Look it up on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scramjet Good place to start
1959
The SCRAMjet was a type of engine that could "suck" the Hydrogen & Oxygen from the air to make a fuel source. This mean it could last forever.
Sophie bc
Sophie bc
Dr. Frederick S. Billig and Dr. Gordon L. Dugger
Anywhere from 70 MPH to upwards of 3 to 4 thousand MPH. An airplane is in development that is called a SCRAMJET that will be able to 7000 MPH. The fastest winged craft ever (not an airplane) was the Space Shuttle, which went 17,000 MPH.
No. The X-43A is a test bed for scramjet (supersonic combustion ramjet) engine.
R. A. Reed has written: 'Infrared measurements of a scramjet exhaust' -- subject(s): Airplanes, Jet propulsion, Infrared spetroscopy, Infrared spectroscopy
James C McDaniel has written: 'Flowfield measurements in a model scramjet combustor using laser-induced iodine fluorescence' -- subject(s): Jets, Fluid dynamics, Fluorescence
G Fabris has written: 'Multiple-scale turbulence modeling of boundary layer flows for scramjet applications' -- subject(s): Turbulence, Shear flow, Unsteady flow (Aerodynamics), Compressibility
Lots of awesome-sounding words: Electrojet Multijet Pulsejet Pulsojet Scramjet Superjet Turbojet Waterjet Propjet Resojet Twinjet Fanjet Inkjet Projet Ramjet Trijet Objet