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North American X-15

The North American X-15 is a hypersonic rocket-powered aircraft. It was operated by the United States Air Force and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration as part of the X-plane series of experimental aircraft. The X-15 set speed and altitude records in the 1960s, reaching the edge of outer space and returning with valuable data used in aircraft and spacecraft design. The X-15's highest speed, 4,520 miles per hour (7,274 km/h; 2,021 m/s),[1] was achieved on 3 October 1967,[2] when William J. Knight flew at Mach 6.7 at an altitude of 102,100 feet (31,120 m), or 19.34 miles. This set the official world record for the highest speed ever recorded by a crewed, powered aircraft, which remains unbroken.[3][4]

X-15
The X-15 pulling away from its drop launch plane
Role Experimental high-speed rocket-powered research aircraft
Manufacturer North American Aviation
First flight 8 June 1959 [1]
Introduction 17 September 1959
Retired December 1968 [1]
Primary users United States Air Force
NASA
Number built 3

During the X-15 program, 12 pilots flew a combined 199 flights.[1] Of these, 8 pilots flew a combined 13 flights which met the Air Force spaceflight criterion by exceeding the altitude of 50 miles (80 km), thus qualifying these pilots as being astronauts; of those 13 flights, two (flown by the same civilian pilot) met the FAI definition (100 kilometres (62 mi)) of outer space. The 5 Air Force pilots qualified for military astronaut wings immediately, while the 3 civilian pilots were eventually awarded NASA astronaut wings in 2005, 35 years after the last X-15 flight.[5][6]

Design and development

 
X-15 after igniting rocket engine
 
X-15A-2, with sealed ablative coating, external fuel tanks, and ramjet dummy test

The X-15 was based on a concept study from Walter Dornberger for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) for a hypersonic research aircraft.[7] The requests for proposal (RFPs) were published on 30 December 1954 for the airframe and on 4 February 1955 for the rocket engine. The X-15 was built by two manufacturers: North American Aviation was contracted for the airframe in November 1955, and Reaction Motors was contracted for building the engines in 1956.

Like many X-series aircraft, the X-15 was designed to be carried aloft and drop launched from under the wing of a B-52 mother ship. Air Force NB-52A, "The High and Mighty One" (serial 52-0003), and NB-52B, "The Challenger" (serial 52-0008, a.k.a. Balls 8) served as carrier planes for all X-15 flights. Release of the X-15 from NB-52A took place at an altitude of about 8.5 miles (13.7 km) and a speed of about 500 miles per hour (805 km/h).[8] The X-15 fuselage was long and cylindrical, with rear fairings that flattened its appearance, and thick, dorsal and ventral wedge-fin stabilizers. Parts of the fuselage (the outer skin[9]) were heat-resistant nickel alloy (Inconel-X 750).[7] The retractable landing gear comprised a nose-wheel carriage and two rear skids. The skids did not extend beyond the ventral fin, which required the pilot to jettison the lower fin just before landing. The lower fin was recovered by parachute.

Cockpit and pilot systems

 
Cockpit of an X-15

The X-15 was the product of developmental research, and changes were made to various systems over the course of the program and between the different models. The X-15 was operated under several different scenarios, including attachment to a launch aircraft, drop, main engine start and acceleration, ballistic flight into thin air/space, re-entry into thicker air, unpowered glide to landing, and direct landing without a main-engine start. The main rocket engine operated only for a relatively short part of the flight but boosted the X-15 to its high speeds and altitudes. Without main engine thrust, the X-15's instruments and control surfaces remained functional, but the aircraft could not maintain altitude.

As the X-15 also had to be controlled in an environment where there was too little air for aerodynamic flight control surfaces, it had a reaction control system (RCS) that used rocket thrusters.[10] There were two different X-15 pilot control setups: one used three joysticks, the other, one joystick.[11]

The X-15 type with multiple control sticks for the pilot placed a traditional center stick between a left 3-axis joystick that sent commands to the Reaction Control System,[12] and a third joystick on the right used during high-G maneuvers to augment the center stick.[12] In addition to pilot input, the X-15 "Stability Augmentation System" (SAS) sent inputs to the aerodynamic controls to help the pilot maintain attitude control.[12] The Reaction Control System (RCS) could be operated in two modes – manual and automatic.[11] The automatic mode used a feature called "Reaction Augmentation System" (RAS) that helped stabilize the vehicle at high altitude.[11] The RAS was typically used for approximately three minutes of an X-15 flight before automatic power off.[11]

The alternative control setup used the MH-96 flight control system, which allowed one joystick in place of three and simplified pilot input.[13] The MH-96 could automatically blend aerodynamic and rocket controls, depending on how effective each system was at controlling the aircraft.[13]

Among the many controls were the rocket engine throttle and a control for jettisoning the ventral tail fin.[12] Other features of the cockpit included heated windows to prevent icing and a forward headrest for periods of high deceleration.[12]

The X-15 had an ejection seat designed to operate at speeds up to Mach 4 (4,500 km/h; 2,800 mph) and/or 120,000 feet (37 km) altitude, although it was never used during the program.[12] In the event of ejection, the seat was designed to deploy fins, which were used until it reached a safer speed/altitude at which to deploy its main parachute.[12] Pilots wore pressure suits, which could be pressurized with nitrogen gas.[12] Above 35,000 feet (11 km) altitude, the cockpit was pressurized to 3.5 psi (24 kPa; 0.24 atm) with nitrogen gas, while oxygen for breathing was fed separately to the pilot.[12]

Propulsion

 
X-15 tail with XLR-99

The initial 24 powered flights used two Reaction Motors XLR11 liquid-propellant rocket engines, enhanced to provide a total of 16,000 pounds-force (71 kN) of thrust as compared to the 6,000 pounds-force (27 kN) that a single XLR11 provided in 1947 to make the Bell X-1 the first aircraft to fly faster than the speed of sound. The XLR11 used ethyl alcohol and liquid oxygen.

