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NASA Books Reveal Wisdom Gained from Failure
The latest in NASA Aeronautics' Book Series tells sevens stories of what NASA learned from accidents or failures involving remotely piloted or autonomous aircraft.
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Listening for the Boom and Rattle of Supersonic Flight
NASA engineers test people's reactions to simulated sonic booms to help develop technologies that might allow supersonic passenger jets to fly over land.
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NASA Researchers Work to Turn Blue Skies Green
A big part of NASA's work to reduce the environmental impact of aircraft has moved into phase two.
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NASA Seeks It All: High Lift, Low Drag
NASA and its industry partners have been working to prove you can have your aerodynamic cake and eat it, too.
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Sector 33 Game App Goes Android
Up to the challenge of playing a game where you're in control of airplanes in a piece of the nation's skies? Yup, there's an app for that.
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NASA Is With You When You Fly
When you board a plane this holiday season, or anytime, realize that NASA works every day to make flying more efficient and safe.
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NASA Book Reveals the Stunning Science Behind Suits
Protecting a pilot or astronaut from sudden changes in pressure requires a suit designed, tested and sewn to perfection.
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Student Ideas for Aviation Wow NASA Audience
During Ideas in Flight, college students prove the future for U.S. aviation is promising.
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X-48C: An X-Plane Transformer
A transformed remotely piloted aircraft could lead the way to a future of flight that is much quieter.
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Hitchhiking Sensors Capture Curiosity's Entry
NASA scientists specializing in hypersonic flight can't wait to get their hands on data that'll be captured during Curiosity's high-speed Mars landing.
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AMELIA's Innovations Inspire Unusual Dedication
AMELIA proves to be one future aircraft design that that inspires awesome innovation and acts of dedication.
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New NASA Book Tells Why Aerospace Accidents Happen
Some of the most well-known accidents in aviation and space history are remembered in this book detailing the non-technical, human-related events that led to each incident.
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8 Questions about NextGen, Pt. 2
Don't get too used to the airplanes you see today because things are changing.
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Sonic Boom Heads for a Thump
NASA is closer to defining how loud a sonic boom can "boom" without becoming a bother.
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Sector 33 Puts You in the Control Tower
Players flock to a new NASA app that requires the brain to be in full throttle to make sure passenger airplanes land safely at a California airport.
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Preps Continue for Launching Engine Icing Research
NASA scientists are getting closer to launching a research campaign to solve the mystery of ice crystal engine icing.
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NASA/FAA Partnership "Greens" Arriving Aircraft
NASA aeronautics officially transferred to the FAA a new air traffic management tool that makes aircraft descents more environmentally friendly.
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New Ideas Sharpen Focus for Greener Aircraft
New aircraft design ideas confirm NASA's green goals are challenging, but ultimately do-able.
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8 Questions about NextGen, Part 1
NextGen is a technology modernization effort that will make air travel
safer, more flexible and more efficient. NASA is one of several U.S.
government agencies that play a crucial role in helping to plan, develop
and implement NextGen.
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New Inlet Design Could Improve Engine Efficiency
Channeled center body inlet could improve airflow and fuel efficiency of jet engines at a wide variety of speeds.
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Quiet Sonic Boom Research Ends in a Whisper
NASA researchers recently gathered data from a select group of volunteers on their perception of sonic booms created by aircraft in supersonic flight.
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MSL Entry, Descent and Landing Instrumentation (MEDLI)
Sensors in MSL's heat shield feed NASA researchers' curiosity about high-speed flight in out-of-this-world atmospheres.
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Balloon Fiesta Exhibit Highlights NASA Aeronautics
NASA reaches out to members of the original "flight club" with exhibits, displays and educational programs at the International Balloon Fiesta.
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Airplane Plus Heat Plus Ice Equals Mystery
The mystery of high ice water content engine icing is propelling NASA into a multi-national effort to find the cause.
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Imagination Fascination, Alive and Well
NASA has proof that kids still get excited by the basics of science. Let their energy inspire you.
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The Big Picture Wins Big
A powerful NASA simulation software wins Government Invention of the
Year, along with the hearts and minds of air traffic managers and
researchers.
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A First Look at Flight in 2025
NASA has just tasked three companies to look into the future and design a more "green" aircraft for 2025.
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NASA Helps Create a More Silent Night
A NASA aeronautics researcher revisits the road to creating a simple-looking device that creates a quieter flight.
