD wind tunnel testing, 175 SSBD Working Group member, 287 SSBE Working Group member, 288
370
Index
meteors, 1 MetroLaser, Inc., 267 Meyer, Paul, 215 Meyer, Robert E., 250, 251 MiG-17 aircraft, 153 MiG-21 aircraft, 152, 153, 154 military aircraft bomber roadmap and technology development, 12829, 139 executive order for sonic boom reduction, 257 ghter aircraft and repeatable reduced sonic booms, 140n12 International Fighter Aircraft competition, 15253 long-range-strike platform study and proposals, 139 NSBIT program, 89 quiet supersonic aircraft and QSP program applications, 12830, 131, 13739 sonic boom prediction computer programs, 8990 supersonic aircraft development, 39, 5, 7, 12829 MIM3D-SB (Multigrid Implicit Marching in Three Dimensions for Sonic Booms) code, 96, 98, 99, 100, 100 Minneapolis, public opinion surveys in, 2425 Miramar Naval Air Station, 153, 154 modied linear theory (MLT), 95, 99, 1067 Moes, Timothy R. Tim, 102, 160, 262, 291 Mojave Airport, 184, 207, 211, 222 Mojave Desert, 2, 4, 107, 208 Molzahn, Leslie, 253, 256 momentum equation, 73, 74 Morgenstern, John CFD and sonic boom signature through turbulence, 22930, 230 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 107, 128 low-boom aircraft congurations, 9899
SR-71 low-boom modication and ight tests, 103 SSBD design, 17475 SSBD program role, 157, 288, 293 SSBE Working Group member, 289 SSBJ studies and proposals, 128 Morris, Sue, 287 Multigrid Implicit Marching in Three Dimensions for Sonic Booms (MIM3D-SB) code, 96, 98, 99, 100, 100 Muroc Army Aireld, 2, 28n7. See also Dryden Flight Research Center (DFRC)/Flight Research Center (FRC)/High-Speed Flight Research Station (HSFRS) Murray, James Jim, 209, 228, 292, 293
N
N+1 quiet supersonic business jet, 257, 269 N+2 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 257, 258, 26869, 269 N+3 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 258, 269, 269 N-102 aircraft, 151 N-156 aircraft, 151, 152 nacelles. See engine nacelles NASA Technical Report Server (NTRS), 30n23 National Academy of Sciences, 44, 50 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)/National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics (NACA) Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate (ARMD), 256, 25758 budget and funding for, 67, 250, 258, 260, 268, 271, 274n14, 284n107, 285n115 Center for AeroSpace Information (CASI), 30n23 honors and tributes for SSBD participants, 235 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 43, 50 low-boom aircraft design development, 250
371
Ofce of Advanced Research and Technology, 47, 49 Ofce of Aeronautics and Space Technology (OAST), 68 Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction (PARTNER) Center of Excellence, 248, 251 public response to sonic booms, awareness of, 44 purpose and mission of, 9 QSP capacity, range, and specications, 131 Research Announcements (NRAs), 258 Research Opportunities in Aviation (ROA) program, 258 Russian partnership with, 108 SSBD success, publicity and news release about, 21314 SSBJ studies and proposals, 12527, 127, 24950 SST research and development, 1012 transonic and supersonic ight development, 2 Turning Goals into Reality Partnership Award, 235 National Aero-Space Plane (NASP) funding for, 106 interest in and support for, 9091 Orient Express moniker, 90 technology development to support, 90, 91 X-30 NASP program, 9091 National Business Aviation Association (NBAA), 249 national defense aircraft and sonic booms, 79 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), BREN Tower research, 2526, 25, 26 National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago, 18 National Park Service Safe Slide project, 19 National Research Council, 109, 128, 136, 145n82, 270
National Sonic Boom Evaluation Ofce (NSBEO), 22 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224, 217 NATO. See North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Naval Air Systems Command (NAVAIR) NAS Patuxent River, 160, 18486, 191, 19293, 216 Naval Research Laboratory (NRL), 78 Naval Strike and Air Warfare Center, 154 Navier, Claude-Louis, 7374 Navier-Stokes code, 98, 114n32 Navier-Stokes equations, 7374 Navy, U.S. CRADA for F-5E SSBD, 18486, 216 F-5E aircraft, 148, 154, 156, 161, 178, 21112, 212 F-5E aircraft, museum home for, 235, 272 F-5 use by, ix Fighter Weapons School, 153 sonic boom research, 25, 36n82 Top Gun training, 153, 154 NCG. See Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) near-eld shock waves, 4041, 44, 4546, 49, 71, 103, 1067, 155, 23435, 234 Needleman, Kathy, 94, 100101, 101 Nehring, Dan, 290 Nellis Air Force Base, 13, 1056, 154 NetJets, 121, 215, 248 Nevada F-5E aggressor squadrons, 154 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms, 107 XB-70 Valkyrie sonic boom research, 21 Nevadomsky, John, 184, 203, 290 New York, Kennedy International Airport, 78 New York University (NYU), 47, 53, 71 NextGen air trafc control system, 268 NF-156F aircraft, 152 NFBoom program, 173
372
Index
