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It is the fastest, most efficient business jet ever to race
across the sky. Capable of flying at near supersonic speeds,
an exciting addition to Cessna's fleet of private aircraft has
pushed the envelope of general aviation to new performance levels.
NASA's Langley Research Center and the Cessna Aircraft Company
of Wichita, Kansas have had a long, beneficial relationship.
Starting with use of supercritical wing technology developed
by NASA in the 1970s, Cessna has repeatedly called upon NASA's
know-how and use of its test facilities. On this latest venture
into business-class jet aircraft building, a highly swept, second-generation
supercritical wing was designed, capable of Mach .92 and supporting
the aircraft to a maximum altitude of 51,000 feet.
To help in the development of the unprecedented aircraft,
Citation X, Cessna retained as a special consultant, Richard
Whitcomb, a retiree from NASA Langley and the inventor of the
supercritical airfoil.
A supercritical airfoil enhances an airplane's performance
in a critical flight area--the transonic regime (speeds near
Mach 1). High-speed subsonic aircraft can experience mixed subsonic
and supersonic airflow, and at some point over the wing, airflow
exceeds the speed of sound. At this point, the airflow surface
suddenly changes, creating a standing shock wave. In turn, this
phenomenon results in excessive drag, and therefore a loss in
efficiency. Supercritical wings change the shape of the airflow
by flattening the upper surface of the wing, which minimizes
the effect of the shock wave. Low drag contributes to an aircraft's
fuel efficiency.
NASA joined forces with Cessna to assist in the development
of the largest, most complex aircraft ever pursued by the company.
As a U.S. airframe manufac turer, Cessna had full access to the
research, personnel, and facilities of NASA. For instance, Langley's
one-of-a-kind Transonic Dynamics Wind Tunnel proved extremely
valuable. The tunnel has a 16-foot square test section and is
capable of operating at Mach numbers up to 1.2. Along with gathering
data on the private jet's wing design, the facility also helped
in measuring the unsteady aerodynamic pressure from air loads
on the new business jet's wing design. The wind tunnel data were
used to validate Cessna's flutter analysis.

| New Cessna
business plane benefited by NASA wind tunnel research, work in
composite materials, and aerodynamic expertise. |
Flutter is defined as an unstable, self-generated oscillation
of an airfoil and associated structure. If left unchecked, flutter
can practically shake an aircraft apart. While conventional,
lower-speed business jets test flutter boundaries in flight test,
more intensive testing was considered prudent for the new and
unique Cessna aircraft prior to flight testing.
A quarter-scale fuselage and wing model underwent weeks of
exhaustive flutter and unsteady pressure tests in the NASA tunnel.
Langley's wind tunnel was perfect for the job. According to Cessna's
Engineering Director, Ellis Brady, no other general aviation
test model had ever measured as much of this type of data. "These
tests gave us an added measure of assurance and confidence in
the safety of this aircraft," Brady notes.
NASA also collaborated on the Cessna project by providing
computational time on its number-crunching Cray computer. This
aspect of testing was particularly useful to Langley engineers
because the business jet's high-speed wing provided invaluable
correlative test data for NASA computer programs used for evaluating
transonic structural dynamics.
Langley also aided Cessna in the acoustics area. Research
conducted at Langley, and at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University under a NASA grant, contributed to the design
and implementation of the business jet's active noise control
system. This approach reduces or nulls out noise by introducing
a countering soundwave at the same level and frequency, but shifted
out of phase.
Much less directly, Langley also contributed to the aircraft's
lightweight structure. Advanced composite material technology
applied to the Cessna craft can be traced to pioneering Langley
research in developing fiber-resin material systems. Over two
decades of study in this area have yielded a dependable database,
at the same time establishing that composite materials, versus
aluminum, can be safely used on aircraft.
The collaboration between Cessna and NASA was award-winning
in many ways. The aircraft was recognized as the top aeronautical
achievement in the United States for 1996, with Cessna receiving
a prestigious Robert J. Collier Trophy.
As the fastest commercially-built aircraft in the United States,
only one non-military aircraft presently in service worldwide
is fastert--he Concorde. The business plane combines cruising
speed with true intercontinental and transatlantic range. Taking
just 67 months from concept to design completion, the Cessna
Citation X aircraft has already accumulated several thousand
flying hours, and is winging its way into the record books.

| Winging its way across
a sky near you, Cessna's newest addition to private business
jets tapped NASA aeronautical research and technology development. |
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