Skip to content

Atlas / Learn / Papers / 20240014651

NASA NTRS · Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)

Optimal Mission Profile for Low-Boom Supersonic Aircraft

Published 2024-12-31 From Langley Research Center 3 authors

Attribution

This is the abstract and citation. Full text lives at NASA NTRS — we link out rather than host. All credit to the authors and Langley Research Center.

Abstract

Verbatim from NASA NTRS. Not paraphrased, not summarized.

An optimal mission profile, called the low-boom mission profile, is proposed for low-boom supersonic aircraft. The low-boom mission profile uses a fixed AoA for the cruise segment until reaching the cruise ceiling. The fixed AoA is determined by the cruise condition for the low-boom shaping of the aircraft. The derived CL trajectory is not necessarily the optimal trajectory for the cruise range when unrestricted supersonic flight is allowed. The undertrack sonic boom ground noise level is reduced during the cruise because of the increasing altitude from the fixed AoA trajectory and the approximate invariance of nondimensional overpressure at 3BL below a supersonic aircraft with respect to cruise altitude change when the AoA and cruise Mach are fixed. The approximate invariance of nondimensional overpressure at 3BL below a supersonic aircraft is verified using both Euler and Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes CFD solvers. A low-boom supersonic transport concept is used to illustrate that, compared to the fixed cruise altitude trajectory, the low-boom mission profile can increase the cruise range of a low-boom aircraft and reduce the undertrack sonic boom ground noise levels for the entire cruise segment. One significant contribution of this paper is the implication that an aircraft OML satisfying a sonic boom ground noise level constraint at SOC will satisfy the same noise level constraint over the entire cruise segment, as long as a fixed AoA trajectory is flown.

Authors

  • Wu Li Langley Research Center
  • Karl Geiselhart Langley Research Center
  • Christopher Eggert Langley Research Center

Keywords

  • Low-boom characteristics
  • Off-design analysis
  • Equivalent area target
  • Primary boom carpet
  • Robust low-boom design
  • Low-boom inverse design optimization
  • Reversed equivalent area
  • Low-boom supersonic transport

Citation: Wu Li, Karl Geiselhart, Christopher Eggert (2024). Optimal Mission Profile for Low-Boom Supersonic Aircraft. Langley Research Center. NASA NTRS ID 20240014651. https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20240014651 ↗