Nixon, Richard M., 53, 67 Noffz, Gregory, 293 Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology (NSBIT) program, 89 North American Air Defense Command (NORAD), 79 North American Aviation SST proposal, 44 North American B-70 bomber, 10. See also XB-70 Valkyrie North American F-86 Sabre, 56 North American Rockwell SSBJ concept, 80, 80, 12526 North American XB-70 Valkyrie. See XB-70 Valkyrie North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Advisory Group for Aerospace Research & Development (AGARD), 4950 Joint Acoustic Propagation Experiment (JAPE), 1034 North Carolina, 78 Northrop, Jack, 151 Northrop Corporation, Grumman merger with, 107 Northrop F-5A/B Freedom Fighter, 152, 153 Northrop F-5 aircraft. See F-5 entries Northrop F-20 Tigershark, 156 Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit bomber, 129, 132, 205 Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Advanced Composites Manufacturing Center, 181, 181 Advanced Systems Development Center, 158 aircraft design competence, ix DARPA industry day participation, 132, 144n65 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 107 Integrated Systems Sector (ISS), ix, 132, 138, 144n66, 155, 156, 172, 188, 259 long-range-strike platform proposals, 139 low-speed wind tunnel, 18283, 183
merger to form, 107 QSP concept capacity, range, and specications, 138 QSP concept funding, 138 QSP concept model and wind tunnel testing, 139 QSP design concept, 120, 13435, 13639, 137 QSP partnership relationship, 132 QSP program and advances in research and skills, 139 QSP program participation, 130, 132 QSP proposal and contract, 13233, 136, 138, 144n68 QSP subcontractor relationships, 13233, 150 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 251 SCAMP project, 267 shaped sonic boom workshop, 15758 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14951, 151 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051 SSBD contract award, 138, 156, 172 SSBD funding, 138, 156, 172, 216 SSBD program role, ixx, x SSBD proposal, 14951, 151, 156 SSBD success, publicity and news release about, 21314 SSBD team members, 215 SSBE ight-readiness reviews and ight clearance, 218 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219, 227 SSBE participation, 21617 SSBJ studies and proposals, 248 stealth technology development, 132, 205 Switchblade oblique-wing study, 259 Teledyne Ryan purchase, 150 vehicle design team, 290 Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Palmdale
373
facilities at, 2045, 204 ight test support personnel, 291 SSBD ight to Palmdale, viii, ixxi, x, 190 91, 2035, 294 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 20910 Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Saint Augustine (NGSA) experience and expertise of technicians at, 184 F-5E maintenance at, 154 ight testing and telemetry instrumentation at, 190 ight test support personnel, 29091 Ingalls role at, 156 nose glove and fairings, fabrication and installation of, 18691, 187, 188, 190 selection of for SSBD modications, 18384 SSBD engine maintenance for maximum thrust, 206 SSBD ight to, 221, 227, 296 SSBD ight to Palmdale from, viii, ixxi, x, 19091, 2035, 294 SSBD maintenance at, 186 Northrop N-102 aircraft, 151 Northrop N-156 aircraft, 151, 152 Northrop NF-156F aircraft, 152 Northrop RF-5A Freedom Fighter, 152 Northrop RF-5E Tigereye, 150, 151, 153, 155 Northrop T-38 Talon. See T-38 Talon Northrop TZ-156 aircraft, 151, 152 Northrop YB-49 ying wing, 3 Northrop YF-5A aircraft, 152 Northrop YF-23 ghter, 132, 139, 155 Northrop YT-38 aircraft, 151 Norwood, Darrell, 199n70 nose design aerodynamics research and, 75 blunt-nosed aircraft, 71, 75, 75, 79 bow waves and, 75, 75 drag and, 79
extension to slow bow shock wave, 69 F-5E conguration, ix, x, x, 15051, 151, 155, 17175, 173, 174 Firebee II BQM-34E RVPs, 101, 102 loft, 171 low-boom, high-drag paradox, 75, 75, 91 sharp-nosed aircraft, 75, 75, 79 NPSOL code, 100, 100 NSBIT (Noise and Sonic Boom Impact Technology) program, 89 Numbers, Keith, 288, 289 Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation Facility, 95 numerical calculations correlation with ight test data, 4849
O
Obama administration and Barack Obama, 260 oblique-wing aircraft, 100, 123, 139, 259 Okada, Dustin, 292 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 Old Dominion University, 175 Olsen, Barbara, 185 Orbital Sciences Corporation, 199n74 organizations, professional and research, 39, 68 Overholt, Matthew, 94 ozone layer, 39
P
Pa-25 aircraft, 221, 22425, 290 Page, Juliet ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 MDBOOM program development, 102 SSBD design, 175 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 288 SSBE Working Group member, 289 Palmdale and Air Force Plant 42, 15, 2045, 204. See also Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Palmdale Parie, James, 292 Parker, Bob, 290
374
Index
