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TRUCK KILLER:THE A-26A A Fighter Pilot’s Dream (1:00) The fastest bomber of World War II, the Douglas A-26 Invader had a top speed of 355 mph, almost 100 mph faster than the TBM Avenger torpedo bomber flying in formation with it (and 140 mph faster than the Twin Beech that joins them in the air). The video was shot in 2018 at the TBM THIS A-6 WAS SO HAUNTED, THEY NAMED IT FOR A STEPHEN KING The gremlin-plagued airplane is a standard of aviation lore. That’s what A-6 Intruder NE 510 was for my squadron mates and me—an inexplicable menace that stalked our aircrew and defied our maintenance department. It had arrived at the squadron in pieces. Chief Warrant Officer Al Gonzales, who GLACIER GIRL: THE BACK STORY July 2007. The journey on which the world’s most famous fighter airplane is now embarked is really the third leg in a trip that started 65 years ago, when Great Britain was holding off Nazi Germany and the United States was rushing warplanes to British airfields. In 1942, Glacier Girl was a brand new Lockheed P-38F, one of hundreds of THE MYSTERY OF THE LOST CLIPPER The mystery of Romance of the Skies was, in effect, an airborne Agatha Christie thriller— Murder on the Orient Express at 10,000 feet. In January 1959, after an unusually long investigation, baffled CAB officials found “no probable cause” for the crash, and formally closed their inquiry. Informally, Ken and I have reopened it, with the DOCKING ON THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING At the time, no airship had docked at the Empire State Building. That didn’t happen until September 1931, when a privately-owned dirigible docked for a mere three minutes, in a 40-mile-per-hour wind. “Traffic was tied up in the streets below for more than a half hour as the pilot, Lieutenant William McCraken jockeyed for position in the HOMEPAGE | AIR & SPACE MAGAZINEDAILY PLANETFLIGHT TODAYSPACEMILITARYINTERVIEWSPHOTOS Special Issue! Epic Air Battles of WW II A 96-page edition timed for the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, featuring stunning photography of WW2 aircraft and GHOSTSHIPS OF THE AIR Ghostships of the Air. AIR & SPACE MAGAZINE | May 25, 2021, 4:55 p.m. We can’t help being tantalized by the sight of derelict airplanes. Their mere presence represents a mystery, a backstory of abandonment we yearn to hear. Award-winning Russian photographer Dmitry Osadchy knows that well, and uses his drone cameras to take us on a world tour HOW THE NAVY TAMED THE “KILLER CORSAIR” The initial carrier-landing qualifications for the Chance Vought F4U Corsair were a disaster. In fall 1942, Lieutenant Commander Sam Porter tested the feasibility of operating the Navy’s bent-wing fighter from the deck of the escort carrier USS Sangamon steaming in the Chesapeake Bay. After four terrifying landings, he called it quits, certain the airplane was on the verge of killing him. MORE THAN 70 YEARS LATER, RABAUL’S AERIAL BATTLEGROUND IS More than 70 Years Later, Rabaul’s Aerial Battleground Is Still Haunting The “Japanese Gibraltar” was the scene of desperate fighting in the fall of 1943. AIR & SPACE COLLECTOR'S EDITIONS A remembrance of December 7th and its aftermath. Nearly 100 pages of history, featuring the great air battles of the Pacific War. Untold stories of forgotten campaigns and of the individuals swept up in monumental events. Outstanding wartime photography and the best action photos of World War II airplanes flying today. GHOSTSHIPS OF THE AIR Ghostships of the Air. AIR & SPACE MAGAZINE | May 25, 2021, 4:55 p.m. We can’t help being tantalized by the sight of derelict airplanes. Their mere presence represents a mystery, a backstory of abandonment we yearn to hear. Award-winning Russian photographer Dmitry Osadchy knows that well, and uses his drone cameras to take us on a world tour THE SCIENCE OF ALIENS, PART 3: HAVE THEY OVERCOME THEIR The latter extreme, cannibalism, has recently been studied by a group led by Mike Boots from the University of California-Berkeley. The researchers used Indian moth larvae in their experiments and found that less selfish behavior evolved under living conditions that forced individuals to interact more frequently with siblings. THERE ARE MORE VIRUSES ON EARTH THAN THERE ARE STARS IN With the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 on everyone’s mind these days, scientists are working to understand its characteristics. Tung Phan from the University of Pittburgh, for example, found many mutations in the genome of the virus, underlining its genetic diversity and the rapid evolution this pathogen is capable of. I WAS THERE: WHEN THE DC-8 WENT SUPERSONIC On August 21, 1961, pilot William Magruder, copilot Paul Patten, flight engineer Joseph Tomich, and flight test engineer Richard H. Edwards took Douglas DC-8-43 no. N9604Z for a test flight at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The aircraft exceeded Mach 1—the only intentional supersonic flight HOW THINGS WORK: SPACE STATION STEERING The International Space Station, now in its 14th year, is by far the largest structure ever placed in orbit. Like any satellite boosted to orbital velocity, it circles the planet endlessly (at five miles per second), with almost no need for additional propulsion. DOCKING ON THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING At the time, no airship had docked at the Empire State Building. That didn’t happen until September 1931, when a privately-owned dirigible docked for a mere three minutes, in a 40-mile-per-hour wind. “Traffic was tied up in the streets below for more than a half hour as the pilot, Lieutenant William McCraken jockeyed for position in the NASA'S ART RIDES THE RAILS It was one of those in-between moments: I was surveying the scene in the parking lot next to the railroad crossing in Taneytown, Maryland, an unspoiled pre-Revolutionary War town of about 5,000 