New York to London in 40 Minutes? Maybe Someday

More than a decade after the demise of supersonic Concorde jets, the drive for easy and affordable access to space has inspired proposals for a new generation of superfast airliners able to streak across continents in minutes.

Recent advances in propulsion and spacecraft design—featuring lower-cost, reusable boosters, and capsules—are transforming the way commercial and military entities view orbital missions. Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX), Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic LLC, and Jeff Bezos ’ Blue Origin LLC are among the private companies developing space vehicles designed to launch multiple times with scant refurbishment.

Public references to Pentagon research, some classified, that describe how this new space technology could be used for spy planes, or to rapidly replace national-security satellites destroyed in a conflict, also have helped fuel talk of using similar concepts to revolutionize air travel.

Now, despite daunting technical and cost challenges, some entrepreneurs are betting they can do it.

By incorporating innovative engine designs, the benefits of 3-D printing and principles of using the same booster repeatedly, these entrepreneurs plan to transform commercial aircraft into so-called hypersonic space planes capable of carrying passengers. Powered by engines that burn hydrogen fuel with oxygen from the atmosphere, but without the piping and moving parts essential for today’s rockets, they would travel at least five times the speed of sound, or about 3,500 miles an hour, versus the 500 mph or so at which conventional jetliners typically cruise.

Among those championing hypersonic travel for fare-paying passengers is Chris Milam, a Texas real-estate developer and technology investor who has pledged to invest as much as $20 million of his own funds over the next few years to design such a system. Along with Preston Carter, an expert formerly with the Pentagon’s advanced research arm, Mr. Milam aims to develop a two-stage concept in which a rocket carries a hypersonic, winged vehicle and releases it to cruise at high altitude. The passenger-carrying craft would land at its destination like a conventional airliner.

“There has been lots of discussion about high-speed flight since the end of Concorde, but little has been realized,” Mr. Milam says. “The reality is systems like this are expensive.”

Preliminary designs call for the space plane to carry about 100 passengers and cruise at an altitude of 70,000 to 100,000 feet, with the goal of reaching any point on Earth within four hours. It would have a total takeoff weight of some 500,000 pounds, less than half of a fully loaded Airbus A380 superjumbo.

The upshot, proponents argue, would provide options far beyond those promised by most of today’s civilian supersonic projects, which remain focused on building business jets or mini-airliners that essentially are updated versions of the Concorde on steroids. Closely held Boom Technology Inc., for example, is developing a three-engine, 45-passenger jet intended to fly 1,500 miles an hour—or roughly twice the speed of sound.

But if an entirely new category of airliner-like suborbital vehicles becomes reality in coming decades, they would fly many times faster and higher, traveling from London to New York in some 40 minutes—or 10 times as fast as current airline schedules. That is still less than the anticipated top speed of the Pentagon’s unmanned XS-1 experimental craft being developed to launch satellites (the Pentagon approved the design a month ago), or NASA’s earlier X-43 rocket ship demonstrator that hit a record-breaking velocity of more than 7,500 miles an hour without a pilot.

Read more at WSJ

Trackback from your site.

Leave a comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Share via