Superquiet Supersonic: NASA Aims for Softer Booms

NASA concept supersonic jet.
NASA is working with partners in the aviation industry to design new supersonic aircraft, like this concept plane, that generate softer sonic booms.
(Image credit: Screenshot, Live Science/NASA)

Supersonic commercial airplanes could make a comeback in the not-too-distant future, bustling passengers to far-off destinations faster than the speed of sound. But there's one problem with these superfast airplanes: They're also superloud.

Just how loud are supersonic aircraft? That depends on the size of the plane, the speed at which the jet travels and several other factors. But even at their slowest, these planes travel 761.2 mph (1,225 km/h), or the speed of sound, and generate a "window-rattling" sonic boom, NASA said. The space agency is currently developing technologies that could make supersonic planes less noisy and therefore less "annoying" for those on the ground.

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