Today a civil test airliner, Boom Technology’s XB-1, broke the sound barrier for the first time in two decades.
The single-seat, three-engine jet is the first independently developed plane to exceed Mach 1 in level flight.
The single-seat jet, a 201-foot-long test model by Boom Supersonic, hit 844 mph just 12 minutes into its latest test flight ...
Dufour Aerospace's Aero2 completes historic hybrid-electric test flights, showcasing self-charging batteries and sustainable cargo solutions.
Boom Supersonic hopes the XB-1 will pave the way for the development of Overture, the company's supersonic commercial ...
With the fragile ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas now officially in effect, many airlines are resuming flights to ...
Get the science behind ice shoves and how the develop in the Great Lakes. Details with meteorologist Tyler Hamilton. Products ...
According to Cirium, an aviation data analytics provider, Denver now has 11 routes that exceed 3,000 miles long. These ...
Boom Supersonic, the American company building what promises to be the world’s fastest airliner, broke the sound barrier for ...
High above a barren California desert on Tuesday, a privately developed aircraft broke the sound barrier for the first time ...
Pilots, when landing at Sabiha Gokcen Airport in Istanbul and departing from it for two days, receive signals from the ...
The first report on last month's Jeju Air crash in South Korea confirms traces of bird strikes in the plane's engines.