PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stevens researchers bring hypersonic flight one step closer to take off

A study suggests that building hypersonic planes won't demand a significantly different design approach

2025-11-12
(Press-News.org)

Hoboken, N.J., November 12, 2025 — If it were to become a reality, hypersonic flight, long the realm of science fiction, could revolutionize global travel, transforming day-long international flights into brief commutes no longer than a feature length movie. The duration of a long-haul route, such as Sydney to Los Angeles, might drop from 15 hours to just one. 

“It really shrinks the planet,” says Professor Nicholaus Parziale, whose research focuses on making such hypersonic flight a reality, and who is a recent recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers for his research into the fluid mechanics that affects high-speed flight. “It will make travel faster, easier and more enjoyable.”

Crossing half the planet in an hour may sound untenable, but such planes may be closer to reality than you think. Military planes already fly at double and triple the speed of sound, which engineers refer to as Mach 2 or Mach 3, where Mach 1 stands for the speed of sound or 760 miles per hour. To cover the distance from Los Angeles to Sydney in an hour the planes would need to fly at Mach 10 — ten times the speed of sound. What’s standing in the way of such ultra-fast planes becoming reality is the turbulence and heat they generate as they fly. 

There's a difference in how the air behaves around the aircraft at low speeds versus high speeds. Aerospace engineers have special terms for this phenomenon: incompressible and compressible flow. In incompressible flow, which occurs at low speeds (below about Mach 0.3 or 225 miles per hour), air density remains nearly constant, which simplifies airplane design. However, at higher speeds, especially above the speed of sound, it switches to compressible flow. “That’s because a gas can 'squish,'” explains Parziale, or, to put it in scientific terms, compress.

Compressing means that air density changes significantly due to variations in pressure and temperature, which affects how an aircraft flies. “Compressibility affects how the airflow goes around the body and that can change things like lift, drag, and thrust required to take off or stay airborne.” All of which is important for plane design.

Aerospace engineers have a pretty good idea how such airflow works with planes that fly below or close to the speed of sound — also known as "low Mach" numbers. To build hypersonic planes, they must understand how airflow works at greater Mach numbers — like five or ten times the speed of sound. And that remains a bit of an enigma, save for the so-called Morkovin’s hypothesis. 

Formulated by Mark Morkovin in mid-20th century, the hypothesis postulates that when air moves at Mach 5 or Mach 6, the turbulence behavior doesn't change all that much from slower speeds. Although air density and temperature change more in faster flows, the hypothesis states that the basic "choppy" motion of turbulence stays mostly the same. “Basically, the Morkovin’s hypothesis means that the way the turbulent air moves at low and high speeds isn’t that different,” says Parziale. “If the hypothesis is correct, it means that we don’t need a whole new way to understand turbulence at these higher speeds. We can use the same concepts we use for the slower flows.” That also means that hypersonic planes don’t need a significantly different design approach.

Yet, so far no one has been able to provide sufficient experimental evidence to support Morkovin’s hypothesis. That became the subject of Parziale’s new study, titled Hypersonic Turbulent Quantities in Support of Morkovin’s Hypothesis, which was published in Nature Communications, on November 12, 2025.

In the study, Parziale’s team used lasers to ionize a gas called krypton which is seeded into the air flowing inside a wind tunnel. That temporarily made krypton atoms form an initially-straight, glowing line. Then researchers used ultra high-resolution cameras to take pictures of how that fluorescent krypton line moves, bends, and twists through the wind tunnel’s air — akin to how a leaf swirls through the little eddies in a river. “As that line moves with the gas, you can see crinkles and structure in the flow, and from that, we can learn a lot about turbulence,” says Parziale, adding that he spent 11 years building that clever setup. “And what we found was that at Mach 6, the turbulence behavior is pretty close to the incompressible flow.” 

Early on, Parziale’s group was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research Young Investigator Research Program (YIP) in 2016 and Office of Naval Research (ONR) YIP in 2020, with the current work being supported by ONR. 

Although the hypothesis isn’t fully confirmed yet, the study brings us one step closer to hypersonic flight because it suggests that planes don’t need an entirely new design to fly at hypersonic speeds. And that simplifies things.