Partnership for Air Transportation Noise and Emissions Reduction (PARTNER) Center of Excellence, 248, 251, 270 Patuxent River Naval Air Station, 160, 18486 Paulson, Allen E., 249 Paulson, J. Michael, 249 Pawlowski, Joseph W. CRADA for F-5E SSBD, 18485 F-5E and RF-5E development role, 153 honors and tributes for SSBD research, 235 ISSM ights, 160, 162 QSP and DARPA solicitations, coordination of responses to, 132 sonic boom demonstrator selection, 14950 SSBD design success, interviews about, 214 SSBD modications oversight role, 188 SSBD problems, delays, and miracles, 227 SSBD program role, 155, 157, 215, 287 SSBD proposal management, 149, 164n1 SSBD wind tunnel testing, 178 SSBD Working Group rules, 158 SSBE program role, 217, 288, 293 Pawnee Pa-25 aircraft, 221, 22425, 290 PBOOM program, 172, 173 PCBoom program, 89, 102, 173 PCBoom3 program, 8990, 102 PCBoom4 program, 28n8, 231, 252 Pedroza, Eddy, 290 Pendleton, Oregon, 25 Pennsylvania State University, 251, 265, 267, 270 people/humans acoustic vibration effects on, 257 attitudes and opinions about sonic booms, 12, 15, 17, 18, 2425, 26, 70, 1056, 107, 138, 215, 231, 248, 267, 271 indoor vibrations, annoyance about, 57, 58, 12324, 141n17 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2324 perceived noise decibel (PNdB), 2324
response to sonic booms, awareness of, 44 shock wave effects on, 12, 14, 76, 77 simulators for research on sonic boom effects on, 50, 105, 105, 215, 248, 258 sonic boom effects on, 13, 1415, 5354, 76, 77 startle response, 25, 103 White Sands Missile Range tests, 19 perceived noise decibel (PNdB), 2324 Philippines, 154 Pierce, Allan D., 91, 104 Pilon, Tony, 174, 288, 289, 293 Piper Colt aircraft, 17 Plotkin, Kenneth J. Ken bow and tail wave lowering and sonic boom reduction, 6364n65 education of, 77 focused boom research, 77, 23132 ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 MDBOOM program development, 102 PCBoom3 program, 8990 sonic boom minimization and demonstrator selection, 14950 SSBD data collection role, 211, 292 SSBD design, 174 SSBD success and attened signature shape, 212 SSBD Working Group member, 155, 288 SSBE data collection and analysis role, 228, 230, 293 SSBE Working Group member, 289 turbulence and sonic boom research, 54 Wyle Laboratories employment of, 77 Poncer, James, 288 Porter, Lisa, 251, 256 Porter, Tom, 288, 289 Powell, Clemans A., 91 Pratt & Whitney FAA workshop presentation, 239n54 N+2 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 26869, 269
375
QSP contract award, 133 QSP subcontractor relationship with NGC, 133 SSBJ studies and proposals, 248 PRC Kentron, 126. See also Kentron International SSBJ studies and proposals Princeton University, 47, 53, 71, 100, 134 Purifoy, Dana F-16XL shock wave measurement ights, 102, 159 ISSM ights, 159, 16061 landing gear problem, 222 SSBD chase plane pilot, 2067, 213, 289 SSBE chase plane pilot, 221, 222, 22526, 289
Q
QuakeGuard, 266 Quesada, Elword R. Pete, 11 Quiet Small Supersonic Transport (QSST), 249 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 251, 25256, 253, 254, 255, 276n29 Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) program birth of, 12931 budget and funding for, 129, 138, 139 capacity, range, and specications, 129, 131 civilian aviation applications, 131, 13738, 139 collaborative focus of, 134 construction materials, 138 contract and funding amounts, 138 contract awards, 13236, 144n68, 156, 171 contributions to technology and research, 139, 149 design and development of concepts, 120, 13439, 135, 137, 146n96, 269 engine technology solicitations and contracts, 133, 135, 135, 13637, 137 FAA workshop presentation, 215, 239n54 ight chronology, 29496
goal of, 129, 131, 136, 139 industry participants, 130, 13236 management of, 130, 134, 139 military applications, 12830, 131, 13739 overight regions and unrestricted operations, 131, 215 overpressure reduction requirements, 131 Phase I, 130, 13236, 135, 137, 171 Phase II, 130, 135, 13639, 137 Phase III, 136 phasing out of, 139 progress on concepts and technology development, 136, 247 proposals and contract awards, 13236, 144n68, 156 sonic boom minimization and noise reduction solicitations and contracts, 13031, 133 34, 13536, 135, 137, 137, 139 sonic boom minimization success, 139 timeline and program activities, 13536, 135 See also Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD) program
R
Raytheon Corporation FAA workshop presentation, 239n54 QSP concept funding, 138 QSP design concept, 137, 139 QSP partnership relationship with NGC, 132 QSP subcontractor relationship with NGC, 133 Raytheon Aircraft Company, 133, 144n69 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051 SSBD data-collection ight chase planes, 210, 212 SSBE participation, 216 SSBJ studies and proposals, 248 Raytheon Premier I aircraft, 210, 212 Read, David, 228
376
Index
Reagan administration and Ronald Reagan, 81, 111n9, 126 remotely piloted vehicles (RPVs), 101, 102, 107, 115n50, 130, 150, 155 Reno Aeronautics Corporation, 13334, 249 Research Opportunities in Aviation (ROA) program, 258 Reynolds, Osborne, 59n3 Reynolds number, 40, 59n3 RF-5A Freedom Fighter, 152 RF-5E Tigereye, 150, 151, 153, 155 Rhoades, Carrie, 262 Richwine, David Dave, 157, 160, 287 Rider, Chuck, 291 rise time, 5657, 57, 6970, 72, 104, 231, 252 Robins, A. Warner SCAT-15F concept, 45, 45 SSBJ study and proposal, 126 supersonic transport research and development, 10 Rochat, Judy, 228 Rogers Dry Lake, 2, 217, 222 Rolls-Royce N+2 quiet supersonic airplane concept, 269, 269 Rolls-RoyceSnecma Olympus 493 engine, 125 SSBJ studies and proposals, 248 Rood, Rich, 292 Ross, Jim, 292 Roswell, x, 294 Roussel, Larry, 290 Royal Air Force, 45, 8 Rung, Corry, 291 Runyan, H.L., 53 Russia aircraft industry and Cold War, 125 ghter aircraft from, 154 NASA partnership with, 108