By November 1960, Reaction Motors delivered the XLR99 rocket engine, generating 57,000 pounds-force (250 kN) of thrust. The remaining 175 flights of the X-15 used XLR99 engines, in a single engine configuration. The XLR99 used anhydrous ammonia and liquid oxygen as propellant, and hydrogen peroxide to drive the high-speed turbopump that delivered propellants to the engine.[10] It could burn 15,000 pounds (6,804 kg) of propellant in 80 seconds;[10] Jules Bergman titled his book on the program Ninety Seconds to Space to describe the total powered flight time of the aircraft.[14]

The X-15 reaction control system (RCS), for maneuvering in the low-pressure/density environment, used high-test peroxide (HTP), which decomposes into water and oxygen in the presence of a catalyst and could provide a specific impulse of 140 s (1.4 km/s).[11][15] The HTP also fueled a turbopump for the main engines and auxiliary power units (APUs).[10] Additional tanks for helium and liquid nitrogen performed other functions; the fuselage interior was purged with helium gas, and liquid nitrogen was used as coolant for various systems.[10]

Wedge tail and hypersonic stability

 
X-15 attached to its B-52 mother ship with a T-38 flying nearby

The X-15 had a thick wedge tail to enable it to fly in a steady manner at hypersonic speeds.[16] This produced a significant amount of base drag at lower speeds;[16] the blunt end at the rear of the X-15 could produce as much drag as an entire F-104 Starfighter.[16]

A wedge shape was used because it is more effective than the conventional tail as a stabilizing surface at hypersonic speeds. A vertical-tail area equal to 60 percent of the wing area was required to give the X-15 adequate directional stability.

— Wendell H. Stillwell, X-15 Research Results (SP-60)

Stability at hypersonic speeds was aided by side panels that could be extended from the tail to increase the overall surface area, and these panels doubled as air brakes.[16]

Operational history

 
X-15 pilots as of December 1965, left to right: Joe Engle, Bob Rushworth, John McKay, Pete Knight, Milt Thompson, and Bill Dana.
Newsreel showing a test flight of the X-15 in 1959

Before 1958, United States Air Force (USAF) and NACA officials discussed an orbital X-15 spaceplane, the X-15B that would launch into outer space from atop an SM-64 Navaho missile. This was canceled when the NACA became NASA and adopted Project Mercury instead.

By 1959, the Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar space-glider program was to become the USAF's preferred means for launching military crewed spacecraft into orbit. This program was canceled in the early 1960s before an operational vehicle could be built.[5] Various configurations of the Navaho were considered, and another proposal involved a Titan I stage.[17]

Three X-15s were built, flying 199 test flights, the last on 24 October 1968.

The first X-15 flight was an unpowered glide flight by Scott Crossfield, on 8 June 1959. Crossfield also piloted the first powered flight on 17 September 1959, and his first flight with the XLR-99 rocket engine on 15 November 1960. Twelve test pilots flew the X-15. Among these were Neil Armstrong, later a NASA astronaut and the first man to set foot on the Moon, and Joe Engle, later a commander of NASA Space Shuttle missions.

In a 1962 proposal, NASA considered using the B-52/X-15 as a launch platform for a Blue Scout rocket to place satellites weighing up to 150 pounds (68 kg) into orbit.[17][18]

In July and August 1963, pilot Joe Walker exceeded 100 km in altitude, joining NASA astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts as the first human beings to cross that line on their way to outer space. The USAF awarded astronaut wings to anyone achieving an altitude of 50 miles (80 km), while the FAI set the limit of space at 100 kilometers (62.1 mi).

On 15 November 1967, U.S. Air Force test pilot Major Michael J. Adams was killed during X-15 Flight 191 when X-15-3, AF Ser. No. 56-6672, entered a hypersonic spin while descending, then oscillated violently as aerodynamic forces increased after re-entry. As his aircraft's flight control system operated the control surfaces to their limits, acceleration built to 15 g0 (150 m/s2) vertical and 8.0 g0 (78 m/s2) lateral. The airframe broke apart at 60,000 feet (18 km) altitude, scattering the X-15's wreckage across 50 square miles (130 km2). On 8 May 2004, a monument was erected at the cockpit's locale, near Johannesburg, California.[19] Major Adams was posthumously awarded Air Force astronaut wings for his final flight in X-15-3, which had reached an altitude of 50.4 miles (81.1 km). In 1991, his name was added to the Astronaut Memorial.[19]

 
X-15-2 crash at Mud Lake, Nevada

The second plane, X-15-2, was rebuilt [20] after a landing accident on 9 November 1962 which damaged the craft and injured its pilot, John McKay.[21] The new plane renamed X-15A-2, had a new 28 -in. fuselage extension to carry liquid hydrogen.[1] It was lengthened by 2.4 feet (73 cm), had a pair of auxiliary fuel tanks attached beneath its fuselage and wings, and a complete heat-resistant ablative coating was added. It took flight for the first time on 25 June 1964. It reached its maximum speed of 4,520 miles per hour (7,274 km/h) in October 1967 with pilot William "Pete" Knight of the U.S. Air Force in control.

Five principal aircraft were used during the X-15 program: three X-15 planes and two modified "nonstandard" NB-52 bombers:

  • X-15-1 56-6670, 81 free flights
  • X-15-2 (later X-15A-2) – 56-6671, 31 free flights as X-15-2, 22 free flights as X-15A-2; 53 in total
  • X-15-3 56-6672, 65 free flights, including the Flight 191 disaster
  • NB-52A 52-003 nicknamed The High and Mighty One (retired in October 1969)
  • NB-52B 52-008 nicknamed The Challenger, later Balls 8 (retired in November 2004)

Additionally, F-100, F-104 and F5D chase aircraft and C-130 and C-47 transports supported the program.[22]

The 200th flight over Nevada was first scheduled for 21 November 1968, to be flown by William "Pete" Knight. Numerous technical problems and outbreaks of bad weather delayed this proposed flight six times, and it was permanently canceled on 20 December 1968. This X-15 (56-6670) was detached from the B-52 and then put into indefinite storage. The aircraft was later donated to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum for display.

Current static displays

 
X-15 at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
 
X-15 at the USAF Museum

Mockups

Stratofortress mother ships

 
NB-52B Balls 8 takes off with an X-15
  • NB-52A (AF Ser. No. 52-003) is displayed at the Pima Air & Space Museum adjacent to Davis–Monthan AFB in Tucson, Arizona. It launched the X-15-1 30 times, the X-15-2, 11 times, and the X-15-3 31 times (as well as the M2-F2 four times, the HL-10 11 times and the X-24A twice).
  • NB-52B (AF Ser. No. 52-008) is on permanent display outside the north gate of Edwards AFB, California. It launched the majority of X-15 flights.

Record flights

 
Key speed and altitude benchmarks of the X-15

Highest flights

During 13 of the 199 total X-15 flights, eight pilots flew above 264,000 feet (50.0 mi; 80 km), thereby qualifying as astronauts according to the US Armed Forces definition of the space border. All five Air Force pilots flew above 50 miles and were awarded military astronaut wings contemporaneously with their achievements, including Adams, who received the distinction posthumously following the flight 191 disaster.[25] However the other three were NASA employees and did not receive a comparable decoration at the time. In 2004, the Federal Aviation Administration conferred its first-ever commercial astronaut wings on Mike Melvill and Brian Binnie, pilots of the commercial SpaceShipOne, another spaceplane with a flight profile comparable to the X-15's. Following this in 2005, NASA retroactively awarded its civilian astronaut wings to Dana (then living), and to McKay and Walker (posthumously).[26][27] Forrest S. Petersen, the only Navy pilot in the X-15 program, never took the aircraft above the requisite altitude and thus never earned astronaut wings.