souls. For a while I chatted with Chief Melvin Diggs, who had pulled up next to me in a patrol car to see WHO DISCOVERED WATER ON THE MOON? A recent article tells how Soviet scientists studying soil samples returned from the Moon in 1976 by the unmanned Luna 24 mission first discovered lunar water. This assertion is based on a paper published in the Russian journal Geokhimiia (vol. 285, p. 285-288, February 1978). The measurement used infrared absorption spectroscopy to look for the “water band” centered around 2.8 microns THE CULT OF THE SONIC CRUISER Before it was announced, on March 29, 2001, only a few potential customers knew about the Sonic Cruiser, and they had been sworn to silence. Boeing stalled media requests for briefings until the Paris airshow in June, where all would be revealed. HOMEPAGE | AIR & SPACE MAGAZINEDAILY PLANETFLIGHT TODAYSPACEMILITARYINTERVIEWSPHOTOS Special Issue! Epic Air Battles of WW II A 96-page edition timed for the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, featuring stunning photography of WW2 aircraft and GHOSTSHIPS OF THE AIR Ghostships of the Air. AIR & SPACE MAGAZINE | May 25, 2021, 4:55 p.m. We can’t help being tantalized by the sight of derelict airplanes. Their mere presence represents a mystery, a backstory of abandonment we yearn to hear. Award-winning Russian photographer Dmitry Osadchy knows that well, and uses his drone cameras to take us on a world tour HOW THE NAVY TAMED THE “KILLER CORSAIR” The initial carrier-landing qualifications for the Chance Vought F4U Corsair were a disaster. In fall 1942, Lieutenant Commander Sam Porter tested the feasibility of operating the Navy’s bent-wing fighter from the deck of the escort carrier USS Sangamon steaming in the Chesapeake Bay. After four terrifying landings, he called it quits, certain the airplane was on the verge of killing him. MORE THAN 70 YEARS LATER, RABAUL’S AERIAL BATTLEGROUND IS More than 70 Years Later, Rabaul’s Aerial Battleground Is Still Haunting The “Japanese Gibraltar” was the scene of desperate fighting in the fall of 1943. WHAT THE OREGON TRAIL LOOKS LIKE TODAY FROM ABOVE Dusty Kleiss is a bonafide American hero: a veteran pilot of the Battle of Midway, and one of the most effective dive bombers in U.S. military history. This Pilot Was the Unsung Hero of the Battle Of Midway (2:30) Investigators suspect that a design flaw in old 737s—later fixed by Boeing— may have caused the September 14, 2008crash.
TRUCK KILLER:THE A-26A A Fighter Pilot’s Dream (1:00) The fastest bomber of World War II, the Douglas A-26 Invader had a top speed of 355 mph, almost 100 mph faster than the TBM Avenger torpedo bomber flying in formation with it (and 140 mph faster than the Twin Beech that joins them in the air). The video was shot in 2018 at the TBM THIS A-6 WAS SO HAUNTED, THEY NAMED IT FOR A STEPHEN KING The gremlin-plagued airplane is a standard of aviation lore. That’s what A-6 Intruder NE 510 was for my squadron mates and me—an inexplicable menace that stalked our aircrew and defied our maintenance department. It had arrived at the squadron in pieces. Chief Warrant Officer Al Gonzales, who GLACIER GIRL: THE BACK STORY July 2007. The journey on which the world’s most famous fighter airplane is now embarked is really the third leg in a trip that started 65 years ago, when Great Britain was holding off Nazi Germany and the United States was rushing warplanes to British airfields. In 1942, Glacier Girl was a brand new Lockheed P-38F, one of hundreds of THE MYSTERY OF THE LOST CLIPPER The mystery of Romance of the Skies was, in effect, an airborne Agatha Christie thriller— Murder on the Orient Express at 10,000 feet. In January 1959, after an unusually long investigation, baffled CAB officials found “no probable cause” for the crash, and formally closed their inquiry. Informally, Ken and I have reopened it, with the DOCKING ON THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING At the time, no airship had docked at the Empire State Building. That didn’t happen until September 1931, when a privately-owned dirigible docked for a mere three minutes, in a 40-mile-per-hour wind. “Traffic was tied up in the streets below for more than a half hour as the pilot, Lieutenant William McCraken jockeyed for position in the HOMEPAGE | AIR & SPACE MAGAZINEDAILY PLANETFLIGHT TODAYSPACEMILITARYINTERVIEWSPHOTOS Special Issue! Epic Air Battles of WW II A 96-page edition timed for the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II, featuring stunning photography of WW2 aircraft and GHOSTSHIPS OF THE AIR Ghostships of the Air. AIR & SPACE MAGAZINE | May 25, 2021, 4:55 p.m. We can’t help being tantalized by the sight of derelict airplanes. Their mere presence represents a mystery, a backstory of abandonment we yearn to hear. Award-winning Russian photographer Dmitry Osadchy knows that well, and uses his drone cameras to take us on a world tour HOW THE NAVY TAMED THE “KILLER CORSAIR” The initial carrier-landing qualifications for the Chance Vought F4U Corsair were a disaster. In fall 1942, Lieutenant Commander Sam Porter tested the feasibility of operating the Navy’s bent-wing fighter from the deck of the escort carrier USS Sangamon steaming in the Chesapeake Bay. After four terrifying landings, he called it quits, certain the airplane was on the verge of killing him. MORE THAN 70 YEARS LATER, RABAUL’S AERIAL BATTLEGROUND IS More than 70 Years Later, Rabaul’s Aerial Battleground Is Still Haunting The “Japanese Gibraltar” was the scene of desperate fighting in the fall of 1943. WHAT THE OREGON TRAIL LOOKS LIKE TODAY FROM ABOVE Dusty Kleiss is a bonafide American hero: a veteran pilot of the Battle of Midway, and one of the most effective dive bombers in U.S. military history. This Pilot Was the Unsung Hero of the Battle Of Midway (2:30) Investigators suspect that a design flaw in old 737s—later fixed by Boeing— may have caused the September 14, 2008crash.
