WAVERIDER and ASTRA,

A History

  by

Duncan Lunan

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Page Six

But in developing fixed-wing Waveriders, NASA is still six years behind ASTRA. In 1992 Gordon and I at last completed a major article wed been working on for four years, Flight in Non-Terrestrial Atmospheres, which we submitted to Analog. The first draft included a Waverider carrier for a Venus surface explorer, a flexible aircraft for Mars exploration, and a Waverider factory for the atmosphere of Jupiter. But Analog editor Stanley Schmidt asked us also to consider worlds which would be like Earth, yet sufficiently different to need different designs. Gordon came up with two, the Lucifer Plane and the Asgard, both of which belonged to a new family of flexible Waverider shapes, allying his previous experience in sails and hang-glider design to Nonweiler's Waverider theory.

And it didn't end there, by any means. At the 1995 Edinburgh International Science Festival Gordon unveiled two new Shapeshifter flexible Waverider designs, one for a space shuttle cargo vehicle and the other an interplanetary probe carrier, both of which are described in his paper which follows. The latter has been tested over 1995-96 in the wind-tunnel of the Architecture Department of Glasgow School of Art, where he works in the industrial design unit. Gordon is working now on a whole new family of flexible airfoils, being tested in subsonic and supersonic tunnels at Imperial College, London, so if all goes well the new Waverider designs can be included. In addition, he's investigating the possibility of manufacturing a sample of the woven carbon-fibre fabric he designed for the Shapeshifter, in hopes that it can be tested thermally at the Art School, which has the necessary plasma torch equipment.

And finally, he and I have come up with an important new potential use for the Shapeshifter, which well describe later in this Spacereport issue. All of which goes to show that the Waverider story, and ASTRAs involvement in it, are both very far from over.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Page Five

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ASTRA A to Z

ASTRA Program | ASTRA Home Page | ASTRA History | Airdrie Activities

Publications | Airdrie Public Observatory | Contact Info

Members Info | Astronomy | Rocketry | Waverider

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WAVERIDER and ASTRA, A History

Page 0ne | Page Two | Page Three | Page Four | Page Five | Page Six

Other Waverider Pages

Waverider News from Across the Pond | NASA Briefings at Oshkosh Air Show

Hyper-X | Some Reflections on Waverider Design | TDRS

Hypersonic Flexwings | Intelligent Test Aircraft | Mayday

HOTOL | SR-71 | Alpha Station

 

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Date Last Modified: 31 07 1999