Ryan BQM-34E Firebee II remotely piloted vehicles, 101, 102, 107, 115n50, 130, 150, 155
S
SABER (Small Airborne Boom Event Recorder) device, 210, 21920, 225, 227, 230 Safe Slide, Project, 19 St. Augustine and St. Johns County Airport, 184, 203, 227. See also Northrop Grumman Corporation (NGC) Saint Augustine (NGSA) Salamone, Joe SSBD program role, 288, 292 SSBE program role, 228, 230, 289, 293 Sandberg, Jim, 185 Scaled Composites, 183, 186 Schein, David Dave, 228, 288, 292, 293 Schkolnik, Gerard, 256, 289 schlieren imaging system photos of shock waves, 104, 105 Scholz, Al, 290, 291 Schueler, Kurt, 288 Schwartz, Ira R., 49, 52, 53 Scott Air Force Base, 17 Seebass, A. Richard aerodynamic minimization calculations, computer program for, 74 caustics and focused boom research, 77 computer program named after, 172 contributions of, 7071 death of, 134 education and career of, 140n1, 142n38 minimization research, 46, 53 minimization theory, conrmation of, 212 minimization theory and aircraft design, 5758, 6971, 7880, 122, 12324, 134, 141n17 photo of, 70 shock wave characteristics research, 54, 55 sonic boom conference participation, 46, 48 SSBJ development, support for, 121, 122
377
SSBJ studies and proposals, 128 supersonic overight regions, limitations on, 5455 von Krmn Institute presentation, 121, 122 SEEB program, 172, 173 Sei, Vince Opus, 221, 290 Seismic Warning Systems, Inc, 266, 267 Seymour, Scott, 188 shadow zones, 49 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstration (SSBD) program aircraft design based on, 271 budget and funding for, 138, 156, 172, 216 congurations and options for demonstration, 155 contributions to technology and research, 23435 data collection team, x, 29293 data sharing requirement, 157, 17475 environmental concerns at test area, 2089, 211 ight and data-collection instruments, 15758, 15960, 161, 18990, 189, 193, 2067, 22021 goal of, xxi ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 206, 20710, 210, 212, 213, 237n26 honors and tributes given to participants, 235 ISSM ights, 158, 15963 lessons learned, 216, 267 management team, 155, 157, 287 NGC contract award, 138, 156, 172 NGC proposal, 14951, 151, 156 probe aircraft, 158 problems, delays, and miracles, 188, 190 91, 22627 proposals and contract awards, 156 publicity and news release about, 21314 QSP program and, x, 135, 136, 149
reports and technical publications, 229, 300301 selection of demonstrator aircraft, 14951, 151 success of, 212, 212, 21314, 216, 234 35, 234, 247, 250, 272 test pilots, 289 timeline and program activities, 135, 136 Working Group formation and membership, 15558, 172, 17475, 28788 workshop on, 15758 See also F-5 Shaped Sonic Boom Demonstrator (SSBD) Shaped Sonic Boom Experiment (SSBE) audible difference in loudness of sonic booms, 23031 CFD calculations correlation with ight test data, 23334 closeout workshop, 229 conference and report presentations, 229, 242nn99100 contributions to technology and research, 23435 data analysis and signicance of ndings, 22935, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234 data collection equipment, arrangements, and capabilities, 217, 21821, 218, 219, 220, 22324, 225, 225, 22729, 230 data collection team, 227, 228, 293 ight-readiness reviews and ight clearance, 218 ight test area, 217, 22122 ight test plan and number of ights, 216, 21718 ight tests, 22127, 226, 230, 241nn81 82, 29596 ight tests, length of, 222 ight tests and weather, 226, 22930 functional check ights, 222 funding for, 216 goal of, 216
378
Index
highest airspeed ight test, 224, 241n81 honors and tributes given to participants, 235 lessons learned, 267 near-eld shock wave research, 23233, 232, 233 preparations for, 21621 program management team, 21617, 288 pushover maneuver and focused booms, 217, 222, 223, 224, 23132, 231 QSP program and, 136 reports and technical publications, 300301 success of, 272 test pilots, 28990 timeline and program activities, 135, 136 turbulence and sonic boom research, 217, 225, 22931, 230, 232 Working Group formation and membership, 21617, 229, 28889 Shepherd, Kevin, 105, 248, 287, 289 Sherman, Mark, 290 Shin, Jaiwon, 258 SHOCKN code, 108 shock waves acoustic rays, 54, 55, 56, 64n68, 71, 231, 231 aircraft design to reduce, xxi, 6, 912, 4250, 6972, 72 air pressure and pressure changes, 3, 3, 16, 16 animals, effects on, 12, 76, 77, 107 atmospheric conditions and visibility of, 16162 bow waves, 34, 3, 16, 16, 41, 45, 54, 72, 75, 75, 79, 23435 CFD and shock wave calculations, 9698, 97 characteristics of, 54, 64n68 compression lift and B-70 design, 10 diffraction of into shadow zones, 49 digital images of, 117n63
expansion of and energy dissemination, 54, 55, 64n68 F-5 shock waves, 286 far eld, 4041, 44, 71, 108, 234 attop signature, 47, 47, 79 in-ight measurement of, 4, 16, 16, 22, 266 freezing signature through effects in atmosphere, 49 lowering bow and tail waves and sonic boom reduction, 54, 6364n65 multiple waves, 16, 40 near eld, 4041, 44, 4546, 49, 71, 103, 1067, 155, 23435, 234 near-eld shock wave experiments, 103, 155, 23233, 232, 233 nonlinear shock wave behavior, 49 N-wave signature, 16, 16, 2324, 24 N-wave signature and acceptable noise level, 5354 N-wave signature and shock cone, 34, 3, 6, 64n68 overpressure measurements, 1319, 21 overpressure prediction, 57 overpressure reduction solutions, 42, 4547, 48, 5658, 57, 70, 79, 79 people, effects on, 12, 14, 76, 77 phantom body to eliminate, 57, 69, 76 photos of, 1 prediction of evolution of, 56 quiet sonic boom signature, conditions for, 268 research on, 12 schlieren imaging system photos of, 104, 105 speed of sound, sonic booms, and, 12, 35, 2728nn58, 28n10 structures, effects on, 12, 76, 77 successful attened signature shape, 212, 212, 21314, 216, 23435, 234 tail waves, 34, 3, 6, 16, 16, 54, 79 temperature and, 12, 18, 27n2, 78
