Production
of NASA's new X-59 supersonic jet continues amid coronavirus outbreak
"Lockheed Martin is continuing with X-59 production operations."
Production on NASA's new X-59 supersonic X-plane despite closures and delays in
the space industry caused by the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the
novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.
In a March 20 statement, NASA officials said that "in California, work
continues by Lockheed Martin on X-59, NASA's first large-scale, piloted X-plane
in more than 30 years, while NASA oversight and inspections will be conducted
almost exclusively virtually."
"Lockheed Martin is continuing with X-59 production operations, and the
only on-site NASA presence is a Quality Assurance representative when needed
for the GMIPs (Government Mandatory Inspection Points)," said Craig
Nickol, NASA's Low Boom Flight Demonstrator project manager, in a statement
provided to Space.com.
Final assembly for the supersonic plane, which was officially named X-59 QueSST
in 2018, was greenlit during a critical design review in 2019. The plane is
designed to travel over land faster than the speed of sound. But, unlike
earlier supersonic planes, its main draw is that it will supposedly create an
ultraquiet sonic boom, making it much less of a disturbance to the general
public.
As a Lockheed Martin representative told Space.com in February, "We're
very confident. All kinds of modeling simulations and predictions align, so we
believe, based on these models and simulations we've run, that it will achieve
that low-boom sound once it reaches supersonic speeds."
The supersonic X-59 QueSST is not the only new X-plane NASA is continuing work
on amid the coronavirus pandemic. The agency is also making advances on its new
X-57 all-electric plane, NASA spokesperson Sasha Ellis of the Langley Research
Center said via email.
The supersonic X-59 QueSST is not the only new X-plane NASA is continuing work
on amid the coronavirus pandemic. The agency is also making advances on its new
X-57 all-electric plane, NASA spokesperson Sasha Ellis of the Langley Research
Center said via email.
Discussing further how work is progressing amid coronavirus, the spokesperson
recently told Space.com that "work is also continuing on NASA's X-57, the
agency's first all-electric X-plane."
"The team is maintaining communication and getting parts in place for
functional tests, taxi tests, and eventually flight tests," Matt Kamlet,
NASA's X-57 public affairs specialist at the Armstrong Flight Research Center
in California, said in the statement.
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