The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.
This video is no longer available on YouTube.
This video cannot be played right now.
Watch on YouTube
Unlock AI-Powered Learning Tools
Sign up to access powerful tools that help you learn faster from every video.
Why We Still Don't Have Hypersonic Flights
Subtitles (209 segments)
Wouldn’t it be nice to fly from Tokyo to LA in two hours instead of 10?
Such a fast trip seems like one of those futuristic dreams
our great-grandparents naively expected to come true by now.
The Concord introduced supersonic flight in the 1970s,
but that jet flew just twice the speed of sound.
The idea of hypersonic flight, which is much faster,
has been around since the 1930s, and has been researched since the 40s.
But 80 years later, flying across the world
still means a full day in a tiny seat, jockeying for the arm rest.
So what’s stopping us from building a plane that can go really fast?
As it turns out, part of the problem is making it also go slow.
[♪ INTRO]
By traversing the Atlantic Ocean at around Mach 2,
the Concord could fly from London to New York in just 3 hours!
What’s a Mach, you say?
I’m glad you asked.
The Mach scale tells us how fast something is traveling relative
to the speed of sound for the material that something is traveling through.
The speed of sound, meanwhile, relates to how fast all the particles that make
up the material can bump into each other and transmit a wave of energy.
Traveling at exactly the speed of sound is equivalent to a Mach number of 1.
A Concorde flying at Mach 2 is moving at twice the speed of sound.
And so on.
Anything that moves faster than the speed of sound is said to be supersonic.
The Mach scale is useful because the speed of sound varies not just for different materials,
but also the same material under different environmental conditions.
In the case of a plane flying through air,
the speed of sound changes depending on the ambient temperature and altitude.
Two planes could be going at the same speed in terms of kilometers per hour,
but have different Mach numbers if they’re moving through different parts of the atmosphere.
And unlike measurements like “kilometers per hour”, which just tells you a speed,
the Mach number will always give you a good idea of how much the material
is being compressed or shoved out of the way.
This leads us nicely into one reason you can’t fly on a Concorde, anymore: sonic booms.
At supersonic speeds, the air a plane is flying through can’t get out of the way fast enough.
Instead, it gets compressed into a dense cone
that’s powerful enough to break windows and damage eardrums.
So the Concorde was super noisy, on account of the continuous shock waves following in its wake.
Maybe some people would be willing to tolerate that for a shorter skip across the pond,
but it was also so expensive to develop and operate that the company never turned a profit.
It closed up shop in 2003.
But we aren’t here to talk about mere supersonic flight,
Full subtitles available in the video player
Practice with Exercises
Generate vocabulary, grammar, and comprehension exercises from this video
Comments (0)
Login to CommentSign up to unlock full features
Track progress, save vocabulary, and practice exercises
Interactive Mode
Quiz
Correct answer:
Related Videos
Stop Building Ugly APIs: Use the Fluent Interface Pattern
The Lazy Loading Pattern: How to Make Python Programs Feel Instant
Google Play PolicyBytes - July 2025 policy updates
The Single Bolt of Lightning that Killed 835 Sheep
Android Developer Story: redBus improved reviews by 57% with Gemini Flash and Firebase AI Logic
SciShow
Quiz
Correct answer:
Quizzes appear as you watch the video
Memory Tip
From this video
Start learning languages for free