I understand that the nose-cones for the Concordes were all built at Brooklands in England.
Because it's rubbed against the passing air fast and hard enough for friction to heat it.
Foam board or cardboard.
no
French Concorde were made in Toulouse (South-West of France) and English Concorde were made in Filton (England).
typically the nose cone is filled with a parachute to the rocket arrives on the ground safely.
The nose cone separates when forward flight is ended and the motor 'retrofires', blowing off the nose cone and exposing the parachute.
A streamlined plastic nose cone.
you cant move concordes nose but you can turn the entire plane etc. but concordes nose cant move
Nacelle .
A perfect cone
It could. If the nose is a right angle, it would be wide but a cone.
First, put a dot in the corner of your paper. Then, roll the paper up, leaving the tip sharp. There! Now you have a nose cone!