Comments on Now that is what I call a clever photograph

Awesome.


Posted by Alisa at May 13, 2009 12:20 PM

particularly since the B-2 isn't supposed to be supersonic-capable.


Posted by Bruce at May 13, 2009 02:45 PM

I call bollocks on this. Close to transonic, possibly, but not supersonic - the most cursory inspection says it doesn't have anything that would allow it to fly supersonic (wings swept back to be inside the shock cone, fully moving control surfaces etc)


Posted by Cleanthes at May 13, 2009 04:03 PM

I'd defer to someone like Dale on this one, but my understanding is that the P-G singularity is cone shaped (as alluded to in the article), ... like this ... and it is initiated at the nose of the craft and rolls back, rather than in the more diffuse manner observed in the still at the Telegraph's site.

Still - a cool shot and much better value for money than a 747 buzzing the public in downtown NYC.


Posted by Bod at May 13, 2009 05:05 PM

Is it legal to take this kind of photo? Is legal to publish it? Is it legal to look at it? !?! Who's that knocking on my door?? It wasn't me!!!


Posted by Marc Sheffner at May 14, 2009 07:23 AM

You often see effects such as this at airshows, where aircraft are travelling nowhere near the speed of sound. Hard manoevering accentuates the effect, and high angle of attack climbs will produce an impressive "vapour ring" around the mid section of the aircraft. Tails and vortices come off the wingtips like smoke trails.

Very impressive, but not connected with supersonic shock waves IMHO. I believe it is due to air of a certain level of humidity being subjected to temporary pressure changes, whereby an airofoil lowers the pressure to condensation point in passing, whereupon the revertion to ambient pressure causes the condensation to disappear as fast as it formed, giving the "cloud" the permanency of an optical illusion.


Posted by TomC at May 14, 2009 10:11 AM

Tomc is probably correct. Anyhow they are not allowed to break the barrier at low altitude over a built-up area.


Posted by heat at May 14, 2009 01:32 PM

FWIW, the caption to the photo does say "high subsonic speed".


Posted by Laird at May 14, 2009 02:18 PM

A Prandtl-Glauert singularity is a phenomenon whereby a wave of rarefaction and compression passes through a compressible medium such as air, causing its dew point to fall momentarily below ambient. Water vapour then condenses and becomes visible. It's easier to produce this effect in the transsonic region, but it can occur at much lower velocities. It helps if the air is very humid as then its dew point is higher.

Maximum speed of a B2 is about Mach 0.95, although cruising speed is about that of a 747.

Most impressive thing about the B2? It can fly a single pass over a target and from ten miles up and twenty miles downrange, completely invisible to radar, release eighty 500lb bombs, all of which are aimed at a different target, and all of which will land within 30 feet of their aimpoint.


Posted by David Gillies at May 15, 2009 12:15 AM
"It can fly a single pass over a target and from ten miles up and twenty miles downrange, completely invisible to radar, release eighty 500lb bombs, all of which are aimed at a different target, and all of which will land within 30 feet of their aimpoint."
As usual, David has the truth of it. Top speed is only impressive in drag racing, and the speed of sound is simply a milestone.

But destroying bad guys in secret, with pinpoint accuracy... hubba hubba.

It is, after all, a military aircraft.


Posted by Kim du Toit at May 15, 2009 02:02 PM
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