Commercial Supersonic TechnologyNASA’s X-59 has undergone final installation of its lower empennage, better known as the tail assembly. NASA’s X-59 has undergone...NASA is on a mission to revolutionize supersonic air travel for passengers across the globe. In this image, you’ll see...This image actually is the product of a complex computer simulation involving supersonic shockwaves.Take a moment and just stare at this beautiful airplane. Whether or not you have an interest in aeronautics or...The wing and cockpit sections of NASA’s X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) are coming together at Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works®...The X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology, or QueSST, wing assembly is lifted by a crane and moved to another area of...NASA’s Low Boom Flight Demonstration Mission is beginning to plan and prepare for a series of tests using the X-59...This image of the horizon was seen from the cockpit of NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center’s F/A-18 research aircraft during...Pictured, a Lockheed Martin technician at their Palmdale, California, facility prepares a machine to shave the first piece of NASA’s...To address the expected noise levels of future aircraft, NASA’s Commercial Supersonic Technology project is already developing technologies focused on...Aeronautical innovations are part of a government-industry partnership to collect data that could make supersonic flight over land possible, dramatically...The future faces of aviation are awesome. Members of Aviation Explorers Post 747, a group of middle- to high-school youth...A NASA F-18 jet takes off from the agency's Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida on...“Armstrong Flight Research Center chief pilot Nils Larson and I were flying supersonic runs to note the handling qualities between...An Air Force Test Pilot School T-38C passes in front of the sun at a supersonic speed, creating shockwaves that...