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The Effects of Sonic Boom on the Ecological Environment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
Extract
It is expected that the number of military and civil aircraft operating supersonically all over the world may remain the same during the next decade. The problem of sonic boom, which has been by-passed for military aircraft through the assignment of specially allocated ranges for supersonic operation, is still with us and is likely to influence the operation of supersonic transport (SST) aircraft, the Concorde and the Tupolev 144. Concorde is still short of reaching the break-even point, despite the large traffic gain registered on the routes to North and South America. The problem is to get overland routes; the difficulties encountered by the UK in the discussions with India and Malaysia for the establishment of a London–Bahrain–Singapore route are well known.
Before presenting the effects of the sonic boom on the ecology it may be well to summarize the nature and the main features of this phenomenon.
(i) The N-wave signature. A complex body like an aircraft, moving in supersonic flight, generates a pattern of local shock waves which tend to coalesce in two main shock cones, the front (or bow) and tail, as the distance from the aircraft increases. A shock wave is a discontinuity surface for the thermodynamic characteristics of the fluid, the most important being the static pressure jump responsible for the N-shaped pressure signature characteristic of the sonic boom. Other parameters are of minor importance to the environment. A shock signature is denned by the following parameters:
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