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Kentucky Students Join Chat with NASA Pilot
Students from a rural Kentucky school are happy to "stay after" so they can participate in an online chat with NASA pilot Herman Posada.
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Technology Readiness Levels Demystified
Technology readiness levels, or TRLs, give innovators a roadmap to follow as they try to take a technology from an idea to a proven benefit that's ready to go to work in the real world.
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Dashlink is Online Home for Collaborative Research
An online community allows NASA and non-NASA researchers with a special interest in a particular aircraft safety challenge to share their latest ideas real-time.
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Wind Shear Accident Was Catalyst for Technology
In the wake of a series of fatal airliner crashes due to microburst wind shear between 1975 and 1985, NASA and the FAA researched the phenomenon and evaluated a series of instruments that could help pilots and ground control handle - or avoid - the problem.
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Beauty of Future Aircraft is More than Skin Deep
A NASA research effort to visualize future passenger airplanes produces ideas dominated by familiar shapes but inspired by surprises underneath.
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The Sheer Delight of Tackling Shear Stress
A tiny new micro-electric sensor that measures a type of stress holds huge promise for more fuel-efficient vehicles and maybe even more healthy hearts.
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From NACA to NASA: 95 Years of Innovation of Flight
Ninety-five years ago on March 3, the National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics - NASA's ancestor - revved the nation's engine on aviation innovation.
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Now Online: Aeronautics Goes E-Book
Books that tell the stories of historic aeronautics moments are being made available for your Kindle and other digital devices.
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Chopper Drop Tests New Technology
NASA researchers dropped a small helicopter from 35 feet to see if a deployable energy absorber could lessen the destructive force of a crash.
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Aviation Pioneer Richard Whitcomb Dies
Richard T. Whitcomb has been called the most significant aerodynamic contributor of the second half of the 20th century.
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From Nothing, Something: One Layer at a Time
A manufacturing process using electron beams works sort of like a Star Trek replicator and could mean big cost and environmental benefits for aviation.
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The X-15, the Pilot and the Space Shuttle
Fifty years later, X-15 test pilot and former space shuttle commander Joe Engle recalls the highs and lows of a unique, high-speed research aircraft.
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My Summer at NASA
Three NASA aeronautics scholarship recipients spent the summer working at NASA and tell us what it was like.
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Shhhh! Keep It Down, Please
New technologies and aircraft designs could help lower the volume around busy airports.
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Look, Up in the Sky
Air shows are great places to see aircraft, but they're also an opportunity to learn about NASA's work to improve aviation efficiency and safety.
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Aviation Safety Takes Center Stage
At a black-tie event near Washington, NASA researchers were recognized for their contributions to reducing the risk of fatal commercial aircraft accidents.
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NASA Aviation Safety Manager Helps Put Students on New Trajectory
Amy Pritchett, director of NASA's Aviation Safety Program, now has a scholarship named after her by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
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NASA Model Flies at Air and Space
A futuristic aircraft model that flew in a NASA wind tunnel is the centerpiece of a newly renovated gallery in the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.
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Future Helicopters Get SMART
Helicopters today are considered a loud, bumpy and inefficient mode for
day-to-day domestic travel, but NASA research could change that view.
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The Quest: A Silent, Carbonless Airplane
It's a simple goal, really. A silent airplane that sends no carbon into the atmosphere. Getting there is the quest on which NASA embarked years ago and figures to continue working on into mid-century.
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Alternative Jet Fuels Put to the Test
NASA and 11 other research groups are testing two non-petroleum-based
jet fuels in the pursuit of alternative fuels that can power commercial
jets and address rising oil costs.
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Aviation Experts Hear from Eyewitness to Disaster
Dennis Fitch will never forget the safety lessons he learned one tragic
day in July 1989. The former United Airlines captain and flight
instructor helped pilot a DC-10 to a crash landing in Sioux City, Iowa,
after the airplane's tail engine exploded in flight.
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Study Investigates Mental Overload in Pilots
Have you ever felt as if your brain was so full of information that you
couldn't process another thing? Mental overload creates confusion and
frustration, and for airline pilots, the consequences can be disastrous.
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NASA and Gulfstream Flying in High Def
NASA is partnering with Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. on a project that could aid visibility for pilots of future supersonic business jets.
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Marking 61 Years of Supersonic Curiosity
Sixty-one years after a sonic boom first rolled across the roof of the
high desert in southern California, there are still things yet to be
discovered about supersonic flight.
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+ Read More Aeronautics Features on NASA.gov
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Last Updated: March 7, 2013
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