There have been two already: the British-French Concorde, discontinued because it was an economic failure :
http:/enzperiodzwikipediazperiodzorg/wiki/Concorde
and
A Russian Tupolev144 ,shown briefly at Le Bourget airshow in Paris, where it crashed:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-144
Thus yes, it is possible but Boeing Jumbo or Airbus A380 jets are a better business proposal.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airbus_A380
The first living creature ejected from a supersonic aircraft was a female rhesus monkey named Albert I. This event took place on June 11, 1948, as part of a research study conducted by the U.S. Air Force to test the effects of supersonic speeds on living organisms.
The Tupolev Tu-144 (NATO reporting name: Charger) was the first supersonic transport aircraft (SST), constructed under the direction of the Soviet Tupolev design bureau headed by Alexei Tupolev. Some western observers nicknamed the plane Concordski (sometimes Konkordski), as the Tu-144 was very similar to Concorde. A prototype first flew on 31 December 1968 near Moscow, two months before Concorde. The Tu-144 first broke the sound barrier on 5 June 1969, and on 15 July 1969 it became the first commercial transport to exceed Mach 2, and the fastest commercial airliner ever.
An aircraft capable of flying at Mach 5 would be considered a hypersonic aircraft. It would travel at approximately 3,836 mph (6,174 km/h) at sea level. These speeds enable significantly reduced travel times for long-distance flights.
According to Wikipedia, the Tupolev Tu-144 (NATO reporting name: Charger) was the first supersonic transport aircraft (SST), constructed under the direction of the Soviet Tupolev design bureau headed by Alexei Tupolev (1925 - 2001). Western observers nicknamed the plane Concordski (sometimes Konkordski), sounding Russian yet still very close to the Concorde, to which the Tu-144 was visually similar. A prototype first flew on 31 December 1968 near Moscow, two months before Concorde. The Tu-144 first broke the sound barrier on 5 June 1969, and on 15 July 1969 it became the first commercial transport to exceed Mach 2, and the fastest commercial airliner ever.
There is no place you can find every commercial ever aired.
As fast as it can. There are no speed limits in place for aircraft. However airlines limits speed for economic reasons. Also the way the engine is designed affects speed. The faster the engine is going, the hotter the engine will be. The turbines get the worst of this heat and if it gets to hot the turbine will fail. And the economic reason being the faster the aircraft, the more fuel you need. The Concorde was a supersonic aircraft. How ever it burned way to much fuel and that proved way to costly to operate the craft.
No.
no
Since aircraft do not, and in fact cannot, go into space then it should be obvious that no aircraft has ever been to Mercury, as yet.
The biggest sized engine to have ever been in an aircraft is the GE90 series. Being the largest engine in aviation history, it was built by GE Aviation.
The speed of sound is proportionally less and vary s according to altitude. when ever air craft exceeds the speed of sound it is defined as i mach. those air crafts capable of crossing sound speed is called supersonic.
Hughes H-4 Hercules