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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!comp.vuw.ac.nz!acheron.amigans.gen.nz!alien
- From: alien@acheron.amigans.gen.nz (Ross Smith)
- Newsgroups: sci.aeronautics
- Subject: Re: MACH 8
- Message-ID: <alien.020z@acheron.amigans.gen.nz>
- Date: 21 Dec 92 13:45:04 GMT+12
- References: <10302@ncrwat.Waterloo.NCR.COM>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Muppet Labs
- Lines: 25
-
- In article <10302@ncrwat.Waterloo.NCR.COM> tjgerman@53iss6.Waterloo.NCR.COM (Trevor German) writes:
- >
- > I have been following the thread about the Mach 8 spy plane
- > and have a general question. What exactly is MACH 1. I understood
- > it to be the speed of sound at sea level (or more accurately at
- > an air pressure defined to be sea level). Is this the case or is
- > MACH 1 the speed of sound at any pressure, ie is MACH1 a higher
- > ground speed at 100,000 than it is at sea level.
-
- Mach 1 is defined to be the *local* speed of sound, so it varies with
- altitude, but not in the way you describe. To a rough approximation (from
- memory, so I may not have the figures exactly right, but it's certainly
- something like this), M1 is 1225 km/h at sea level, *falls* to 1062 km/h
- at 11,000 metres, remains more or less constant from there to about 30,000
- metres, then starts slowly increasing.
-
-
- --
- ...... Ross Smith (Wanganui, NZ) ...... alien@acheron.amigans.gen.nz ......
- Mine is the ship bound for Alpha Centauri
- We must be out of our minds
- For though we are shipmates bound for tomorrow
- Everyone here's flying blind (Crystal Gayle)
- --
-
-