Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
NASA is the American space agency. NASA also tests new aircraft. One of their planes is called the X-59. It is a special experimental plane that can fly very fast.
The X-59 flew faster than the speed of sound for the first time in June 2026. This is called breaking the sound barrier. When a plane breaks the sound barrier, it usually makes a very loud noise called a sonic boom.
But the X-59 is special. It was designed to make a very quiet sound instead of a loud boom. Scientists want to show that supersonic planes can be quiet enough to fly over cities. This could bring back fast passenger travel one day.
- NASA
- the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the US government agency responsible for space exploration and aviation research
- aircraft
- any machine that can fly, such as a plane, helicopter, or drone
- sound barrier
- the point at which an aircraft reaches the speed of sound, approximately 767 miles per hour at sea level
- sonic boom
- a loud explosive noise caused by an aircraft traveling faster than the speed of sound
- supersonic
- faster than the speed of sound
- experimental
- used for testing new ideas or technologies, not yet ready for regular use
- passenger
- a person who travels in a vehicle, aircraft, or ship but is not the driver or pilot
- decibel
- a unit used to measure the loudness of a sound
Level 2 - Elementary
NASA's X-59 QueSST experimental aircraft achieved a historic milestone in early June 2026 when it broke the sound barrier for the first time, reaching a speed greater than Mach 1 -- the speed of sound. The aircraft was built by Lockheed Martin's elite Skunk Works division in Palmdale, California, and made its maiden flight in October 2025. After a maintenance period and 14 additional test flights, the team was ready to push the aircraft past the speed of sound.
The X-59 is designed to fly at approximately 630 miles per hour at an altitude of 43,000 feet when breaking the sound barrier, eventually targeting Mach 1.4 (about 925 miles per hour) at 55,000 feet. What makes this aircraft revolutionary is not its speed but the noise it produces. Traditional supersonic aircraft, including the famous Concorde passenger jet, generate sonic booms loud enough to break windows and rattle buildings -- measured at 105 to 110 decibels. The X-59 is designed to produce a sound of just 75 decibels, roughly as loud as a car door closing.
The reason for the dramatic noise reduction lies in the X-59's unusual shape. The plane has a very long, slender nose measuring about 30 feet -- roughly a third of its total length -- and a specially shaped fuselage that spreads out the shockwaves that cause sonic booms, preventing them from coalescing into a single loud blast. If the 'quiet boom' technology holds up in testing, the US Federal Aviation Administration could use data from the X-59 program to write new rules permitting supersonic passenger flight over land for the first time since the Concorde era ended in 2003.
- Mach number
- a measurement of speed relative to the speed of sound; Mach 1 equals the speed of sound, Mach 2 equals twice the speed of sound
- altitude
- the height of something above sea level, commonly used to describe how high an aircraft is flying
- fuselage
- the main body of an aircraft, to which the wings and tail are attached, and which carries the passengers or cargo
- shockwave
- a sharp disturbance in the air caused by an object moving faster than sound, which forms a cone-shaped pressure wave behind the aircraft
- coalesce
- to combine or merge into a single mass; in aviation, the joining of multiple pressure waves into one loud sonic boom
- maiden flight
- the first flight ever made by a newly built aircraft
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
- the US government agency responsible for regulating civil aviation, including setting rules for what aircraft are allowed to fly and where
- QueSST
- Quiet SuperSonic Technology, the name of the NASA program and design concept behind the X-59 aircraft
Level 3 - Intermediate
NASA's Quesst (Quiet SuperSonic Technology) mission passed its defining test in early June 2026 when its X-59 experimental aircraft exceeded Mach 1 for the first time during a flight from Lockheed Martin's Palmdale facility. The milestone came after the aircraft's October 2025 maiden flight, a planned winter maintenance period, and 14 subsequent test sorties validating the aircraft's handling characteristics and subsonic aerodynamics. The sound-barrier crossing is the prerequisite for the program's core scientific goal: measuring whether the X-59's acoustic footprint on the ground below matches its designers' predictions of a 75 EPNdB (Effective Perceived Noise in decibels) noise level -- equivalent to closing a car door -- versus the 105-110 EPNdB that made the Concorde commercially and socially unacceptable over populated land masses.
