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Edited by Noah Shachtman | Contact

Falcon Fills Blackbird's Shoes

A decade after the final retirement of Lockheed Martin's Mach-3 SR-71 Blackbird spy plane, the Air Force is preparing to test a plane that flies more than three times as fast. Two Falcon Hypersonic Test Vehicles, built by Lockheed Martin with input from NASA and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), will take to the air in 2008. The $100-million program aims to field a Mach-10 unmanned aircraft that can spy on foreign powers, drop bombs or even lob satellites into orbit.

Carter concept 2.jpgThe Blackbird, which was first retired in 1990 then briefly resurrected between 1995 and 1997, reached its Mach-3 top speed by way of its hybrid Pratt & Whitney J-58 engines, which featured a conventional turbojet engine installed inside a ramjet optimized for supersonic flight. At low speeds, the turbojet did most of the work; at high speed the turbojet throttled back and the ramjet took over.

Engineers are improving on this so-called "combined cycle" to propel the Falcon, using a more powerful "scramjet" in place of the ramjet. "We need propulsion that transitions seamlessly from Mach 0 to Mach 9 or 10," says Lockheed Martin's Bob Baumgartner.

"For low speed, we're looking at turbine engines that can perform at speeds from Mach 0 to Mach 4, then a scramjet ... that takes over anywhere between Mach 2 and Mach 4 and goes up to higher Mach numbers -- depending on the fuel, up to Mach 10," says Steven Walker, a Darpa researcher. "For sure, we know how turbines work, but we don't have turbines that work at Mach 4."

"The scramjets are still at a low-technology readiness level," he adds. "Combining both flow-paths and looking at how you transition from one to the other and the transition back ... that's all new, break-through technology."

"Thermal protection ... is the next major enabling technology," Baumgartner says, referring to ways of coping with the high temperatures that Mach-10 flight generates. "We're looking at durable metallic thermal protection panels to withstand heat and keep it away from structure. We're also looking at ceramic panels."

Foil insulation is an option too, he continues. And for the engines, developers are looking at new ceramic or metal-alloy coatings that can withstand temperatures reaching thousands of degrees.

Lockheed Martin's Craig Johnston, who works on a hypersonic engine project, sees many applications for Falcon and similar vehicles. "I can easily envision this technology eventually making its way into advanced aircraft ... something like long-range strike aircraft, supersonic bombers or future fighters."

Darpa also foresees using Falcon to cheaply launch small satellites. "Falcon will develop a low cost, responsive Small Launch Vehicle that can be launched for $5 million or less," an agency statement reads. "The SLV will be capable of launching small satellites into sun-synchronous orbits and will provide the nation a new, small-payload access to space capability."

--David Axe

Latest Comments

The picture is not new, we invesnted this in the 1960's here in the United Kingdom, it's called a Waverider. Obviously the Americans are making another claim at inventing something new, just like the rocket and jet plane ;)

Posted by: George at January 24, 2007 9:10 AM


Lockheed Martin, well it wasn't LMC back then built the ASAT ( anti-satellite missle) back in the 80's. It was launched from the belly of an F-14 flying straight up. They actually shot down a retired satellite with it. Old news!

Posted by: Boda at December 22, 2006 7:56 AM


I remember one of my aerospace professors at KU 15 years ago talk about the engine arrangement in the SR-71 / YF-12 as being two different engines side by side. At low speeds a ram would move a vane that would divert the flow into a turbine and at high speeds the flow would be allowed to flow straight into the scramjet. Of course there was no way of knowing for sure. I also remember my Dad telling me about the SR-71 doing night operations out of a hangar in Myrtle Beach in 1962. It would leave under the cover of darkness, leaking fuel everywhere when it left. It was usually seen flying south and then a couple hours later it would come back with its nose and wing tips glowing bright orange. It would come back at night and would park in its own separate hangar. Even the base commander wasn't allowed in there I was told. Its amazing what that bird from the Skunk works could do.

Posted by: jason littlejohn at October 26, 2006 1:51 AM


EHTA ONVERMENTGA SIA ESTINGTA HINGSTA EHINDBA UROA ACKBA, VENEA NIA IGHTRA NIA RONTFA FOA UROA ACESFA.710671

Posted by: John at October 24, 2006 10:42 AM


There are alot of discoveries you really do not know about. If you did your reasearch, you would obviously know that the capabilities of LM, are much more than some give credit for. That's a clue that thirty years is a laugh compared to what I know. I guess you will have to wait and see when you wake up at night and look out your window to see nothing but a refractory sonic pulse in the sky, with nothing more.

Posted by: Bryant at October 23, 2006 5:40 PM


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