Transport Supersonique (SST) (Supersonic Transport (SST))
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Definition
Une catégorie d'aéronef commercial conçu pour voler plus vite que la vitesse du son, illustrée par le Concorde franco-britannique et le soviétique Tupolev Tu-144, tous deux en service dans les années 1970–2000.
What Is Supersonic Transport?
Supersonic transport (SST) refers to commercial airliners capable of cruising faster than the sound barrier — above Mach 1. The defining achievement of the SST era was the Concorde, developed jointly by the British Aircraft Corporation and Aérospatiale of France. Cruising at Mach 2.04 (approximately 2,180 km/h) at 55,000–60,000 feet, Concorde crossed the Atlantic in just 3.5 hours — less than half the time of subsonic jets. The aircraft represented the pinnacle of 1960s aerospace technology and remained operationally unmatched for over three decades.
Historical Context
SST programs emerged in the early 1960s as a logical next step after military jets routinely exceeded Mach 1. Britain and France signed the Concorde treaty in 1962. The Soviet Union launched a parallel program resulting in the Tupolev Tu-144, which first flew on December 31, 1968 — beating Concorde by two months. The United States pursued the Boeing 2707, a swing-wing Mach 2.7 design, but Congress cancelled it in 1971 amid environmental concerns about sonic booms and potential ozone depletion. Sonic boom complaints over land restricted Concorde to oceanic routes, limiting its commercial viability.
Key Milestones
- March 2, 1969: Concorde maiden flight from Toulouse.
- January 21, 1976: Concorde enters scheduled service simultaneously on London–Bahrain (British Airways) and Paris–Dakar–Rio (Air France) routes.
- November 22, 1977: Concorde begins New York service, its most commercially lucrative route.
- July 25, 2000: Air France Flight 4590 crashes outside Paris, killing 113 people — the only fatal Concorde accident.
- October 24, 2003: Concorde's final commercial flight, ending 27 years of supersonic cruise service.
Legacy and Impact
Concorde proved that sustained commercial supersonic flight was technically feasible but economically marginal. High fuel consumption, limited passenger capacity (100 seats), and route restrictions confined it to a premium niche. Its legacy is multifaceted: it demonstrated advanced aerodynamics (ogival delta wing, drooping nose), materials science (the airframe operated at 127°C from kinetic heating), and systems integration. A new generation of SST ventures — Boom Supersonic, Aerion, and NASA's X-59 QueSST — are working to solve the sonic boom problem that ultimately grounded Concorde's successor dreams.
Related Terms
Mur du Son
L'augmentation spectaculaire de la traînée aérodynamique ressentie par les aéronefs approchant la vitesse du son (Mach 1), autrefois considérée comme une limite physique absolue à la vitesse de vol.
Nombre de Mach
Le rapport entre la vitesse d'un avion et la vitesse locale du son, utilisé pour caractériser le vol en régime compressible.
Vitesse de croisière
La vitesse à laquelle un avion opère le plus efficacement durant la phase principale de vol en route.