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Russian Tu-144LL SST Flying Laboratory Takeoff at Zhukovsky Air Development Center

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Description: its nose drooped and canards extended, the Tupolev Tu-144LL supersonic flying laboratory lifts off from the Zhukovsky Air Development Center near Moscow, Russia on a 1997 test flight. NASA teamed with American and Russian aerospace industries for an extended period in a joint international research program featuring the Russian-built Tu-144LL supersonic aircraft. The object of the program was to develop technologies for a proposed future second-generation supersonic airliner to be developed in the 21st Century. The aircraft's initial flight phase began in June 1996 and concluded in February 1998 after 19 research flights. A shorter follow-on program involving seven flights began in September 1998 and concluded in April 1999. All flights were conducted in Russia from Tupolev's facility at the Zhukovsky Air Development Center near Moscow. The centerpiece of the research program was the Tu 144LL, a first-generation Russian supersonic jetliner that was modified by its developer/builder, Tupolev ANTK (aviatsionnyy nauchno-tekhnicheski y kompleks-roughly, aviation technical complex), into a flying laboratory for supersonic research. Using the Tu-144LL to conduct flight research experiments, researchers compared full-scale supersonic aircraft flight data with results from models in wind tunnels, computer-aided techniques, and other flight tests. The experiments provided unique aerodynamic, structures, acoustics, and operating environment data on supersonic passenger aircraft. Data collected from the research program was being used to develop the technology base for a proposed future American-built supersonic jetliner. Although actual development of such an advanced supersonic transport (SST) is currently on hold, commercial aviation experts estimate that a market for up to 500 such aircraft could develop by the third decade of the 21st Century. The Tu-144LL used in the NASA-sponsored research program was a "D" model with different engines than were used in production-model aircraft. Fifty experiments were proposed for the program and eight were selected, including six flight and two ground (engine) tests. The flight experiments included studies of the aircraft's exterior surface, internal structure, engine temperatures, boundary-layer airflow, the wing's ground-effect characteristics, interior and exterior noise, handling qualities in various flight profiles, and in-flight structural flexibility. The ground tests studied the effect of air inlet structures on airflow entering the engine and the effect on engine performance when supersonic shock waves rapidly change position in the engine air inlet. A second phase of testing further studied the original six in-flight experiments with additional instrumentation installed to assist in data acquisition and analysis. A new experiment aimed at measuring the in-flight deflections of the wing and fuselage was also conducted. American-supplied transducers and sensors were installed to measure nose boom pressures, angle of attack, and sideslip angles with increased accuracy. Two NASA pilots, Robert Rivers of Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, and Gordon Fullerton from Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, California, assessed the aircraft's handling at subsonic and supersonic speeds during three flight tests in September 1998. The program concluded after four more data-collection flights in the spring of 1999. The Tu-144LL model had new Kuznetsov NK-321 turbofan engines rated at more than 55,000 pounds of thrust in full afterburner. The aircraft is 215 feet, 6 inches long and 42 feet, 2 inches high with a wingspan of 94 feet, 6 inches. The aircraft is constructed mostly of light aluminum alloy with titanium and stainless steel on the leading edges, elevons, rudder, and the under-surface of the rear fuselage...Image # EC97-44203-3.July 1997

NASA Photo Collection

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aviation nk 321 tsagi aerospace tu 144 tu 144 ll tupolev tu 144 charger tsentralniy aerogidrodinamicheskiy institut tupolev tu 144 national aeronautics and space administration koliesov rd 36 51 kuznetsov цаги central aerohydrodynamic institute super sonic transport airplane sst cccp 77114 rd 36 51 kuznetsov nk 321 uubw koliesov ra 77114 zhukovsky aircraft zhukovsky air development center центра льный аэрогидродинами ческий институ т ramenskoye tupolev rd 36 koliesov rd 36 airliners tu 144 d research program program engines research conduct flight research experiments dryden flight research center aircraft flight data research flights experiments three flight tests flight experiments test flight flight tests inches developer civil aviation passenger aircraft airlines supersonic military aircraft nasa california
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Armstrong Flight Research Center ,  34.95855, -117.89067
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label_outline Explore Tupolev Tu 144, Research Program, Kuznetsov

Military Photographer of the Year Winner 1999 TITLE: "Screaming Super Hornet" CATEGORY: Combat Camera PLACE: Honorable Mention Combat Camera CAPTION INFORMATION: Aboard USS Harry S. Truman, Naval Station Norfolk. An F/A-18E streaks across the flight deck of the TRUMAN while conducting flight tests aboard the nuclear aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75). IMAGE FILE #DD-SP-01-00006

A black and white photo of a woman and a child. Office of War Information Photograph

An Air Force C-17A Globemaster III, 437th Airlift Wing (AW), Charleston AFB, South Carolina, prepares to depart Germany loaded with Tri-Wall Aerial Delivery System (TRIADS) containers. Air Force C-17's delivered Humanitarian Daily Rations (HDR) in support of Operation ENDURING FREEDOM from Germany to Afghan refugees who massed inside the borders of Afghanistan. The C-17's carried more than 35,000 HDRs packed in 84 TRIAD boxes. Each box measures 80 inches tall and 48 inches square, containing 420 HDRs. The HDRs were delivered in a first of its kind, high-altitude airdrop. This is the first operational TRIAD delivery from a C-17 aircraft as well as the first combat airdrop mission...

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Nikolai Yegorovich Zhukovsky - Collected Papers, lectures 1889-1914 years. Theory of attraction. img 085

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A member of the 436th Equipment Maintenance Squadron (EMS) seals the "Spirit of 9-11" decal on a C-5 Galaxy at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, on 18 March 2002. The plane will be officially named in an upcoming naming ceremony. "Lets Roll," the now famous phrase United Airlines Flight 93 passenger Todd Beamer uttered as he and fellow passengers foiled terrorist hijackers, bringing down the aircraft in a Pennsylvania field that fatal morning

Nikolai Yegorovich Zhukovsky - Collected Papers, lectures 1889-1914 years. Theory of attraction. img 029

Beechcraft : 34 : Twin Quad, Space and Aviation museum SDASM

Kelly Johnson, developer of the original U-2 reconnaissance aircraft presents models of its successor, the new TR-1 aircraft (background) to LGEN James P. Mullins and LGEN John G. Albert during its rollout ceremony. LGEN Mullins is the new commander of the Air Force Acquisition Logistics Command and LGEN Albert is the former commander

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aviation nk 321 tsagi aerospace tu 144 tu 144 ll tupolev tu 144 charger tsentralniy aerogidrodinamicheskiy institut tupolev tu 144 national aeronautics and space administration koliesov rd 36 51 kuznetsov цаги central aerohydrodynamic institute super sonic transport airplane sst cccp 77114 rd 36 51 kuznetsov nk 321 uubw koliesov ra 77114 zhukovsky aircraft zhukovsky air development center центра льный аэрогидродинами ческий институ т ramenskoye tupolev rd 36 koliesov rd 36 airliners tu 144 d research program program engines research conduct flight research experiments dryden flight research center aircraft flight data research flights experiments three flight tests flight experiments test flight flight tests inches developer civil aviation passenger aircraft airlines supersonic military aircraft nasa california