“Today, we must use computers to design an airplane, and the computational resources to design a plane that will fly at Mach 6, simulating all the tiny, fine, little details would be impossible,” says Parziale. “The Morkovin’s hypothesis allows us to make simplifying assumptions so that the computational demands to design hypersonic vehicles can become more doable.”

The study findings also hold promise for changing how space transportation is done, Parziale explains. “If we can build planes that fly at hypersonic speed, we can also fly them into space, rather than launching rockets, which would make transportation to and from low Earth orbit easier,” he says. “It will be a game-changer for transportation not only on earth, but also in low orbit.”

About Stevens Institute of Technology
Stevens is a premier, private research university situated in Hoboken, New Jersey. Since our founding in 1870, technological innovation has been the hallmark of Stevens’ education and research. Within the university’s three schools and one college, more than 8,000 undergraduate and graduate students collaborate closely with faculty in an interdisciplinary, student-centric, entrepreneurial environment. Academic and research programs spanning business, computing, engineering, the arts and other disciplines actively advance the frontiers of science and leverage technology to confront our most pressing global challenges. The university continues to be consistently ranked among the nation’s leaders in career services, post-graduation salaries of alumni and return on tuition investment. 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers uncover natural seepage of oil and gas off Northeast Greenland

2025-11-12
A large research study by an international team of scientists led by Christoph Böttner from Aarhus University shows clear evidence of extensive natural hydrocarbon seepage along the Northeast Greenland margin — one of the least explored continental margins on Earth.  The new discoveries of widespread natural seepage and gas hydrates in NE Greenland represent a significant advance in our understanding of natural seepage across the Arctic. This is important in the light of rapidly changing ...

The “Seven Sisters” just found thousands of long-lost siblings

2025-11-12
Astronomers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have discovered that the famous Pleiades star cluster, the “Seven Sisters” often spotted on winter nights, is just the bright tip of a much larger stellar family. By combining data from NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) and the European Space Agency’s Gaia space telescope, the team uncovered thousands of hidden siblings spread across the sky, a sprawling structure they call the Greater Pleiades Complex. The discovery shows the Pleiades is 20 times larger than previously thought.  Most stars, including our own Sun, are born ...

Leading through crises: Key lessons from school principals

2025-11-12
From navigating the COVID-19 pandemic alongside cyclones, bushfires, and other natural disasters, school principals are often the unsung heroes leading communities through crises.  New research from Edith Cowan University’s (ECU) School of Education has revealed important insights into how school principals navigated the extraordinary period of compounding crises between 2020 and 2023.  Analysis of interviews with principals from Australia, Fiji and New Zealand revealed a balance of directive and collaborative approaches as they adapted to meet changing community needs.   “A ...

Next-generation nanoparticle–stem cell hybrids open a new horizon in bone regeneration

2025-11-12
A research team in South Korea has successfully developed a novel technology that combines nanoparticles with stem cells to significantly improve 3D bone tissue regeneration. This advancement marks a major step forward in the treatment of bone fractures and injuries, as well as in next-generation regenerative medicine. Dr. Ki Young Kim and her team at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT), in collaboration with Professor Laura Ha at Sunmoon University, have engineered a nanoparticle-stem cell hybrid, termed a nanobiohybrid by integrating mesoporous ...

Bees learn to read simple ‘Morse code’

2025-11-12
Biology Letters study shows that bumblebees can be trained to differentiate between long and short light flashes  Researchers at Queen Mary University of London have shown for the first time that an insect – the bumblebee Bombus terrestris – can decide where to forage for food based on different durations of visual cues.   In Morse code, a short duration flash or ‘dot’ denotes a letter ‘E’ and a long duration flash, or ‘dash’, means letter ‘T’. Until now, the ability to discriminate between ‘dot’ and ‘dash’ has been seen only in humans and other vertebrates ...

Repurposed antibiotic shows promise against Central Nervous System Tuberculosis in NUS Medicine study

2025-11-12
Researchers at the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore (NUS Medicine), have demonstrated that doxycycline, a commonly available and inexpensive antibiotic, can improve survival rates and neurological outcomes in Central Nervous System Tuberculosis (CNS-TB) in a preclinical non-human study. Published in the Journal of Neuroinflammation, the study offers a promising adjunctive therapy for this severe and often fatal disease. The study, led by Associate Professor Catherine Ong ...

