'Silent Jet' Could Be Ready By 2030

Nov. 7, 2006
A radical new design is being developed - the plane would be a flying wing

A radically redesigned passenger jet could alleviate a major complaint of people who live near major airports: the deafening sound of planes taking off and landing.

A team of 40 researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cambridge University spent three years working on the wide, streamlined jet, which they plan to unveil in London today.

The "silent jet," which from outside an airport would sound about as noisy as a washing machine or other household appliance, would carry 215 passengers and could be in the air by 2030.

"Noise really is one of the major barriers to airport expansion and the expansion of flights," said Edward Greitzer, an MIT professor who helped run the project. "It gets a lot of complaints."

The breakthrough could bring a welcome change to aviation, industry experts said.

"People are still willing to pay more for the convenience of a closer-in airport," said Richard Aboulafia, vice president at Teal Group, an aerospace consulting firm in Fairfax, Va. "There is an economic value to being able to keep your air transport close in town, which means you've got to be quiet."

Reducing noise has been a focus in recent years of companies that make airplanes and jet engines. While their efforts have mainly involved tweaks to existing technologies, the MIT-Cambridge team set out to redesign the plane from the ground up, with a focus on quiet.

Instead of the tube-and-wing model common today, the silent jet is a flying wing, evoking current "stealth" military aircraft. It lacks the central vertical stabilizer common at the tail of current passenger jets, instead using a pair of stabilizers at the wingtips.

The proposed plane has a 222-foot wingspan and is 144 feet long from nose to tail, comparable in size to a Boeing 767.

"You take the fuselage and you squish it, and you spread it out, and it's an all-lifting body," said Zoltan Spakovsky, an associate professor at MIT who worked on the project.

The design allows the plane to remain in the air at slower speeds, which would allow it to cruise in for a landing more quietly. The plane does not use wing flaps, which are common on today's passenger jets and create landing noise.

The MIT-Cambridge team also designed what team members said could be a quieter and more fuel-efficient engine system. Rather than placing the jets in pods suspended under the wings, the silent jet uses three engines built into the middle of the plane, at the rear.

Airplane makers may prove more likely to cherry-pick individual technologies than to adopt the whole redesign for their products, executives said.

"In a project like this, the idea is to really focus on one goal and see what you could do in the extreme," said Billy Glover, director of environmental performance at Boeing Commercial Airplanes in Seattle, one of the industry experts the researchers have used as a sounding board. "But as you go to a real design process, you have a lot of other trade-offs."

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