Of the thirteen flights, only twoflights 90 and 91, piloted by Walkerexceeded the Kármán line, the internationally recognized 100 km (62 mi) altitude used by the FAI to denote the edge of space.

X-15 flights higher than 50 miles[28][29]
Flight Date Top speed[a] Altitude Pilot
Flight 91 22 August 1963 3,794 mph (6,106 km/h) (Mach 5.58) 67.1 mi (108.0 km) Joseph A. Walker
Flight 90 19 July 1963 3,710 mph (5,971 km/h) (Mach 5.50) 65.9 mi (106.1 km) Joseph A. Walker
Flight 62 17 July 1962 3,832 mph (6,167 km/h) (Mach 5.45) 59.6 mi (95.9 km) Robert M. White
Flight 174 1 November 1966 3,750 mph (6,035 km/h) (Mach 5.46) 58.1 mi (93.5 km) William H. "Bill" Dana
Flight 150 28 September 1965 3,732 mph (6,006 km/h) (Mach 5.33) 56.0 mi (90.1 km) John B. McKay
Flight 87 27 June 1963 3,425 mph (5,512 km/h) (Mach 4.89) 54.0 mi (86.9 km) Robert A. Rushworth
Flight 138 29 June 1965 3,432 mph (5,523 km/h) (Mach 4.94) 53.1 mi (85.5 km) Joe H. Engle
Flight 190 17 October 1967 3,856 mph (6,206 km/h) (Mach 5.53) 53.1 mi (85.5 km) William J. "Pete" Knight
Flight 77 17 January 1963 3,677 mph (5,918 km/h) (Mach 5.47) 51.5 mi (82.9 km) Joseph A. Walker
Flight 143 10 August 1965 3,550 mph (5,713 km/h) (Mach 5.20) 51.3 mi (82.6 km) Joe H. Engle
Flight 197 21 August 1968 3,443 mph (5,541 km/h) (Mach 5.01) 50.7 mi (81.6 km) William H. Dana
Flight 153 14 October 1965 3,554 mph (5,720 km/h) (Mach 5.08) 50.5 mi (81.3 km) Joe H. Engle
Flight 191 15 November 1967 3,570 mph (5,745 km/h) (Mach 5.20) 50.4 mi (81.1 km) Michael J. Adams

fatal

Fastest recorded flights

X-15 ten fastest flights[31][29]
Flight Date Top speed[a] Altitude Pilot
Flight 188 3 October 1967 4,520 mph (7,274 km/h) (Mach 6.70) 19.3 mi (31.1 km) William J. "Pete" Knight
Flight 175 18 November 1966 4,250 mph (6,840 km/h) (Mach 6.33) 18.7 mi (30.1 km) William J. "Pete" Knight
Flight 59 27 June 1962 4,104 mph (6,605 km/h) (Mach 5.92) 23.4 mi (37.7 km) Joseph A. Walker
Flight 45 9 November 1961 4,093 mph (6,587 km/h) (Mach 6.04) 19.2 mi (30.9 km) Robert M. White
Flight 97 5 December 1963 4,018 mph (6,466 km/h) (Mach 6.06) 19.1 mi (30.7 km) Robert A. Rushworth
Flight 64 26 July 1962 3,989 mph (6,420 km/h) (Mach 5.74) 18.7 mi (30.1 km) Neil A. Armstrong
Flight 137 22 June 1965 3,938 mph (6,338 km/h) (Mach 5.64) 29.5 mi (47.5 km) John B. McKay
Flight 89 18 July 1963 3,925 mph (6,317 km/h) (Mach 5.63) 19.8 mi (31.9 km) Robert A. Rushworth
Flight 86 25 June 1963 3,911 mph (6,294 km/h) (Mach 5.51) 21.2 mi (34.1 km) Joseph A. Walker
Flight 105 29 April 1964 3,906 mph (6,286 km/h) (Mach 5.72) 19.2 mi (30.9 km) Robert A. Rushworth

Pilots

X-15 pilots and their achievements during the program
Pilot Organization Year assigned
to X-15[32]
Total
flights
USAF
space
flights
FAI
space
flights
Max
Mach
Max
speed
(mph)
Max
altitude
(miles)
Michael J. Adams U.S. Air Force 1966 7 1 0 5.59 3,822 50.3
Neil A. Armstrong NASA 7 0 0 5.74 3,989 39.2
Scott Crossfield North American Aviation 14 0 0 2.97 1,959 15.3
William H. Dana NASA 1965 16 2 0 5.53 3,897 58.1
Joe H. Engle U.S. Air Force 1963 16 3 0 5.71 3,887 53.1
William J. Knight U.S. Air Force 1964 16 1 0 6.7 4,519 53.1
John B. McKay NASA 1960 29 1 0 5.65 3,863 55.9
Forrest S. Petersen U.S. Navy 1958 5 0 0 5.3 3,600 19.2
Robert A. Rushworth U.S. Air Force 1958 34 1 0 6.06 4,017 53.9
Milton O. Thompson NASA 1963 14 0 0 5.48 3,723 40.5
Joseph A. Walker NASA 25 3 2 5.92 4,104 67.0
Robert M. White U.S. Air Force 1957 16 1 0 6.04 4,092 59.6

Killed in the crash of X-15-3

Specifications

 

Other configurations include the Reaction Motors XLR11 equipped X-15, and the long version.

