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Jungfrau Is Back In the Air

Jungfrau Is Back In the Air

Destinus’ first prototype, Jungfrau, is reaching new heights. While Eiger (our second and larger prototype) is in full preparation for its next flight campaign, Jungfrau has been reintroduced to the sky to collect additional information and test out new equipment, in order to drive future developments. Last week, the enhanced Jungfrau cruised over an airfield in Germany with upgraded sensors and hardware, kicking off a new series of test campaigns that will carry out over the summer.

From Subsonic to Hypersonics

Although very efficient for hypersonic flights, both Jungfrau and Eiger have shapes that differ from common subsonic airframes. There will not be a single shape which can tackle subsonic, supersonic and hypersonic flight regimes all in a single mission. This is because different geometrical features are tailored to each specific regime. Therefore, flying hypersonic shapes such as Jungfrau at subsonic speeds is a very challenging task, in which Destinus is succeeding.

This is essential as, after all, every aircraft requires to take off, land and fly in a subsonic regime.

The Jungfrau Aeroshape

In contrast with conventional subsonic aircrafts, Jungfrau is tailless with a low delta wing configuration and negative dihedral. Due to shock waves at hypersonic speeds, the delta wing has a high sweep angle and a very low aspect ratio. In contrast, subsonic aircraft usually consist of high aspect ratio wings with positive dihedral and a small sweep angle. The low aspect ratio and negative dihedral enables efficient wave riding in hypersonics (the art of surfing on shock waves), but it is unstable and inefficient at low speeds.

The Jungfrau Tests Enhance Computer Models

It is very important to study the stability, maneuverability, and balancing of the aircraft in a subsonic regime before attempting to break the sound barrier. The combination of computer simulations and flight testing is necessary to understand the aircraft and to make the optimum developmental leaps. To this end, flying Jungfrau has been a fantastic source of data to calibrate predictive models to describe the low-speed behaviour of the aircraft.

Watch the flight video here: https://youtu.be/tfxcwTgDUS0