New research reveals path to sustainable rice farming in Myanmar

2025-11-12
Scientists have identified practical fertilizer strategies that can help rice farmers in Myanmar boost their profits, protect the environment, and improve food security. Recent research, led by an international team including experts from the University of Melbourne and local partners, provides new recommendations for nitrogen fertilizer use, aiming for a balance between high yields and low environmental costs. Myanmar is one of Southeast Asia’s largest rice producers, yet struggles with low productivity, financial challenges, and food insecurity. Most local farmers rely on ...

Missed the live session? Watch the recording now!

2025-11-12
The insightful Carbon Research Webinar, "Fossil-Free Graphite from Biomass for Greener Process Industries," is now available on-demand on YouTube! This insightful discussion with Prof. Weihong Yang of KTH Royal Institute of Technology took place on Monday, August 11, 2025. In case you couldn't join us live, you can now catch the full session on-demand, where Prof. Yang explores innovative strategies for replacing fossil-based materials with sustainable, bio-based graphite. He provides key insights into: Converting bioprecursors into fossil-free graphite. Its critical applications ...

Moisture‑resistant scalable ambient‑air crystallization of perovskite films via self‑buffered molecular migration strategy

2025-11-12
As perovskite solar cells (PSCs) move toward commercialization, their extreme sensitivity to ambient moisture remains a major barrier to scalable, low-cost manufacturing. Now, researchers from Xidian University, led by Prof. Weidong Zhu and Prof. Chunfu Zhang, have developed a self-buffered molecular migration strategy that enables moisture-resistant, ambient-air crystallization of perovskite films—achieving record efficiencies without the need for strict humidity control. Why Self-Buffered Molecular Migration Matters Moisture Tolerance: A BABr shielding layer slows intermolecular ...

A novel strategy for highly selective ethanol synthesis from methane driven by light-driven transformation without reliability for reactive oxygen species

2025-11-12
Professor Zhongkui Zhao of Dalian University of Technology, in collaboration with Professor Riguang Zhang of Taiyuan University of Technology, Researcher Yuefeng Liu of the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Professor Ting Zhang of Qingdao University, and Professor Chunshan Song  of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, constructed a single-atom Cu-N2O1 site with axial oxygen coordination on C3N4. Through the polar activation of the CH bond by the polar Cu-O bond, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study reveals that flu vaccine performance varies by age

Narwhals hit moorings—questioning safety assumptions of oceanographic monitoring in the Arctic

The silent threat to our planet that’s easily solved: Light pollution

Stevens researchers bring hypersonic flight one step closer to take off

Researchers uncover natural seepage of oil and gas off Northeast Greenland

The “Seven Sisters” just found thousands of long-lost siblings

Leading through crises: Key lessons from school principals

Next-generation nanoparticle–stem cell hybrids open a new horizon in bone regeneration

Bees learn to read simple ‘Morse code’

Repurposed antibiotic shows promise against Central Nervous System Tuberculosis in NUS Medicine study

New research reveals path to sustainable rice farming in Myanmar

Missed the live session? Watch the recording now!

Moisture‑resistant scalable ambient‑air crystallization of perovskite films via self‑buffered molecular migration strategy

A novel strategy for highly selective ethanol synthesis from methane driven by light-driven transformation without reliability for reactive oxygen species

Monk seal acoustic breakthrough: Hawai’i study quadruples known call types and detects novel communication strategy

Five minutes of training could help you spot fake AI faces

Shouting at seagulls could stop them stealing your food

AI detects hidden objects on chest scans better than radiologists

Breakthrough gives hope in fight against aggressive form of blood cancer

Experts find £90K “sweet spot” for crowdfunding success

Tough little wallaby sets the scene for kangaroo bounding success

Scientists develop low-cost sensor to safeguard water from fireworks pollution

Researchers aim to disrupt breast cancer line of communication and prevent spread

A sit-stand ratio ‘sweet spot’ may boost office productivity

New computational process could help condense decades of disease biology research into days

UTIA soil scientist receives Women in Science National Mentoring Award

New study finds generative AI can brainstorm objectives but needs human expertise for decision quality

New analysis yields clearer picture of toxin-producing blue-green algae blooms

Trainer identification project treads new ground

Parsa & Ascoli studying neuromorphic spintronics

[Press-News.org] Stevens researchers bring hypersonic flight one step closer to take off
A study suggests that building hypersonic planes won't demand a significantly different design approach