379
wind, N-wave signatures, and strenth of sonic booms, 19, 19, 56 wind tunnel research, 12, 17, 4042, 42, 59n4 Short Takeoff and Landing (STOL) Maneuvering Technology Demonstration, 262 Shrout, Barrett L., 4546 Siclari, Michael, 96, 98, 100, 107 Silva, Perry, 291 Simmons, Frank, III, 253, 256 simulators and laboratory devices improvement of through CFD, 25758 Langley experiments and research, 5052, 51, 248 mobile sonic boom simulator, 248, 270 Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation Facility, 95 scope of research with, 12 sonic boom effects, research on, 76, 105, 105, 215, 248, 25758 Skoshi Tiger (Little Tiger) evaluation, 152, 153 Skyshield I air exercise, 7 Skyshield II air exercise, 78 Skyshield III air exercise, 8 Small Airborne Boom Event Recorder (SABER) device, 210, 21920, 225, 227, 230 Smith, Leslie, 293 Smith, Mark nose glove and fairings, fabrication of, 181 SSBD modications role, 186, 187, 190, 215, 290 Smith, Richard G., III, 215 Smolka, Jim ISSM preliminary ight, 159 LaNCETS project, 26263, 263 Low Boom/No Boom maneuver, 252 Quiet Spike retractable nose-boom concept, 253, 255 Quiet Supersonic Platform (QSP) program, 256 SSBD chase plane pilot, 205, 206, 289
SSBE chase plane pilot, 221, 289 Society of Automotive Engineers, 242n99 Society of Experimental Test Pilots, 242n99, 25556 Soltani, Aziz, 290 sonic bangs, 60n12 Sonic Boom Mitigation Project, 25051, 260, 275n22 sonic boom research advances and progress in, 1067, 27172 Air Force role in, 1319 animals, effects on, 12, 14, 24, 76, 77, 89 atmospheric effects, measurement of, 1516, 18, 18, 2324, 24 atmospheric effects, understanding of, 56 bow and tail wave lowering and sonic boom reduction, 54, 6364n65 BREN Tower research, 2526, 25, 26, 54 caustics, 26, 26, 49, 54, 55, 77, 26667, 282n87 CFD and sonic boom minimization research, 9394, 95101 charts for estimating sonic booms, 81 Colorado Rockies sonic boom research, 19 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 computer programs and data analysis for boom minimization, 4445, 46, 47, 4849, 56, 71, 72, 76, 8990, 102, 11516n53, 172, 173 conferences and symposia, 4344, 4550, 5253, 91, 9293, 106, 11819n83, 229, 242nn99100, 27071 focused boom research, 77, 8990, 266 67, 282n87 focused boom research and pushover maneuver, 217, 222, 223, 224, 23132, 231 funding for, 7273, 79 future research area recommendations, 10910
380
Index
heroic era of, 25 HSR program contributions to, 10810, 118n78, 11819n83 information sharing and research partnerships, 39, 43, 50 isolated areas for, 1617 light aircraft, effects on, 17 low-boom, high-drag paradox, 75, 75, 91 low-boom designs, practical applications for, 9293 low-boom transport feasibility study, 72 low-boom X-plane, 136, 24950, 251, 270, 271 minimization, rst experimental attempt at, 41 minimization and aircraft design, xxi, 6, 912, 4250, 53, 53, 5658, 6973, 72, 7576, 7880, 79, 80, 27071, 271, 285n112 minimization and ight proles, 5657, 64n75 minimization and HSCT program, 9195, 93, 94, 1067, 128 minimization of sonic booms, brainpower and research for, 4250 minimization theory, conrmation of, 212 minimization theory, revision of, 7476 minimization theory and aircraft design, 5758, 6971, 7880, 122, 12324, 134, 141n17 NASA role in, 9, 12 NASA specialized research programs, 47 Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 people, effects on, 13, 1415, 5354, 76, 77 perceived noise decibel (PNdB), 2324 prediction and minimization techniques, advances in, 7481, 85n43 QSP program, 13031, 13334, 13536, 135, 137, 137, 139
reliability of outcomes of, 55 reports and technical publications on, 5556, 56, 64n73, 73, 229, 300301 SCR/SCAR/AST program, 6869 SST research and, 1012, 13, 17, 19, 26, 5558, 56, 64n73 strength of sonic booms produced, 15 structures, effects on, 12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 24, 76, 77, 89, 26366, 264 surveys of public opinion, 12, 15, 17, 18, 2425, 26, 1056, 107, 138, 215, 267 White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819 See also ight tests; simulators and laboratory devices; wind tunnels Sonic Boom Resistant Earthquake Warning System (SonicBREWS), 266 sonic booms acceptability of, responsibility for, 125 aerodynamics and, 1112 altitude and production of, 4, 1516, 108 atmospheric conditions and production of, 1516, 56, 108 audible differences in loudness, 212, 214, 23031 carpets, 2, 8, 18, 18, 21, 31n32, 52, 55 causes of, 1, 35 concept and denition of, 60n12 control and abatement rules and regulations, 4950, 53, 6869, 7273, 77, 78, 82n7, 122, 21415, 248, 24950 damage claim amounts, 17, 18, 19 damage from and complaints about, 49, 8, 17, 24, 25, 31n32, 52 double-boom sounds, 34 drag and, 139 ghter aircraft and repeatable reduced sonic booms, 140n12 ight plan phases and severity of, 45, 8, 1516, 21, 31n32, 39, 41, 43, 46, 122, 126, 231, 26667 human-produced, 1, 2, 27n5
