Companies, countries developing 'hypersonic' travel – more than 6x the speed of sound Texas-based Venus Aerospace was selected by Nasa to continue work on Rotating Detonation Rocket Engines ...
Boom Supersonic envisions an aircraft capable of cruising at Mach 1.7, or nearly 2,100 km/h, at an altitude of 18,000 m, with up to 80 passengers on board. Its appearance is reminiscent of ...
The F-21 Kfir, developed by Israel in the 1970s, is a Mach 2 fighter jet based on the French Dassault Mirage 5. After France ...
This warbird was the first Mach 2 aircraft acquired by the Israeli Air Force in the 1960s. The delta-shaped bird took flight for the IAF in 1975. The backstory behind the development of the Kfir ...
Türkiye's homegrown light attack aircraft Hürjet, developed by Turkish Aerospace Industries (TAI), completed on Monday its ...
One of the newest aircraft to enter service in the U.S. Air Force is the F-35 Lightning II, which is a fifth-generation ...
Boom Supersonic is halfway along in the ten test flights of the proof of concept XB-1 before supersonic flight.
In October 1967, during the Vietnam War, a CIA-operated A-12 "Oxcart" spy plane flew high-speed reconnaissance missions over ...
In the 77 years since Captain Chuck Yeager flew faster than the speed of sound, supersonic travel has transformed how we fly.
Red Oak (Texas) and Querétaro (Mexico) have begun to manufacture key components for the 1 st Global 8000 production aircraft* ...
Soar, developed by the U.S. Air Force and Boeing from 1959 to 1963, was designed to be a pioneering hypersonic space plane ...
While the latest fifth-generation fighters, like the F-35 or F-22, prioritize stealth and technology, some of the older ...