快猫短视频

Scramjet’s death plunge puts solar probe on hold

NASA has postponed this week鈥檚 launch of its HESSI solar flare probe while
experts work out why an experimental hypersonic aircraft launched on a similar
Pegasus rocket failed last weekend.

NASA had to destroy what could have been the world鈥檚 fastest jet aircraft,
the X-43a, just minutes before it was due to attempt a Mach 7 flight. The X-43a
is powered by an air-breathing jet engine called a supersonic combustion ramjet,
or 鈥渟cramjet鈥. Instead of using compressor blades, a ramjet uses its speed to
compress oxygen from the atmosphere. A scramjet does this at supersonic speeds
and burns hydrogen fuel. But to reach such speeds, the X-43a has to sit on the
nose-cone of a modified Pegasus rocket, which is itself carried aloft by a B-52
bomber.

But the Pegasus careered off course after separating from the B-52, tumbling
end over end. NASA is now 鈥渨orking to determine if there are any associated
technical issues鈥 between the X-43a failure and the Pegasus鈥攆rom Orbital
Sciences of Dulles, Virginia鈥攖hat will launch HESSI. Prior to the X-43a
incident, three larger Pegasus rockets have failed in the last 12 years.

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