Data from[citation needed]

General characteristics

  • Crew: One
  • Length: 50 ft 9 in (15.47 m)
  • Wingspan: 22 ft 4 in (6.81 m)
  • Height: 13 ft 3 in (4.04 m)
  • Wing area: 200 sq ft (19 m2)
  • Empty weight: 14,600 lb (6,622 kg)
  • Gross weight: 34,000 lb (15,422 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Reaction Motors XLR99-RM-2 liquid-fuelled rocket engine, 70,400 lbf (313 kN) thrust

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 4,520 mph (7,270 km/h, 3,930 kn)
  • Range: 280 mi (450 km, 240 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 354,330 ft (108,000 m)
  • Rate of climb: 60,000 ft/min (300 m/s)
  • Thrust/weight: 2.07

In popular culture

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists


Notes

  1. ^ a b The speed of sound in the atmosphere varies with altitude, so a comparatively lower airspeed (measured in mph or km/h) can correspond to a higher Mach number.[30]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Gibbs, Yvonne, ed. (28 February 2014). "NASA Armstrong Fact Sheet: X-15 Hypersonic Research Program". NASA. Retrieved 4 October 2015. 4,520 mph (Mach 6.7 on Oct. 3, 1967,
  2. ^ Haskins, Caroline; Anderson, Brian; Koebler, Jason (6 October 2017). "Why the Piloted Flight Speed Record Hasn't Been Broken in 50 Years". Retrieved 5 February 2019.
  3. ^ "North American X-15 High-Speed Research Aircraft". Aerospaceweb.org. 2010. Retrieved 24 November 2008.
  4. ^ Jacopo Prisco (28 July 2020). "X-15: The fastest manned rocket plane ever". CNN. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  5. ^ a b Jenkins 2001, p. 10.
  6. ^ Thompson, Elvia H.; Johnsen, Frederick A. (23 August 2005). "NASA Honors High Flying Space Pioneers" (Press release). NASA. Release 05-233.
  7. ^ a b Käsmann 1999, p. 105.
  8. ^ "X-15 launch from B-52 mothership". Armstrong Flight Research Center. 6 February 2002. Photo E-4942.
  9. ^ Gibbs, Yvonne (13 August 2015). "NASA Dryden Fact Sheets - X-15 Hypersonic Research Program". NASA.
  10. ^ a b c d e Raveling, Paul. "X-15 Pilot Report, Part 1: X-15 General Description & Walkaround". SierraFoot.org. Retrieved 30 September 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e Jarvis, Calvin R.; Lock, Wilton P. (1965). Operational Experience With the X-15 Reaction Control and Reaction Augmentation Systems (PDF). NASA. OCLC 703664750. TN D-2864.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Raveling, Paul. "X-15 Pilot Report, Part 2: X-15 Cockpit Check". SierraFoot.org. Retrieved 1 October 2011.
  13. ^ a b "Forty Years ago in the X-15 Flight Test Program, November 1961–March 1962". Goleta Air & Space Museum. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  14. ^ Gale, Floyd C. (October 1961). "Galaxy's 5-Star Shelf". Galaxy Magazine. Vol. 20, no. 1. p. 174.
  15. ^ Davies 2003, p. 8.28.
  16. ^ a b c d Stillwell, Wendell H. (1965). X-15 Research Results: With a Selected Bibliography. NASA. OCLC 44275779. NASA SP-60.
  17. ^ a b Wade, Mark. . Encyclopedia Astronautica. Archived from the original on 11 October 2011. Retrieved 30 September 2011.
  18. ^ "Historical note: Blue Scout / X-15". Citizensinspace.org. 21 March 2012.
  19. ^ a b Merlin, Peter W. (30 July 2004). "Michael Adams: Remembering a Fallen Hero". The X-Press. 46 (6).
  20. ^ Evans 2013a, p. 183
  21. ^ Evans 2013a, p. 143
  22. ^ Jenkins, Dennis R. (2010). X-15: Extending The Frontiers of Flight. NASA. ISBN 978-1-4700-2585-4.
  23. ^ National Air and Space Museum (15 July 2022). "North American X-15". airandspace.si.edu. from the original on 25 June 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2022. Display Status: This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum. It is either on loan or in storage.
  24. ^ USAF Museum Guidebook 1975, p. 73.
  25. ^ Jenkins (2000), Appendix 8, p. 117.
  26. ^ Johnsen, Frederick A. (23 August 2005). "X-15 Pioneers Honored as Astronauts". NASA.
  27. ^ Pearlman, Robert Z. (23 August 2005). "Former NASA X-15 Pilots Awarded Astronaut Wings". space.com.
  28. ^ Evans 2013b, p. 12
  29. ^ a b X-15 First Flight 1991, Appendix A.
  30. ^ Evans 2013b, p. 12
  31. ^ Evans 2013b
  32. ^ Cassutt, Michael (November 1998). Who's Who in Space (Subsequent ed.). New York: Macmillan Library Reference. ISBN 9780028649658.

Bibliography

  • Davies, Mark, ed. (2003). The Standard Handbook for Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineers. New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 8–28. ISBN 978-0-07-136229-0.
  • Evans, Michelle (2013a). The X-15 Rocket Plane, Flying the First Wings into Space. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-2840-5.
  • Evans, Michelle (2013b). "The X-15 Rocket Plane: Flying the First Wings Into Space - Flight Log" (PDF). Mach 25 Media.
  • Godwin, Robert, ed. (2001). X-15: The NASA Mission Reports. Burlington, Ontario: Apogee Books. ISBN 1-896522-65-3.
  • Hallion, Richard P. (1978). "Saga of the Rocket Ships". In Green, William; Swanborough, Gordon (eds.). Air Enthusiast Six. Bromley, Kent, UK: Pilot Press.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R. (2001). Space Shuttle: The History of the National Space Transportation System: The First 100 Missions (3rd ed.). Stillwater, Minnesota: Voyageur Press. ISBN 0-9633974-5-1.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R.; Landis, Tony; Miller, Jay (June 2003). American X-Vehicles: An Inventory – X-1 to X-50 (PDF). Monographs in Aerospace History No. 31. NASA. OCLC 68623213. SP-2003-4531.
  • Jenkins, Dennis R.; Dana, William H. (2010). X-15: Extending the Frontiers of Flight. NASA. ISBN 978-0-16-079285-4. SP-2007-562.
  • Käsmann, Ferdinand C. W. (1999). Die schnellsten Jets der Welt: Weltrekord-Flugzeuge [The Fastest Jets in the World: World Record Aircraft] (in German). Kolpingring, Germany: Aviatic Verlag. ISBN 3-925505-26-1.
  • Price, A. B. (12 January 1968). Design Report – Thermal Protection System, X-15A-2. Denver, Colorado: Martin Marietta Corporation. NASA CR-82003.
  • Proceedings of the X-15 First Flight 30th Anniversary Celebration (PDF). NASA. January 1991. NASA CP-3105.
  • Thompson, Milton O. (1992). At the Edge of Space: The X-15 Flight Program. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 1-56098-107-5.
  • Tregaskis, Richard (2000). X-15 Diary: The Story of America's First Space Ship. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse. ISBN 0-595-00250-1.
  • United States Air Force Museum Guidebook. Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio: Air Force Museum Foundation. 1975.
  • Watts, Joe D. (October 1968). Flight Experience With Shock Impingement and Interference Heating on the X-15-2 Research Airplane (PDF). NASA. NASA-TM-X-1669.

