NASA just passed a milestone with the X-59. What comes next aims to change commercial aviation

Commercial aviation has been pursuing a difficult promise for decades: flying faster than sound without making that progress a problem for those on the ground. The obstacle is not only the speed, but the shock waves that generates a supersonic aircraft and that can be perceived as a sonic boom. He X-59 was born to test an alternative: reaching those speeds with an acoustic signature that NASA hopes will be much more discreet. NASA is not yet talking about commercial routes, but it is about a step designed to address one of the great barriers to this type of flights. The most recent advance came last Friday, when the X-59 exceeded the speed of sound for the first time during a test flight within the Quesst mission. According to NASApilot Jim “Clue” Less took off and landed at Edwards Air Force Base, California, on an 81-minute mission. The plane reached an approximate maximum speed of Mach 1.1, which the agency places in this flight at about 1,150 km/h, at an altitude of about 13,200 meters. It was an important milestone, but still within a testing phase focused on testing its flight qualities. The test of the most discreet supersonic flight enters its decisive phase The important thing, therefore, will not only be what happens inside the plane, but what is heard from below. Quesst is designed to demonstrate a technology capable of softening this phenomenon until it becomes a lighter sound knock. The next part of the plan involves flying over American communities and collecting the reaction of people exposed to that sound. The agency will then share those results with national and international regulators to inform future data-driven noise standards. That is why the first supersonic flight is not an arrival point, but rather the beginning of a more demanding phase. The next step will come in the following days: a first test in “mission conditions”, with a cruising speed of Mach 1.4, which NASA places around 1,490 km/hand an altitude of about 16,800 meters. The data matters because these are the basic conditions that the agency contemplates for future flights over inhabited areas in the United States. Before asking people what they have heard, the aircraft has to demonstrate that it can operate stably in that regime. Behind the X-59 there is not just a striking shape or an isolated commitment to recover supersonic flight. NASA remembers who has been studying this field for more than seven decades, with special attention to the noise associated with these flights and ways to make it more discreet. The Quesst mission combines advanced simulations, wind tunnel testing, schlieren photography and computational fluid dynamics to anticipate how the air around the aircraft behaves. The current phase has to verify something very specific: whether this entire design works in flight with a full-scale supersonic aircraft. The ultimate goal is not for the X-59 to end up transporting passengers, but for its data to help open a door that has been practically closed for decades. The information collected will be shared with national and international regulators to contribute to news noise standards based on data, not just the historical experience of the large noises associated with supersonic flight. The agency also plans to provide design tools and technology for future quieter supersonic aircraft. If the plan works, manufacturers would have more confidence to explore commercial concepts capable of flying fast without disturbing the ground as much. As we can see, the X-59 has crossed an important line, but the Quesst mission still has its most relevant tests ahead. First you will have to get closer to the conditions planned for these test flights over inhabited areas, and then you will come to the verification that really matters for the future of the program: knowing if that sound shock is acceptable. A good part of the value of NASA data will be played there. Images | POT In Xataka | Airbus has just made the most autonomous commercial aircraft in the world fly. Your goal: 22 hours straight without a stopover

The X-59 has flown and the illusion of the commercial supersonic aircraft returns

Today, civil supersonic flight is a distant memory, a feat that left more questions than certainties after the end of the concorde. The industry focused on efficiency and autonomy, and the dream of crossing continents faster was shelved, in part because the sonic boom noise made it a limited and controversial privilege. Today that dream appears again, not with grandiose promises, but with a very specific objective: to demonstrate that you can fly faster than sound without shaking those on the ground. That return is no longer an intention expressed in documents or a static prototype. On October 28, 2025, the X-59 left the ground for the first time since PalmdaleCalifornia, and landed shortly after at NASA’s Armstrong Center in Edwards. The output was deliberately contained, intended to validate systems and basic behavior in flight. After landing, Lockheed Martin assured that “the X-59 performed exactly as planned,” a sign that the project is entering the phase in which tests replace mockups and promises. The project that aspires to change half a century of air rules The X-59 is a technological demonstrator developed by NASA together with Lockheed Martin to try to solve the biggest obstacle to civil supersonic flight: noise. Instead of the boom that has limited these aircraft for decades, its design seeks produce a much softer “hit”. Its long and stylized fuselage, the cabin located in the middle of the fuselage and a 4K external vision system instead of a front window They are essential pieces of that objective. It does not aspire to be a commercial aircraft, but rather to generate the data that could allow it one day. The first flight was cautious by design. NASA had anticipated that the initial outing would focus on testing systems integration, stability and communications, without yet entering high speeds or extreme altitudes. According to planning, it was a circuit at low altitude and low speed to validate the essentials: that the aircraft responds, that the telemetry flows and that the controls behave as expected. Supersonic will come later, when the program advances to the next phase of testing. The aircraft was officially presented in January 2024 at the Skunk Works facilities The road to that first flight has been long. NASA launched the project in 2016 and initially set takeoff for 2020, a deadline that was moved after facing technical challenges identified in 2023. The aircraft was officially presented in January 2024 at the Skunk Works facilities and, throughout 2025, completed engine tests, integration checks and running rehearsals. On July 10 of that year, Test pilot Nils Larson performed the first low-speed taxi, a sign that the ground phase was coming to an end. From this point, the program enters progressive mode. First, additional verification flights will be completed and then the speed and altitude will be increased until reaching the planned supersonic regime, with a ceiling of Mach 1.4 according to the official roadmap. NASA and Lockheed Martin will collect aerodynamic and acoustic data during this stage at the Edwards base. Later, the plane will fly over inhabited areas to evaluate the public’s reaction, a key piece to convey results to regulators. Beyond technology, the supersonic challenge involves regulation. In the United States, passenger flights at more than Mach 1 over land They have been banned since 1973when Congress imposed the measure due to the acoustic impact. Other countries apply similar restrictions. The Quesst program attempts to provide scientific evidence that allows these rules to be reconsidered, not based on hypotheses, but on verifiable measurements. If NASA can demonstrate that the noise of the X-59 is tolerable, civil aviation could recover some of the ground lost after Concorde. It is advisable not to confuse the X-59 with a prototype of a future passenger plane. It is, above all, a test bed. It will not transport civilians nor will it go on sale: its function is to generate evidence on the feasibility of silent supersonic flight. NASA intends for acoustic and social data to serve as a reference to adjust regulation. From there, if the industry considers that the scenario is favorable, commercial designs inspired by this experiment could emerge, but that horizon is still far away. From now on, each flight will provide information that will allow us to know if the X-59 bet has a future beyond investigation. The key will not be in the maximum speed, but in the sound footprint and the social response generated by the essays about real communities. Only then will regulators decide whether it is time to review rules that have remained largely unchanged since the 1970s. The project does not promise a new Concorde, but it does promise the possibility of opening a route that until now seemed closed. Images | Lockheed Martin (1, 2) In Xataka | The Comac C919 symbolizes China’s aerial dream: the trade war threatens to clip its wings in mid-takeoff

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