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Briefing Set As Hyper-X flight Preparations Begin

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Jacques van Oene

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Apr 17, 2001, 9:38:50 AM4/17/01
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Chris Rink
(757) 864-6786
c.p....@larc.nasa.gov

RELEASE NO. 01-027
For Release: April 16, 2001
Briefing set as Hyper-X flight preparations begin

The first of three unpiloted X-43 vehicles in NASA Langley Research Center's
Hyper-X program will soon begin hypersonic flight.

Flying from seven to ten times the speed of sound, using air-breathing
scramjet engines instead of traditional rocket power, the smaller,
12-foot-long X-43 could represent a major leap forward in the goal of
providing faster, more reliable and less expensive access to space.

The NASA Hyper-X Program's development and testing of the Hyper-X vehicle is
conducted jointly by NASA Langley and NASA Dryden Flight Research Center,
Edwards, Calif. Langley is NASA's lead center for hypersonic technology
development; Dryden will flight test the scramjet in late May or early June.

On Wednesday, April 18, at 1 p.m., EDT, NASA will conduct a press briefing
from Dryden featuring Vince Rausch, NASA Langley Hyper-X program manager.
Rausch and other project officials will outline plans for upcoming X-43
flights and the Hyper-X program.

The briefing will be carried live on NASA TV with two-way
question-and-answer capability for reporters covering the event at the NASA
Langley Newsroom. Also at Langley, interested media will have the
opportunity to interview senior Hyper-X officials and see a full-scale test
model with a working scramjet engine in the 8-Foot High Temperature Tunnel.

The NASA Langley Newsroom is in Building 1202 on North Dryden Street.
Reporters will be met at the gate and provided with badges by a
representative of the Public Affairs Office.

The news briefing will be carried on NASA Television, which is available on
GE-2, transponder 9C, located at 85 degrees West longitude, with vertical
polarization. Frequency will be on 3880 MHz, with audio on 6.8 MHz.

- end -

--
Jacques :-)

http://www.spacepatches.com

http://www.jacqmans.com

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