External links

NASA
  • X-15: Hypersonic Research at the Edge of Space
  • Hypersonics Before the Shuttle: A Concise History of the X-15 Research Airplane
  • The short film Research Project X-15 is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
Non-NASA
  • at Encyclopedia Astronautica
  • X-15: Advanced Research Airplane, design summary by North America Aviation

north, american, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, hypersonic, rocket, powered, aircraft, operated, united, states, force, national, aeronautics, space, administration, part, plane, series, experimental, aircraft, speed, altitude, records, 1960s, r. X 15 redirects here For other uses see X 15 disambiguation The North American X 15 is a hypersonic rocket powered aircraft It was operated by the United States Air Force and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration as part of the X plane series of experimental aircraft The X 15 set speed and altitude records in the 1960s reaching the edge of outer space and returning with valuable data used in aircraft and spacecraft design The X 15 s highest speed 4 520 miles per hour 7 274 km h 2 021 m s 1 was achieved on 3 October 1967 2 when William J Knight flew at Mach 6 7 at an altitude of 102 100 feet 31 120 m or 19 34 miles This set the official world record for the highest speed ever recorded by a crewed powered aircraft which remains unbroken 3 4 X 15The X 15 pulling away from its drop launch planeRole Experimental high speed rocket powered research aircraftManufacturer North American AviationFirst flight 8 June 1959 1 Introduction 17 September 1959Retired December 1968 1 Primary users United States Air ForceNASANumber built 3During the X 15 program 12 pilots flew a combined 199 flights 1 Of these 8 pilots flew a combined 13 flights which met the Air Force spaceflight criterion by exceeding the altitude of 50 miles 80 km thus qualifying these pilots as being astronauts of those 13 flights two flown by the same civilian pilot met the FAI definition 100 kilometres 62 mi of outer space The 5 Air Force pilots qualified for military astronaut wings immediately while the 3 civilian pilots were eventually awarded NASA astronaut wings in 2005 35 years after the last X 15 flight 5 6 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Cockpit and pilot systems 1 2 Propulsion 1 3 Wedge tail and hypersonic stability 2 Operational history 3 Current static displays 3 1 Mockups 3 2 Stratofortress mother ships 4 Record flights 4 1 Highest flights 4 2 Fastest recorded flights 5 Pilots 6 Specifications 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksDesign and development Edit X 15 after igniting rocket engine X 15A 2 with sealed ablative coating external fuel tanks and ramjet dummy test The X 15 was based on a concept study from Walter Dornberger for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics NACA for a hypersonic research aircraft 7 The requests for proposal RFPs were published on 30 December 1954 for the airframe and on 4 February 1955 for the rocket engine The X 15 was built by two manufacturers North American Aviation was contracted for the airframe in November 1955 and Reaction Motors was contracted for building the engines in 1956 Like many X series aircraft the X 15 was designed to be carried aloft and drop launched from under the wing of a B 52 mother ship Air Force NB 52A The High and Mighty One serial 52 0003 and NB 52B The Challenger serial 52 0008 a k a Balls 8 served as carrier planes for all X 15 flights Release of the X 15 from NB 52A took place at an altitude of about 8 5 miles 13 7 km and a speed of about 500 miles per hour 805 km h 8 The X 15 fuselage was long and cylindrical with rear fairings that flattened its appearance and thick dorsal and ventral wedge fin stabilizers Parts of the fuselage the outer skin 9 were heat resistant nickel alloy Inconel X 750 7 The retractable landing gear comprised a nose wheel carriage and two rear skids The skids did not extend beyond the ventral fin which required the pilot to jettison the lower fin just before landing The lower fin was recovered by parachute Cockpit and pilot systems Edit Cockpit of an X 15 The X 15 was the product of developmental research and changes were made to various systems over the course of the program and between the different models The X 15 was operated under several different scenarios including attachment to a launch aircraft drop main engine start and acceleration ballistic flight into thin air space re entry into thicker air unpowered glide to landing and direct landing without a main engine start The main rocket engine operated only for a relatively short part of the flight but boosted the X 15 to its high speeds and altitudes Without main engine thrust the X 15 s instruments and control surfaces remained functional but the aircraft could not maintain altitude As the X 15 also had to be controlled in an environment where there was too little air for aerodynamic flight control surfaces it had a reaction control system RCS that used rocket thrusters 10 There were two different X 15 pilot control setups one used three joysticks the other one joystick 11 The X 15 type with multiple control sticks for the pilot placed a traditional center stick between a left 3 axis joystick that sent commands to the Reaction Control System 12 and a third joystick on the right used during high G maneuvers to augment the center stick 12 In addition to pilot input the X 15 Stability Augmentation System SAS sent inputs to the aerodynamic controls to help the pilot maintain attitude control 12 The Reaction Control System RCS could be operated in two modes manual and automatic 11 The automatic mode used a feature called Reaction Augmentation System RAS that helped stabilize the vehicle at high altitude 11 The RAS was typically used for approximately three minutes of an X 15 flight before automatic power off 11 The alternative control setup used the MH 96 flight control system which allowed one joystick in place of three and simplified pilot input 13 The MH 96 could automatically blend aerodynamic and rocket controls depending on how effective each system was at controlling the aircraft 13 Among the many controls were the rocket engine throttle and a control for jettisoning the ventral tail fin 12 Other features of the cockpit included heated windows to prevent icing and a forward headrest for periods of high deceleration 12 The X 15 had an ejection seat designed to operate at speeds up to Mach 4 4 500 km h 2 800 mph and or 120 000 feet 37 km altitude although it was