381
inescapability of, 46, 47 lift and, 6, 15, 16, 123, 139, 252 natural, 1 N-wave signature, 16, 16, 2324, 24 N-wave signature and acceptable noise level, 5354 N-wave signature and shock cone, 34, 3, 6 prediction of evolution of, 56 pressure spikes and noise from, 4 quiet sonic boom signature, conditions for, 268 secondary booms, 78 speed of sound, shock waves, and, 12, 35, 2728nn58, 28n10 SST sonic boom level goal, 39 super booms, 6, 77 supersonic ight and, 2, 34 theoretical ways of minimization, 46 turbulence and, 18, 18, 22, 26, 49, 54, 56, 1035, 104, 108, 217, 225, 22931, 230, 232 weight of aircraft and, 15, 123, 139 wind, N-wave signatures, and strenth of sonic booms, 19, 19, 56 Sonic Booms on Big Structures (SonicBOBS), 26566 Sonic Boom Symposium (ASA), 4546 SONIC program, 48 Sorensen, Hans, 71 sound, speed of rate of, 12, 27n2 shock waves, sonic booms, and, 12, 35, 2728nn58, 28n10 temperature and, 12, 27n2, 86n52 sound barrier, breaking of, 2, 28n7 South Carolina, 78 Soviet Union, 9 Space Defense Initiative, 111n9 Space Shuttle/Space Transportation System (STS) budget and funding for, 250
ceramic tile use on, 61n37 environmental impact statement, 7677 environmental impact statement and sonic booms, 85n43 high-speed frictionless ow computations and aerodynamics of, 74 sonic boom predictions, 7677 X-15 sonic boom research, 33n53 Space Technology Program, 285n115 Spain Construcciones Aeronauticas Sociedad Anonima (CASA), 124, 141n22 F-5 aircraft production, 152 spark-discharge system, 50 SPLTFLOW-3D code, 195n22 Spooner, John, 291 Springs, Tony, 144n65 SR-71 Blackbird Boomle database information, 111n2 JAPE ight tests, 104 low-boom modication and ight tests, 88, 1023, 103 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 shock wave measurement ights, 1078, 108, 159, 217 sonic boom research, 21, 2425, 70 training program, 24 Srenco, Ron, 290 stability, 40 Stack, John P., 12 stainless steel construction materials, 43 Stanford University, 133, 134 Stencel, Larry, 291 Stevens, Ted, 129 Stokes, George Gabriel, 7374 Strategic Air Command (SAC) air defense aircraft and exercises, 79 Community and Structural Response Program (Bongo), 17, 18 SR-71 Blackbird training program, 24
382
Index
structures (buildings) acoustic vibration effects on, 257 indoor vibrations, annoyance about, 57, 58, 12324, 141n17 shock wave effects on, 12, 76, 77 simulators for research on sonic boom effects on, 50 sonic boom effects on, 12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 24, 76, 77, 89, 26366, 264 Stuart, Jerry, 290 Stucky, Mark Forger, 221, 228, 290 Su-51 supersonic business jet, 125 Sukhoi Design Bureau Gulfstream Aerospace relationship with, 125 HISAC participation, 248, 268 SSBJ studies and proposals, 125 Sullivan, Brenda audible difference in loudness of sonic booms, 23031 sonic boom simulation research, 105, 215, 248 SSBE data collection and analysis role, 228, 230, 293 SSBE Working Group member, 289 Superboom Caustic Analysis and Measurement Program (SCAMP), 26667, 282n87 super booms, 6, 77 Supersonic Acoustics Signature Simulator II (SASSII), 270 Supersonic Aerospace International (SAI), 249, 259, 274n9 Supersonic Aircraft Noise Mitigation program, 129 supersonic business jets (SSBJs) capacity, range, and specications, 12124 concepts, studies, and proposals for, 80, 80, 12428, 141n21, 215, 24751, 257, 268, 270 funding for development of, 127 indoor vibrations and design of, 12324, 141n17 N+1 quiet supersonic business jet, 257, 269
noise and sonic boom rules and regulations and viability of, 21415, 248, 259 QSP design concept, 139 QSP program applications, 131 routing of, 124 SCAMP project, 26667, 282n87 sonic boom minimization designs, 12124, 128, 24951 support for and interest in development of, 12124, 127, 128, 24751 US and NASA role in development of, 122, 24950 The Whisper SSBJ, 259 Supersonic Commercial Air Transport (SCAT) design and development of, 912, 11 ight plan phases and severity of sonic booms, 41 SCAT-4, 10, 11 SCAT-15, 10, 11, 69 SCAT-15F, 45, 45 SCAT-16, 10, 11, 44 SCAT-17, 10, 11, 44 sonic boom research and, 26 wing congurations, 10, 11, 45, 45 Supersonic Cruise Industry Alliance (SCIA), 248 Supersonic Cruise Research (SCR)/Supersonic Cruise Aircraft Research (SCAR)/Advanced Supersonic Technology (AST) program aircraft design criteria, 69 AST model, 66, 82n6 ATF-100, 69 cancellation of, 67, 8081 conference at Langley, 75, 80 establishment of, 67 focus of, 6768, 73 funding for, 69, 8081 naming of, 67 organization of, 68 reports and technical publications, 73 sonic boom research, 6873 SSBJ study and proposal, 12526
383
