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Home » General » Breaking the Sound Barrier Again: The Return of Supersonic Flight to American Skies

General

Breaking the Sound Barrier Again: The Return of Supersonic Flight to American Skies

Smith
Last updated: July 12, 2026 8:34 am
Smith - Editor in Chief
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Breaking the Sound Barrier Again: The Return of Supersonic Flight to American Skies
Breaking the Sound Barrier Again: The Return of Supersonic Flight to American Skies
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Contents
Supersonic Flight – The Performance Shift: Overpressure vs. Absolute SpeedEngineering the “Sonic Thump”1. The Mach Cutoff Phenomenon2. Aerodynamic ReshapingIndustry Momentum: From Prototypes to Airline Orders

Supersonic Flight – The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has officially issued a landmark Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to lift the 53-year-old ban on civil supersonic flight over the continental United States. Aiming to finalize these performance-based frameworks by mid-2027, the new regulations shift away from a flat speed limit to a noise-based certification standard. This policy pivot clears the runway for next-generation aerospace companies to deploy commercial supersonic airliners that dramatically reduce travel times while utilizing cutting-edge flight engineering to eliminate disruptive sonic booms.

July 12, 2026 (STL.News) Supersonic Flight – Commercial aviation is standing on the precipice of a high-speed renaissance. For more than half a century, a strict federal mandate kept the continental United States locked at subsonic speeds for civilian travel. However, recent regulatory filings and tech breakthroughs have set the clock ticking toward an era in which cross-country and international travel times could be cut nearly in half.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a historic Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to formally repeal the 1973 prohibition on civil supersonic overland flight. Propelled by executive directives and emerging legislative updates, the U.S. government has set mid-2027 as the target to finalize the regulatory frameworks needed to safely integrate faster-than-sound commercial jets into the national airspace.

Supersonic Flight – The Performance Shift: Overpressure vs. Absolute Speed

The foundational flaw of the original 1973 ban was its rigidity. It barred civil aircraft from exceeding Mach 1 (roughly 770 mph depending on altitude and temperature) over land, entirely ignoring how much noise actually reached the ground. The FAA’s new regulatory philosophy swaps this blanket restriction for a performance-based standard, focusing purely on measurable ground-level impact rather than speed metrics.

Under the newly proposed framework, commercial aircraft will be legally permitted to fly at supersonic speeds over U.S. soil provided they meet strict acoustic criteria:

  • En Route Limit: The aircraft must be operated so that the sonic boom overpressure at the surface does not exceed 0.11 pounds per square foot (psf).
  • Takeoff and Landing: A secondary, companion proposal addressing the specific noise thresholds during airport takeoffs and landings is scheduled to follow, with both rules slated for finalization by summer 2027.

By setting a clear pressure-wave cap instead of prescribing specific engine types or speeds, the FAA is offering a technology-agnostic sandbox. Aerospace firms have the flexibility to design their own proprietary flight solutions, as long as they prove to regulators that their ground impact remains beneath the 0.11 psf limit.

Engineering the “Sonic Thump”

The commercial failure of the Concorde was famously tied to the window-rattling sonic booms that restricted its high-speed routes strictly to transoceanic paths. Modern aerospace engineering has completely re-imagined how shockwaves interact with the atmosphere.

Two key technological approaches are driving this supersonic revival:

1. The Mach Cutoff Phenomenon

Aerospace manufacturers are developing advanced, automated autopilot modes that leverage Mach cutoff. By continuously factoring in aircraft design, altitude, speed, and real-time atmospheric conditions, the plane can fly at precise thresholds where the generated shockwaves refract and bend back upward into the atmosphere. This prevents the primary overpressure wave from ever slamming into the ground.

2. Aerodynamic Reshaping

Collaborative testing between NASA and private entities has proven that physical airframe sculpting can disperse shockwaves, preventing them from coalescing into a singular, explosive boom. NASA’s recent testing of its experimental X-59 demonstrator successfully muffled the traditional boom down to a faint “sonic thump”—musically comparable to the sound of a car door shutting a few yards away.

Industry Momentum: From Prototypes to Airline Orders

The regulatory shift is running parallel to rapid industrial execution. Private aerospace firms are no longer operating in the realm of theory; they are logging supersonic flight hours.

  • Boom Supersonic: The aerospace innovator successfully broke the sound barrier with its XB-1 demonstrator aircraft over the Mojave Desert, validating its flight technologies under an active FAA Special Flight Authorization. Boom is using these datasets to construct its flagship commercial airliner, Overture, an all-premium-cabin aircraft engineered to reach Mach 1.7 speeds, with passenger fares targeted to match current business-class pricing. Major carriers like United Airlines and American Airlines have already placed firm orders for these upcoming fleets.
  • Hermeus: Pushing even further into high-speed horizons, Hermeus secured its own Special Flight Authorization to conduct overland testing of its Quarterhorse aircraft system at the White Sands Missile Range, proving that the infrastructure for both manned and unmanned high-speed systems is actively scaling.
  • Looking Ahead: While the FAA’s mid-2027 deadline provides the regulatory baseline manufacturers need to finalize assembly lines, consumers should expect a staggered rollout. Once the rules are codified, individual aircraft models must still clear rigorous type-certification phases. Industry analysts project the first commercial supersonic passenger paths will officially welcome ticket-holders near the turn of the decade.
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By Smith Editor in Chief
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Martin Smith is the founder and Editor in Chief of STL.News, STL.Directory, St. Louis Restaurant Review, STLPress.News, and USPress.News.  Smith is responsible for selecting content to be published with the help of a publishing team located around the globe.  The publishing is made possible because Smith built a proprietary network of aggregated websites to import and manage thousands of press releases via RSS feeds to create the content library used to filter and publish news articles on STL.News.  Since its beginning in February 2016, STL.News has published more than 250,000 news articles.  He is a member of the United States Press Agency (Reg. # 31659) and a Certified member of the US Press Association (Reg. # 802085479).
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