never used during the program 12 In the event of ejection the seat was designed to deploy fins which were used until it reached a safer speed altitude at which to deploy its main parachute 12 Pilots wore pressure suits which could be pressurized with nitrogen gas 12 Above 35 000 feet 11 km altitude the cockpit was pressurized to 3 5 psi 24 kPa 0 24 atm with nitrogen gas while oxygen for breathing was fed separately to the pilot 12 Propulsion Edit X 15 tail with XLR 99 The initial 24 powered flights used two Reaction Motors XLR11 liquid propellant rocket engines enhanced to provide a total of 16 000 pounds force 71 kN of thrust as compared to the 6 000 pounds force 27 kN that a single XLR11 provided in 1947 to make the Bell X 1 the first aircraft to fly faster than the speed of sound The XLR11 used ethyl alcohol and liquid oxygen By November 1960 Reaction Motors delivered the XLR99 rocket engine generating 57 000 pounds force 250 kN of thrust The remaining 175 flights of the X 15 used XLR99 engines in a single engine configuration The XLR99 used anhydrous ammonia and liquid oxygen as propellant and hydrogen peroxide to drive the high speed turbopump that delivered propellants to the engine 10 It could burn 15 000 pounds 6 804 kg of propellant in 80 seconds 10 Jules Bergman titled his book on the program Ninety Seconds to Space to describe the total powered flight time of the aircraft 14 The X 15 reaction control system RCS for maneuvering in the low pressure density environment used high test peroxide HTP which decomposes into water and oxygen in the presence of a catalyst and could provide a specific impulse of 140 s 1 4 km s 11 15 The HTP also fueled a turbopump for the main engines and auxiliary power units APUs 10 Additional tanks for helium and liquid nitrogen performed other functions the fuselage interior was purged with helium gas and liquid nitrogen was used as coolant for various systems 10 Wedge tail and hypersonic stability Edit X 15 attached to its B 52 mother ship with a T 38 flying nearby The X 15 had a thick wedge tail to enable it to fly in a steady manner at hypersonic speeds 16 This produced a significant amount of base drag at lower speeds 16 the blunt end at the rear of the X 15 could produce as much drag as an entire F 104 Starfighter 16 A wedge shape was used because it is more effective than the conventional tail as a stabilizing surface at hypersonic speeds A vertical tail area equal to 60 percent of the wing area was required to give the X 15 adequate directional stability Wendell H Stillwell X 15 Research Results SP 60 Stability at hypersonic speeds was aided by side panels that could be extended from the tail to increase the overall surface area and these panels doubled as air brakes 16 Operational history Edit X 15 pilots as of December 1965 left to right Joe Engle Bob Rushworth John McKay Pete Knight Milt Thompson and Bill Dana source source source source source source source source source source Newsreel showing a test flight of the X 15 in 1959 Before 1958 United States Air Force USAF and NACA officials discussed an orbital X 15 spaceplane the X 15B that would launch into outer space from atop an SM 64 Navaho missile This was canceled when the NACA became NASA and adopted Project Mercury instead By 1959 the Boeing X 20 Dyna Soar space glider program was to become the USAF s preferred means for launching military crewed spacecraft into orbit This program was canceled in the early 1960s before an operational vehicle could be built 5 Various configurations of the Navaho were considered and another proposal involved a Titan I stage 17 Three X 15s were built flying 199 test flights the last on 24 October 1968 The first X 15 flight was an unpowered glide flight by Scott Crossfield on 8 June 1959 Crossfield also piloted the first powered flight on 17 September 1959 and his first flight with the XLR 99 rocket engine on 15 November 1960 Twelve test pilots flew the X 15 Among these were Neil Armstrong later a NASA astronaut and the first man to set foot on the Moon and Joe Engle later a commander of NASA Space Shuttle missions In a 1962 proposal NASA considered using the B 52 X 15 as a launch platform for a Blue Scout rocket to place satellites weighing up to 150 pounds 68 kg into orbit 17 18 In July and August 1963 pilot Joe Walker exceeded 100 km in altitude joining NASA astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts as the first human beings to cross that line on their way to outer space The USAF awarded astronaut wings to anyone achieving an altitude of 50 miles 80 km while the FAI set the limit of space at 100 kilometers 62 1 mi On 15 November 1967 U S Air Force test pilot Major Michael J Adams was killed during X 15 Flight 191 when X 15 3 AF Ser No 56 6672 entered a hypersonic spin while descending then oscillated violently as aerodynamic forces increased after re entry As his aircraft s flight control system operated the control surfaces to their limits acceleration built to 15 g0 150 m s2 vertical and 8 0 g0 78 m s2 lateral The airframe broke apart at 60 000 feet 18 km altitude scattering the X 15 s wreckage across 50 square miles 130 km2 On 8 May 2004 a monument was erected at the cockpit s locale near Johannesburg California 19 Major Adams was posthumously awarded Air Force astronaut wings for his final flight in X 15 3 which had reached an altitude of 50 4 miles 81 1 km In 1991 his name was added to the Astronaut Memorial 19 X 15 2 crash at Mud Lake Nevada The second plane X 15 2 was rebuilt 20 after a landing accident on 9 November 1962 which damaged the craft and injured its pilot John McKay 21 The new plane renamed X 15A 2 had a new 28 in fuselage extension to carry liquid hydrogen 1 It was lengthened by 2 4 feet 73 cm had a pair of auxiliary fuel tanks attached beneath its fuselage and wings and a complete heat resistant ablative coating was added It took flight for the first time on 25 June 1964 It reached its maximum speed of 4 520 miles per hour 7 274 km h in October 1967 with pilot William Pete Knight of the U S Air Force in control Five principal aircraft were used during the X 15 program three X 15 planes and two modified nonstandard NB 52 bombers X 15 1 56 6670 81 free flights X 15 2 later X 15A 2 56 6671 31 free flights as X 15 2 22 free flights as X 15A 2 53 in total X 15 3 56 6672 65 free flights including the Flight 191 disaster NB 52A 52 003 nicknamed The High and Mighty One retired in October 1969 NB 52B 52 008 nicknamed The Challenger later Balls 8 retired in November 2004 Additionally F 100 F 104 and F5D chase