Агаарын хөлгийн түүхэн дэх хамгийн хурдан тийрэлтэт онгоц болох SR-71 Blackbird-ийн дээд хурдыг хотын гудамжны түвшинд дүрсэлсэн сонирхолтой симуляцийг бүтээжээ.
Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird нь хүйтэн дайны үед стратегийн тагнуулын зориулалтаар бүтээгдсэн бөгөөд 85,000 фут өндөрт Mach 3-аас дээш хурдтайгаар нисэх чадвартай байв. 1976 онд тогтоосон 2,193 миль/цаг (MPH) хурдны дээд амжилтыг өнөөг хүртэл агаараар амьсгалдаг, хүний жолоодлоготой тийрэлтэт онгоц эвдээгүй байна. “Airplane Mode”-оос бэлтгэсэн уг симуляци нь Нью-Йорк, Сан-Франциско, Сидней зэрэг томоохон хотуудын дээгүүр уг онгоцыг нисгэж, түүний ер бусын хурдыг бодит орчинтой харьцуулан харуулжээ.
Бодит байдал дээр SR-71 нь ийм өндөр хурдаар газрын гадаргуутай ойр нисэх боломжгүй юм. Агаар мандлын нягтрал ихтэй доод давхаргад нисэх нь агаарын урсгалын эсэргүүцэл болон аэродинамикийн ноцтой асуудлуудыг үүсгэдэг тул уг онгоц нь агаар сийрэг өндөрт л дээд үзүүлэлтээ үзүүлэхээр бүтээгджээ.
Техникийн хувьд SR-71 нь хоёр секунд тутамд нэг миль замыг туулдаг байсан бөгөөд хэрэв дээд хурдаа хадгалж чадвал дэлхийг 11 цаг 30 минутын дотор тойрох боломжтой байв. 1990-ээд оны сүүлээр АНУ-ын Агаарын цэргийн хүчин SR-71-ийг албан ёсоор ашиглалтаас гаргасан ч түүний инженерийн шийдэл болон хурдны үзүүлэлт нь нисэхийн салбарын түүхэн дэх хамгийн гайхалтай амжилтуудын нэг хэвээр байна.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
An incredible simulation has shown what the SR-71’s top speed would look like if it were flying at ground level, and the results are almost impossible to comprehend.
The legendary reconnaissance aircraft remains the fastest air-breathing manned jet ever built, with performance figures that still haven’t been beaten decades after it left service.
Instead of watching the Blackbird cruise at its usual altitude of more than 80,000 feet, this animation from Airplane Mode imagined it flying over some of the world’s biggest cities.
The result shows how outrageously fast the Cold War icon really was.
Incredible simulation shows the jet’s top speed at ground level
The Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird is one of the most iconic aircraft ever created.
Developed during the Cold War as a strategic reconnaissance aircraft, it was designed to fly so high and so fast that enemy defenses couldn’t intercept it.
It could cruise comfortably above Mach 3 while operating at altitudes of around 85,000 feet.
Despite entering service in the 1960s, the Blackbird still holds the official world speed record for an air-breathing manned jet aircraft, reaching 2,193MPH during a record-setting flight in 1976.
That achievement has remained untouched for almost half a century.
Because the SR-71 spent nearly all of its missions at extreme altitude, it’s difficult to appreciate just how quickly it moved.
That’s exactly what inspired aviation creator Airplane Mode to produce a simulation imagining the aircraft flying at ground level.

The video places the Blackbird over recognizable city skylines including New York, San Francisco, and Sydney, allowing us to compare its speed against familiar landmarks.
Rather than soaring peacefully across the sky, the aircraft flashes through the sky in an instant.
Buildings, roads, and bridges disappear almost as quickly as they come into view, making it clear why the aircraft earned its legendary reputation.

The SR-71’s stats are some of aviation’s greatest engineering achievements
The simulation is, of course, entirely computer generated and doesn’t depict a real flight.
Flying an SR-71 at its maximum speed close to the ground wouldn’t be possible because the dense air at low altitude would generate enormous aerodynamic problems with the aircraft.
Instead, the Blackbird achieved its incredible performance where the atmosphere was much thinner.


Even so, the visualization succeeds in putting the aircraft’s speed into perspective.
At more than 2,000MPH, the SR-71 covered around a mile every couple of seconds and could circle the Earth in roughly 11 and a half hours if it maintained its top cruising speed.
The aircraft officially retired from U.S. Air Force service in the late 1990s, but its engineering achievements continue to fascinate aviation enthusiasts around the world.
From breaking speed records to inspiring modern simulations like this one, the SR-71 Blackbird remains one of the most remarkable planes to ever fly.


