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Скачать или смотреть M2-F3 Lifting Body Test Flight Over the Mojave Desert

  • NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center
  • 2017-07-12
  • 11941
M2-F3 Lifting Body Test Flight Over the Mojave Desert
John MankeMilt ThompsonNASA Flight Research CenterEdwards AFBNASAM2-F3Lifting BodySmithsonian InstitutionArmstrong Flight Research CenterM2-F2vertical finBruce PetersonB-52M2-F1
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Описание к видео M2-F3 Lifting Body Test Flight Over the Mojave Desert

This 39-second video from the early 1970's shows the M2-F3 Lifting Body performing a test flight over California's Mojave Desert near Edwards Air Force Base.

The M2-F2/F3 was the first of the heavy-weight, entry-configuration lifting bodies. Over 27 missions, the M2-F3 reached a top speed of 1,064 mph (Mach 1.6). Highest altitude reached by vehicle was 71,500 feet on Dec. 21, 1972, the date of its last flight, with NASA pilot John Manke at the controls. NASA donated The M2-F3 vehicle to the Smithsonian Institution in December 1973.

A fleet of lifting bodies flown at the NASA Flight Research Center (FRC -- now Armstrong Flight Research Center), Edwards, CA, from 1963 to 1975 demonstrated the ability of pilots to maneuver and safely land a wingless vehicle designed to fly back to Earth from space and be landed like an aircraft at a pre-determined site.

Aerodynamic lift -- essential to flight in the atmosphere -- was obtained from the shape of their bodies. The addition of fins and control surfaces allowed the pilots to stabilize and control the vehicles and regulate their flight paths.

The information the lifting body program generated contributed to the data base that led to development of today's Space Shuttle program.

The success of the FRC's M2-F1 program led to NASA's development and construction of two heavyweight lifting bodies based on studies at NASA's Ames and Langley Research Centers -- the M2-F2 and the HL-10, both built by the Northrop Corporation. The "M" refers to "manned" and "F" refers to "flight" version. "HL" comes from "horizontal landing" and 10 is for the tenth lifting body model to be investigated by Langley.

The first flight of the M2-F2--which looked much like the "F1" -- was on July 12, 1966. Milt Thompson was the pilot. By then, the same B-52s used to air launch the famed X-15 rocket research aircraft were modified to also carry the lifting bodies. Thompson was dropped from the B-52's wing pylon mount at an altitude of 45,000 feet on that maiden glide flight.

The M2-F2 weighed 4,620 pounds, was 22 feet long, and had a width of about 10 feet.

On May 10, 1967, during the sixteenth glide flight leading up to powered flight, a landing accident severely damaged the vehicle and seriously injured the NASA pilot, Bruce Peterson.

NASA pilots and researchers realized the M2-F2 had lateral control problems, even though it had a stability augmentation (control) system. When the M2-F2 was rebuilt by the Northrop Corporation with the cooperation of the FRC and redesignated the M2-F3, it was modified with an additional third vertical fin -- centered between the tip fins -- to improve control characteristics.

For more information on the lifting bodies, click here: https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstron...

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