aircraft and C 130 and C 47 transports supported the program 22 The 200th flight over Nevada was first scheduled for 21 November 1968 to be flown by William Pete Knight Numerous technical problems and outbreaks of bad weather delayed this proposed flight six times and it was permanently canceled on 20 December 1968 This X 15 56 6670 was detached from the B 52 and then put into indefinite storage The aircraft was later donated to the Smithsonian Air amp Space Museum for display NB 52A s n 52 003 permanent test variant carrying an X 15 with mission markings horizontal X 15 silhouettes denote glide flights diagonal silhouettes denote powered flights X 15 just after release X 15 touching down on its skids with the lower ventral fin jettisoned X 15A 2 56 6671 with external fuel tanksCurrent static displays Edit X 15 at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C X 15 at the USAF Museum X 15 1 AF Ser No 56 6670 was on display in the National Air and Space Museum Milestones of Flight gallery Washington D C the aircraft is no longer on display 23 X 15A 2 AF Ser No 56 6671 is at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton Ohio It was retired to the museum in October 1969 24 The aircraft is displayed in the museum s Research and Development Gallery alongside other X planes including the Bell X 1B and Douglas X 3 Stiletto Mockups Edit Dryden Flight Research Center Edwards AFB California United States painted with AF Ser No 56 6672 Pima Air amp Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB Tucson Arizona painted with AF Ser No 56 6671 Evergreen Aviation amp Space Museum McMinnville Oregon painted with AF Ser No 56 6672 A full scale wooden mockup of the X 15 it is displayed along with one of the rocket engines Stratofortress mother ships Edit NB 52B Balls 8 takes off with an X 15 NB 52A AF Ser No 52 003 is displayed at the Pima Air amp Space Museum adjacent to Davis Monthan AFB in Tucson Arizona It launched the X 15 1 30 times the X 15 2 11 times and the X 15 3 31 times as well as the M2 F2 four times the HL 10 11 times and the X 24A twice NB 52B AF Ser No 52 008 is on permanent display outside the north gate of Edwards AFB California It launched the majority of X 15 flights Record flights EditMain article List of X 15 flights Key speed and altitude benchmarks of the X 15 Highest flights Edit During 13 of the 199 total X 15 flights eight pilots flew above 264 000 feet 50 0 mi 80 km thereby qualifying as astronauts according to the US Armed Forces definition of the space border All five Air Force pilots flew above 50 miles and were awarded military astronaut wings contemporaneously with their achievements including Adams who received the distinction posthumously following the flight 191 disaster 25 However the other three were NASA employees and did not receive a comparable decoration at the time In 2004 the Federal Aviation Administration conferred its first ever commercial astronaut wings on Mike Melvill and Brian Binnie pilots of the commercial SpaceShipOne another spaceplane with a flight profile comparable to the X 15 s Following this in 2005 NASA retroactively awarded its civilian astronaut wings to Dana then living and to McKay and Walker posthumously 26 27 Forrest S Petersen the only Navy pilot in the X 15 program never took the aircraft above the requisite altitude and thus never earned astronaut wings Of the thirteen flights only two flights 90 and 91 piloted by Walker exceeded the Karman line the internationally recognized 100 km 62 mi altitude used by the FAI to denote the edge of space X 15 flights higher than 50 miles 28 29 Flight Date Top speed a Altitude PilotFlight 91 22 August 1963 3 794 mph 6 106 km h Mach 5 58 67 1 mi 108 0 km Joseph A WalkerFlight 90 19 July 1963 3 710 mph 5 971 km h Mach 5 50 65 9 mi 106 1 km Joseph A WalkerFlight 62 17 July 1962 3 832 mph 6 167 km h Mach 5 45 59 6 mi 95 9 km Robert M WhiteFlight 174 1 November 1966 3 750 mph 6 035 km h Mach 5 46 58 1 mi 93 5 km William H Bill DanaFlight 150 28 September 1965 3 732 mph 6 006 km h Mach 5 33 56 0 mi 90 1 km John B McKayFlight 87 27 June 1963 3 425 mph 5 512 km h Mach 4 89 54 0 mi 86 9 km Robert A RushworthFlight 138 29 June 1965 3 432 mph 5 523 km h Mach 4 94 53 1 mi 85 5 km Joe H EngleFlight 190 17 October 1967 3 856 mph 6 206 km h Mach 5 53 53 1 mi 85 5 km William J Pete KnightFlight 77 17 January 1963 3 677 mph 5 918 km h Mach 5 47 51 5 mi 82 9 km Joseph A WalkerFlight 143 10 August 1965 3 550 mph 5 713 km h Mach 5 20 51 3 mi 82 6 km Joe H EngleFlight 197 21 August 1968 3 443 mph 5 541 km h Mach 5 01 50 7 mi 81 6 km William H DanaFlight 153 14 October 1965 3 554 mph 5 720 km h Mach 5 08 50 5 mi 81 3 km Joe H EngleFlight 191 15 November 1967 3 570 mph 5 745 km h Mach 5 20 50 4 mi 81 1 km Michael J Adams fatalFastest recorded flights Edit X 15 ten fastest flights 31 29 Flight Date Top speed a Altitude PilotFlight 188 3 October 1967 4 520 mph 7 274 km h Mach 6 70 19 3 mi 31 1 km William J Pete KnightFlight 175 18 November 1966 4 250 mph 6 840 km h Mach 6 33 18 7 mi 30 1 km William J Pete KnightFlight 59 27 June 1962 4 104 mph 6 605 km h Mach 5 92 23 4 mi 37 7 km Joseph A WalkerFlight 45 9 November 1961 4 093 mph 6 587 km h Mach 6 04 19 2 mi 30 9 km Robert M WhiteFlight 97 5 December 1963 4 018 mph 6 466 km h Mach 6 06 19 1 mi 30 7 km Robert A RushworthFlight 64 26 July 1962 3 989 mph 6 420 km h Mach 5 74 18 7 mi 30 1 km Neil A ArmstrongFlight 137 22 June 1965 3 938 mph 6 338 km h Mach 5 64 29 5 mi 47 5 km John B McKayFlight 89 18 July 1963 3 925 mph 6 317 km h Mach 5 63 19 8 mi 31 9 km Robert A RushworthFlight 86 25 June 1963 3 911 mph 6 294 km h Mach 5 51 21 2 mi 34 1 km Joseph A WalkerFlight 105 29 April 1964 3 906 mph 6 286 km h Mach 5 72 19 2 mi 30 9 km Robert A RushworthPilots EditX 15 pilots and their achievements during the program Pilot Organization Year assignedto X 15 32 Totalflights USAFspaceflights FAIspaceflights MaxMach Maxspeed mph Maxaltitude miles Michael J Adams U S Air Force 1966 7 1 0 5 59 3 822 50 3Neil A Armstrong NASA 7 0 0 5 74 3 989 39 2Scott Crossfield North American Aviation 14 0 0 2 97 1 959 15 3William H Dana NASA 1965 16 2 0 5 53 3 897 58 1Joe H Engle U S Air Force 1963 16 3 0 5 71 3 887 53 1William J Knight U S Air Force 1964 16 1 0 6 7 4 519 53 1John B McKay NASA 1960 29 1 0 5 65 3 863 55 9Forrest S Petersen U S Navy 1958 5 0 0 5 3 3 600 19 2Robert A Rushworth U S Air Force 1958 34 1 0 6 06 4 017 53 9Milton O Thompson NASA 1963 14 0 0 5 48 3 723 40 5Joseph A Walker NASA 25 3 2 5 92 4 104 67 0Robert M White U S Air Force 1957 16 1 0 6 04 4 092 