The X-59's aerodynamic architecture departs radically from conventional supersonic designs. Its defining feature is a needle-like forward fuselage measuring 9.1 meters -- approximately 30 percent of the aircraft's overall length -- that serves as a shockwave management device. At supersonic speeds, shockwaves emanate continuously from all points on the airframe; on a conventional aircraft like the Concorde, these waves merge within a short distance into two dominant discontinuities -- a bow shock and a tail shock -- that reach the ground as two sharp percussive events audible as a double boom. The X-59's elongated nose and carefully sculpted lower surface geometry enforce what aerodynamicists call 'shaped sonic boom' technology: the shockwaves are distributed along the extended fuselage and forced to remain acoustically separated, so they arrive at the ground as a series of much smaller pressure perturbations rather than a single coalesced bang.
The program's eventual payoff is regulatory, not operational. NASA will fly the X-59 over several US cities in 2027 and 2028, soliciting public response surveys to quantify community annoyance at the 75 EPNdB signature. The resulting dataset will be delivered to the Federal Aviation Administration and the International Civil Aviation Organization to inform the first update to overland supersonic flight rules since the FAA's 1973 ban. Aerion, Boom Supersonic, and Spike Aerospace -- all three of which have commercial supersonic passenger aircraft in various stages of development -- have explicitly cited the potential regulatory framework change as the essential precondition for viable business models targeting routes between New York and London or Los Angeles and Tokyo.
- EPNdB (Effective Perceived Noise in decibels)
- a specialized noise measurement unit that accounts for the frequency content and duration of a sound as perceived by human hearing, used specifically to evaluate aircraft noise
- shockwave management
- the engineering practice of shaping an aircraft to control where and how strongly pressure waves form at supersonic speeds, with the goal of reducing noise on the ground
Level 4 - Advanced
The X-59 QueSST's first supersonic flight, achieved in early June 2026 after a gestation period stretching from the 2016 contract award through an October 2025 maiden flight and fourteen subsequent subsonic test sorties, marks the operational commencement of the most consequential phase of the Quesst program: the empirical validation of low-boom aerodynamic theory at actual flight conditions. Until this moment, the 75 EPNdB ground-noise prediction -- derived from computational fluid dynamics simulations, wind-tunnel scaled-model testing, and analytical extensions of the F-18 Quiet Spike data from the early 2000s -- remained a design claim rather than a measured reality. Breaking Mach 1 over the Edwards Air Force Base restricted airspace and then over sparsely populated terrain in the Mojave is the necessary precondition for the over-city community-response trials scheduled for 2027-2028, which constitute the scientific output that Congress, the FAA, and ICAO are actually waiting for.
The acoustic engineering underpinning the X-59's design is a specific application of the broader discipline of sonic boom minimization theory, whose formal foundations were laid by Robert T. Jones at NASA Ames and extended by George Haglund and colleagues in the 1970s and 1980s. The key insight -- that a slender, smoothly tapered body with carefully managed area distribution can enforce temporal separation of the shockwave system -- became computationally tractable only with the advent of modern CFD codes capable of resolving the near-field pressure signature across hundreds of design iterations. The X-59's 9.1-meter forward fuselage, combined with a lower-surface geometry optimized using Lockheed Martin's internal adjoint-gradient shape optimization toolchain, produces what engineers call an 'N-wave modified' pressure signature: instead of the classic two-peak N-wave of the Concorde boom, the far-field waveform exhibits multiple low-amplitude oscillations that the human auditory system integrates as a series of soft thumps rather than a single percussive event.
The program's regulatory endgame operates on a timeline calibrated to the development cycles of three private-sector supersonic ventures -- Boom Supersonic's Overture, Aerion's AS3 (whose development resumed after a 2021 Chapter 11 filing), and Spike Aerospace's S-512 -- all of which have designed around an anticipated FAA Part 91 and Part 121 amendment that would conditionally lift the 14 CFR 91.817 prohibition on civil supersonic flight over land. The current prohibition is acoustically, not technically, motivated: it was written around the operational Concorde boom signature and has never been formally benchmarked against quieter alternatives. If the X-59 community-response surveys, analyzed using the Composite Noise Rating framework and the Day-Night Average Sound Level metric, confirm that the 75 EPNdB signature falls below the threshold of widespread community annoyance, the FAA has indicated it would open a notice-and-comment rulemaking within twelve to eighteen months. The commercial implications for transatlantic and transpacific routes -- where overland legs currently force supersonic aircraft to decelerate to subsonic speeds over populated territory, nullifying much of the journey-time advantage -- are potentially transformative.