supersonic ight advances and progress in research, 10810, 27172 conferences and symposia, 4344, 4550, 5253, 91, 106, 11819n83, 27071 design and development of aircraft for, 2, 39, 5, 7, 75, 10910 distances own by early supersonic aircraft, 8 executive order for R&D plan, 257 ight plan phases and severity of sonic booms, 45, 8, 1516, 21, 31n32, 39, 41, 43, 46, 122, 126, 231, 26667 funding for research, 67 future research area recommendations, 10910 low-boom aircraft congurations, 99 low-boom transport feasibility study, 72 NASA research on, 12 noise and sonic boom control and abatement rules and regulations and prohibition of, 4950, 53, 6869, 7273, 77, 78, 82n7, 122, 21415, 248, 24950, 259 operating costs of aircraft, 75 overight regions, limitations on, 5455, 6869, 7273, 75, 77, 82n7, 91, 92, 106, 107, 21415, 271 renewed interest in and support for, 90 sonic booms and, 2, 34 viability of large aircraft for, 122 See also High-Speed Civil Transport (HSCT); High-Speed Research (HSR) program; supersonic business jets (SSBJs); Supersonic Commercial Air Transport (SCAT) Supersonics Project, 25661, 265, 26667, 26869, 285n115 Supersonic Transport (SST) aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 50, 78, 12223 approval for development of, 12 cancellation of, 55, 57, 67
computer programs and data analysis for design of, 4445, 46, 47, 4849 criticism of and opposition to, 5255, 63n54 data and scientic knowledge from program, 26 design and development of, 1012, 39 design of for sonic boom minimization, 4250, 5355, 53 environmental impact of, 39 feasibility studies review, 4344 funding for, 1011, 53, 55, 122 materials for and construction of, 43 passenger loads to support, 122 Presidential Advisory Committee (PAC) for, 11 Request for Proposals to aircraft industry, 44 sonic boom carpets, 52 sonic boom level goal, 39 sonic boom research and, 1012, 13, 17, 19, 26, 5558, 56, 64n73 support for development of, 1011 test beds, 10, 20 wind tunnel research and design of, 4142 See also Concorde airliner; Tu-144 aircraft Supersonic Vehicles Technology program, 215 Swain, John, 228, 292, 293 swept wing aircraft, 6, 72 Switchblade oblique-wing study, 139, 259 Switzerland F-5 aircraft production, 153 F-5E buy back from, 156, 185, 186, 203
T
T-38 Talon Boomle database information, 111n2 capabilities, range, and specications, ix, 151, 154 DACT and aggressor squadrons, 154 design and development of, 151 JAPE ight tests, 104 production of, 151, 152
384
Index
shock wave photos with schlieren imaging system, 104, 105 SSBD ight chronology, 294 SSBD ight to Palmdale, ixx, 19091, 2035, 294 test pilot, 289 Taiwan F-5 aircraft production, 153 F-5E buy back from, 203 Taylor, Albion D., 89 TEAM (Three-dimensional Euler/Navier-Stokes Aerodynamic Method) code, 98, 114n32 Techsburg, 133 Teets, Ed, 292 Teledyne Ryan, 150 temperature altitude, atmospheric changes, and, 6970 N-wave shape and overpressure and, 15 shock waves and, 12, 18, 27n2, 78 simulators and laboratory devices for research on, 50 sonic boom behavior and variations in, 56, 78, 86n52 sonic boom research, overpressure measurements, and, 18 speed of sound and, 12, 27n2, 86n52 SSBD Mach number parameters and air temperature, 186, 205, 206, 207, 213 Tetra Tech, 267 TF-15A trainer, 262 The Right Stuff (Wolfe), 2 thermodynamics, advances in, 74 The Whisper SSBJ, 259 Thomas, Carla, 213, 292 Thomas, Charles, 71, 76, 8990, 96, 98, 102 Thomson, Michael Mike, 206, 213, 226, 262, 263, 291 Thorne, William W.D., 206, 291 Three-dimensional Euler/Navier-Stokes Aerodynamic Method (TEAM) code, 98, 114n32
thunder, 1 Tinker Air Force Base Oklahoma City Public Reaction Study (Bongo II), 18 SSBD ights, ixx, 294, 296 titanium construction materials, 43 Toberman, Michael, 253 Tonopah, Nevada, 14 Top Gun training, 153, 154 Tracing Rays and Aging Pressure Signatures (TRAPS) program, 89, 102 TRACOR, Inc., 24 Tracy, Richard, 249 TRANAIR code, 114n32 transonic ight design of aircraft for, 6 development of aircraft for, 2 Mach number, 2, 28n10 Transportation, U.S. Department of (DOT), 11, 67, 227 Transport Canada, 251 TRAPS (Tracing Rays and Aging Pressure Signatures) program, 89, 102 Triumph Aerospace Systems, 266 troposphere, 27n2 Trott, Jay, 144n65 Trout, Martin, 291 Tschida, Thomas, 292 Tu-20 Bear bombers, 78 Tu-144 aircraft, 75, 108 turbulence and sonic booms, 18, 18, 22, 26, 49, 54, 56, 1035, 104, 108, 108, 217, 225, 22931, 230, 232 Turning Goals into Reality Partnership Award (NASA), 235 TZ-156 aircraft, 151, 152
U
Ueda, Jim, 290 Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel (Ames), 95, 96
385
Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel (Langley), 38, 7880, 95, 99100 United Kingdom. See Great Britain (United Kingdom) United States (US) aerospace and technological developments, 9 aircraft engine noise and sonic boom challenges, 50 economic and scal problems in, 25960, 271 United States Air Force Museum, 21 University of Arizona, 140n1 University of California, 270 University of Chicago, National Opinion Research Center, 18 University of Colorado, 47, 134, 140n1, 142n38 University of Southern California, 242n99 University of Toronto, 76, 105 UPS and UPS3D parabolized Navier-Stokes codes, 98, 99, 114n32
W