59 6 Killed in the crash of X 15 3Specifications Edit Other configurations include the Reaction Motors XLR11 equipped X 15 and the long version Data from citation needed General characteristicsCrew One Length 50 ft 9 in 15 47 m Wingspan 22 ft 4 in 6 81 m Height 13 ft 3 in 4 04 m Wing area 200 sq ft 19 m2 Empty weight 14 600 lb 6 622 kg Gross weight 34 000 lb 15 422 kg Powerplant 1 Reaction Motors XLR99 RM 2 liquid fuelled rocket engine 70 400 lbf 313 kN thrustPerformance Maximum speed 4 520 mph 7 270 km h 3 930 kn Range 280 mi 450 km 240 nmi Service ceiling 354 330 ft 108 000 m Rate of climb 60 000 ft min 300 m s Thrust weight 2 07In popular culture EditMain article Aircraft in fiction North American X 15See also Edit Aviation portal Rocketry portal Spaceflight portal SpaceShipOne SpaceShipTwoAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bell X 2 Douglas D 558 2 SkyrocketRelated lists List of rocket aircraft List of X 15 flights List of spaceflight related accidents and incidentsNotes Edit a b The speed of sound in the atmosphere varies with altitude so a comparatively lower airspeed measured in mph or km h can correspond to a higher Mach number 30 References Edit a b c d e Gibbs Yvonne ed 28 February 2014 NASA Armstrong Fact Sheet X 15 Hypersonic Research Program NASA Retrieved 4 October 2015 4 520 mph Mach 6 7 on Oct 3 1967 Haskins Caroline Anderson Brian Koebler Jason 6 October 2017 Why the Piloted Flight Speed Record Hasn t Been Broken in 50 Years Retrieved 5 February 2019 North American X 15 High Speed Research Aircraft Aerospaceweb org 2010 Retrieved 24 November 2008 Jacopo Prisco 28 July 2020 X 15 The fastest manned rocket plane ever CNN Retrieved 12 November 2020 a b Jenkins 2001 p 10 Thompson Elvia H Johnsen Frederick A 23 August 2005 NASA Honors High Flying Space Pioneers Press release NASA Release 05 233 a b Kasmann 1999 p 105 X 15 launch from B 52 mothership Armstrong Flight Research Center 6 February 2002 Photo E 4942 Gibbs Yvonne 13 August 2015 NASA Dryden Fact Sheets X 15 Hypersonic Research Program NASA a b c d e Raveling Paul X 15 Pilot Report Part 1 X 15 General Description amp Walkaround SierraFoot org Retrieved 30 September 2011 a b c d e Jarvis Calvin R Lock Wilton P 1965 Operational Experience With the X 15 Reaction Control and Reaction Augmentation Systems PDF NASA OCLC 703664750 TN D 2864 a b c d e f g h i Raveling Paul X 15 Pilot Report Part 2 X 15 Cockpit Check SierraFoot org Retrieved 1 October 2011 a b Forty Years ago in the X 15 Flight Test Program November 1961 March 1962 Goleta Air amp Space Museum Retrieved 3 October 2011 Gale Floyd C October 1961 Galaxy s 5 Star Shelf Galaxy Magazine Vol 20 no 1 p 174 Davies 2003 p 8 28 a b c d Stillwell Wendell H 1965 X 15 Research Results With a Selected Bibliography NASA OCLC 44275779 NASA SP 60 a b Wade Mark X 15 Blue Scout Encyclopedia Astronautica Archived from the original on 11 October 2011 Retrieved 30 September 2011 Historical note Blue Scout X 15 Citizensinspace org 21 March 2012 a b Merlin Peter W 30 July 2004 Michael Adams Remembering a Fallen Hero The X Press 46 6 Evans 2013a p 183 Evans 2013a p 143 Jenkins Dennis R 2010 X 15 Extending The Frontiers of Flight NASA ISBN 978 1 4700 2585 4 National Air and Space Museum 15 July 2022 North American X 15 airandspace si edu Archived from the original on 25 June 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2022 Display Status This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum It is either on loan or in storage USAF Museum Guidebook 1975 p 73 Jenkins 2000 Appendix 8 p 117 Johnsen Frederick A 23 August 2005 X 15 Pioneers Honored as Astronauts NASA Pearlman Robert Z 23 August 2005 Former NASA X 15 Pilots Awarded Astronaut Wings space com Evans 2013b p 12 a b X 15 First Flight 1991 Appendix A Evans 2013b p 12 Evans 2013b Cassutt Michael November 1998 Who s Who in Space Subsequent ed New York Macmillan Library Reference ISBN 9780028649658 Bibliography EditDavies Mark ed 2003 The Standard Handbook for Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineers New York McGraw Hill pp 8 28 ISBN 978 0 07 136229 0 Evans Michelle 2013a The X 15 Rocket Plane Flying the First Wings into Space Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 2840 5 Evans Michelle 2013b The X 15 Rocket Plane Flying the First Wings Into Space Flight Log PDF Mach 25 Media Godwin Robert ed 2001 X 15 The NASA Mission Reports Burlington Ontario Apogee Books ISBN 1 896522 65 3 Hallion Richard P 1978 Saga of the Rocket Ships In Green William Swanborough Gordon eds Air Enthusiast Six Bromley Kent UK Pilot Press Jenkins Dennis R 2001 Space Shuttle The History of the National Space Transportation System The First 100 Missions 3rd ed Stillwater Minnesota Voyageur Press ISBN 0 9633974 5 1 Jenkins Dennis R Landis Tony Miller Jay June 2003 American X Vehicles An Inventory X 1 to X 50 PDF Monographs in Aerospace History No 31 NASA OCLC 68623213 SP 2003 4531 Jenkins Dennis R Dana William H 2010 X 15 Extending the Frontiers of Flight NASA ISBN 978 0 16 079285 4 SP 2007 562 Kasmann Ferdinand C W 1999 Die schnellsten Jets der Welt Weltrekord Flugzeuge The Fastest Jets in the World World Record Aircraft in German Kolpingring Germany Aviatic Verlag ISBN 3 925505 26 1 Price A B 12 January 1968 Design Report Thermal Protection System X 15A 2 Denver Colorado Martin Marietta Corporation NASA CR 82003 Proceedings of the X 15 First Flight 30th Anniversary Celebration PDF NASA January 1991 NASA CP 3105 Thompson Milton O 1992 At the Edge of Space The X 15 Flight Program Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 1 56098 107 5 Tregaskis Richard 2000 X 15 Diary The Story of America s First Space Ship Lincoln Nebraska iUniverse ISBN 0 595 00250 1 United States Air Force Museum Guidebook Wright Patterson AFB Ohio Air Force Museum Foundation 1975 Watts Joe D October 1968 Flight Experience With Shock Impingement and Interference Heating on the X 15 2 Research Airplane PDF NASA NASA TM X 1669 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to North American X 15 NASAX 15 Hypersonic Research at the Edge of Space Hypersonics Before the Shuttle A Concise History of the X 15 Research Airplane The short film Research Project X 15 is available for free download at the Internet Archive Non NASAX 15A at Encyclopedia Astronautica X 15 Advanced Research Airplane design summary by North America Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North American X 15 amp oldid 1126951409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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