Return of the Biplane
Shigeru Obayashi/Tohoku University
In the 1930s engineer Adolf Busemann conceived of a supersonic
biplane that produced no sonic boom—the shock waves would bounce off the
plane’s two wings at opposing angles, nullifying each other. But the
design created so much drag that the plane wouldn’t have been able to
fly. Now two groups are trying to improve the concept with computer
simulations. Engineers at Japan’s Tohoku University devised wings with
shifting flaps that adjust for drag at different speeds. And researchers
from MIT and Stanford University widened the air channel between the
wings and tilted their leading and trailing edges. If either design gets
built, it could be the first supersonic biplane to take off.
See the supersonic Concorde jet breaking the sound barrier below.
No comments:
Post a Comment