Walkden, Frank, 6, 16, 30n25, 41, 43, 252 Walker, Steven H. Steve honors and tributes for SSBD research, 235 QSP program management, 139 SSBD ight tests, 207 SSBD program role, 157, 287 Walker Air Force Base, x Wallops Island Station schlieren imaging system photos of shock waves at, 104, 105 sonic boom research, 13, 14 sonic boom research on structures, 17 tower for sonic boom research, 26 Washington, DC, Dulles International Airport, 78 Wasson, Rich, 293 waveform parameter program, 71, 76, 8990, 96, 98, 102 Waveforms and Sonic Boom Perception and Response (WSPR), 267 WC-135B aircraft, 22 Webb, James, 11 Weidlinger Associates, 133 weight of aircraft and sonic booms, 15, 123, 139 Weinstein, Leonard, 104, 105, 117n63 Weir, Tom, 207 Western USA Sonic Boom Survey, 1056, 107 Westra, Bryan, 293 Whelan, David, 131 Whitcomb, Richard, 6, 10, 46 White House executive order for aeronautics R&D plan, 257 Ofce of Science and Technology (OST), 22, 90 White Sands Missile Range tests, 1819, 1034 Whitham, Gerald B., 34, 6, 16, 29n17, 30n25, 40, 41, 43, 56 Wilcox, Nancy, 292 Williams Air Force Base, x
V
V-2 ballistic missile, 2 Vadnais, Jay, 172 Vadyak, Joe, 288, 289 Valiant Air Command Museum, 235, 272 Vandenberg Air Force Base, 228 variable cycle engine (VCE) program, 68, 122 Vartio, Eric, 290, 291 Veitch, Lisa, 185, 287 Vietnam War and aircraft development and deployment, 15254 Visco, Christine, 291 von Krmn, Theodore, 51 von Krmn Institute for Fluid Dynamics, 121, 132 VORLAX methodology, 173 Vulcan bombers, 8
386
Index
wind, N-wave signatures, and strenth of sonic booms, 19, 19, 56 wind tunnel models mounting of, 41, 176, 176, 178 precision of, 41 Reynolds number and scaling of, 40 size and characteristics of, 4041, 180 SSBD model, 170, 17576, 176, 178, 18283, 183, 198n53 XB-70 model, 42 wind tunnel research accuracy and reliability of, 4142 benets and importance of, 40 CFD calculations correlation with wind tunnel data, 96, 9798, 17580, 177, 18283 far elds, 4041 ight test data correlation with wind tunnel data, 4142, 4445, 47 HSCT sonic boom minimization research, 9495, 94, 96 Langley sonic boom research, 12, 38, 47, 47 limitations of, 9798 low-boom models and boom minimization research, 7880, 79, 99100 near elds, 4041, 4546 near-eld shock wave research, 71 QSP concept model and wind tunnel testing, 139 SCAT-15F concept, 45 shock waves, 12, 17, 4042, 42, 59n4 sonic booms, 4, 12, 4042, 42, 59n4 SSBD program, 170, 17580, 176, 177, 18283, 183 wind tunnels Ames Supersonic Wind Tunnel, 139 Ames Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, 95, 96 Langley 4-by-4-foot Supersonic Pressure Tunnel, 17, 4041, 59n4 Langley Unitary Plan Wind Tunnel, 38, 7880, 95, 99100 NGC low-speed tunnel, 18283, 183
wings arrow-wing congurations, 42, 45, 45, 72, 72, 79, 80, 80, 126 boom minimization designs, 72, 72, 7880, 79, 80 cranked-arrow-wing conguration, 102, 121, 125, 13839 delta-wing congurations, 44, 48, 53, 72, 79 design of for supersonic ight, 6 laminar ow technology development and testing, 283n94 NGC concept design, 13839 oblique-wing aircraft research, 100, 123, 139, 259 SCAT congurations, 10, 11, 45, 45 swept wing aircraft, 6, 72 Switchblade oblique-wing study, 139, 259 variable sweep wings, 12627, 127 Wlezien, Richard Fundamental Aeronautics Program, 256 honors and tributes for SSBD research, 235 low-boom aircraft design development, 250 NASA Headquarters role, 139 QSP concept designs, 135 QSP contract award criteria, 134 QSP program management, 130 QSP program progress, 136 SSBD design review, 185 SSBD design success, 214 SSBD program role, 157, 287 Wolfe, Tom, 291 Wolz, Rob, 288, 289 World War II, 2, 27n5 Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, 4, 89 WSPR (Waveforms and Sonic Boom Perception and Response), 267 Wyle Laboratories In-Home Noise Generation/Response System (IHONORS), 105, 105 ISSM ight data analysis, 16263 MDBOOM program, 102, 11516n53
387
PCBoom program, 173 Plotkin employment at, 77 QSP subcontractor relationship with NGC, 132, 133, 150 SCAMP project, 267 sonic boom expertise at, 133 sonic boom minimization and demonstrator selection, 14950 SSBD design, 175 SSBD ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 208, 209 SSBE ground sensors and data-collection equipment, 219, 227 SSBE participation, 216 surveys of public opinion about sonic booms, 107 WSPR project, 267
termination of program, 21 wind tunnel model, 42 XB-70-1 test bed, 20, 21, 22 XB-70-2 test bed, 20, 21, 22 XF-104 Starghter, 4 X-plane, low-boom, 136, 24950, 251, 270, 271 XS-1/X-1 aircraft, xii, 2, 3, 2728nn68, 28n10, 209, 256, 266
Y
Yasaki, Chris, 290 Yazejian, Joan, 190, 293 YB-49 ying wing, 3 Yeager, Chuck, 2, 2728nn68, 209, 258 Yeager, Larry, 74 YF-5A aircraft, 152 YF-12 Blackbird National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 SCR/SCAR/AST program ights, 77 sonic boom research, 21, 23 YF-23 ghter, 132, 139, 155 YF-100 Super Sabre, 4 YF-102 Delta Dagger, 4 YF-105 Thunderchief, 4 YO-3A aircraft, 108, 108, 217 York, Tom, 290 YT-38 aircraft, 151 Yuma Marine Corps Air Station, 154, 185
X
X-15 aircraft shock wave research in supersonic pressure tunnel, 17 sonic boom research, 16, 33n53 Space Shuttle and sonic boom research, 76 termination of program, 21 X-30 NASP program, 9091 X-54A concept, 259, 270 XB-70 Valkyrie characteristics and capabilities, 20 data and records, restoration and digitization of, 103 design and development of, 10 National Sonic Boom Evaluation Program, 2224 N-wave signature, 2324, 24 sonic boom carpets, 21 sonic boom research, 2021, 3435nn65 66, 57 SST design proposal, basis for, 44 SST test beds, 10, 20 stainless steel skin, 43
Z
ZEPHYRUS code, 108
388