Courtesy of Reaction Engines
It can soar at 6.437 kmh (4,000 mph)—or five times the speed of sound
For most New Yorkers, getting to the Hamptons in less than
three hours is a commendable feat, but what if you could get all the way to
London in just a third of the time? The UK Space Agency recently revealed plans
for a high-tech “space plane” that is capable of jetting across the pond at
lightning speed—and it could be in the skies as soon as 2030.
On Tuesday, the CEO of the UK Space Agency Graham Turnock
announced the UK would be working more closely with Australia in a “world-first
Space Bridge” agreement which will focus on delivering a plane—or rocket,
really—to shuttle passengers from continent-to-continent in just four hours.
While flights from London to the Big Apple will reportedly take a skerrick over
60 minutes.
It’s all courtesy of a new hypersonic engine SABRE
(Synergetic Air-Breathing Rocket Engine)—which the scientists at Reaction
Engines are currently developing. Fueled by a combination of hydrogen and
oxygen, SABRE is capable of powering a plane to Mach 5.4 (6.437 kmh - 4,000 mph) for speedy
commercial travel—that’s around five times the speed of sound—or Mach 25
(30.577 kmh - 19,000 mph) when soaring in space. It’s supposedly greener and cheaper than
current air travel, too.
SABRE Hypersonic Space Plane
Courtesy of Reaction Engines
One of the challenges of hypersonic flight is ensuring the engine can withstand the heat—traveling that quickly can cause the engine
itself to melt—but SABRE chills the incoming air with tiny tubes of
super-cooled helium, and then utilizes that captured heat to power the engine.
“Our pre-cooler takes air that arrives at 1,000 degrees
centigrade and cools it down to zero in one-twentieth of a second,” Shaun
Driscoll, of Reaction Engines, said.
SABRE Engine Courtesy of Reaction Engines
That’s not just talking, either. Back in April, The Oxfordshire-based firm announced successful tests of a precooler, simulating
conditions at Mach 3.3—that’s 50 percent faster than the supersonic turbojet
Concorde, which trekked between New York and Paris in 3.5 hours, but was
terminated in 2003 following a catastrophic crash in which 109 people died.
It’s also on par with the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, the fastest jet aircraft
ever made.
Reaction Engines will continue trialing parts, with test
flights scheduled to begin in mid-2020 and commercial flights slated for the 2030s.
The government has already invested 68,353,060 Euros - £60 million (around $74 million at current
exchange) into SABRE, which has been matched by Rolls Royce, BAE Systems and
Boeing.
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