TRUCK KILLER:THE A-26A A Fighter Pilot’s Dream (1:00) The fastest bomber of World War II, the Douglas A-26 Invader had a top speed of 355 mph, almost 100 mph faster than the TBM Avenger torpedo bomber flying in formation with it (and 140 mph faster than the Twin Beech that joins them in the air). The video was shot in 2018 at the TBM THIS A-6 WAS SO HAUNTED, THEY NAMED IT FOR A STEPHEN KING The gremlin-plagued airplane is a standard of aviation lore. That’s what A-6 Intruder NE 510 was for my squadron mates and me—an inexplicable menace that stalked our aircrew and defied our maintenance department. It had arrived at the squadron in pieces. Chief Warrant Officer Al Gonzales, who GLACIER GIRL: THE BACK STORY July 2007. The journey on which the world’s most famous fighter airplane is now embarked is really the third leg in a trip that started 65 years ago, when Great Britain was holding off Nazi Germany and the United States was rushing warplanes to British airfields. In 1942, Glacier Girl was a brand new Lockheed P-38F, one of hundreds of THE MYSTERY OF THE LOST CLIPPER The mystery of Romance of the Skies was, in effect, an airborne Agatha Christie thriller— Murder on the Orient Express at 10,000 feet. In January 1959, after an unusually long investigation, baffled CAB officials found “no probable cause” for the crash, and formally closed their inquiry. Informally, Ken and I have reopened it, with the DOCKING ON THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING At the time, no airship had docked at the Empire State Building. That didn’t happen until September 1931, when a privately-owned dirigible docked for a mere three minutes, in a 40-mile-per-hour wind. “Traffic was tied up in the streets below for more than a half hour as the pilot, Lieutenant William McCraken jockeyed for position in the AIR & SPACE COLLECTOR'S EDITIONS A remembrance of December 7th and its aftermath. Nearly 100 pages of history, featuring the great air battles of the Pacific War. Untold stories of forgotten campaigns and of the individuals swept up in monumental events. Outstanding wartime photography and the best action photos of World War II airplanes flying today. GHOSTSHIPS OF THE AIR Ghostships of the Air. AIR & SPACE MAGAZINE | May 25, 2021, 4:55 p.m. We can’t help being tantalized by the sight of derelict airplanes. Their mere presence represents a mystery, a backstory of abandonment we yearn to hear. Award-winning Russian photographer Dmitry Osadchy knows that well, and uses his drone cameras to take us on a world tour THE SCIENCE OF ALIENS, PART 3: HAVE THEY OVERCOME THEIR The latter extreme, cannibalism, has recently been studied by a group led by Mike Boots from the University of California-Berkeley. The researchers used Indian moth larvae in their experiments and found that less selfish behavior evolved under living conditions that forced individuals to interact more frequently with siblings. THERE ARE MORE VIRUSES ON EARTH THAN THERE ARE STARS IN With the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 on everyone’s mind these days, scientists are working to understand its characteristics. Tung Phan from the University of Pittburgh, for example, found many mutations in the genome of the virus, underlining its genetic diversity and the rapid evolution this pathogen is capable of. I WAS THERE: WHEN THE DC-8 WENT SUPERSONIC On August 21, 1961, pilot William Magruder, copilot Paul Patten, flight engineer Joseph Tomich, and flight test engineer Richard H. Edwards took Douglas DC-8-43 no. N9604Z for a test flight at Edwards Air Force Base in California. The aircraft exceeded Mach 1—the only intentional supersonic flight HOW THINGS WORK: SPACE STATION STEERING The International Space Station, now in its 14th year, is by far the largest structure ever placed in orbit. Like any satellite boosted to orbital velocity, it circles the planet endlessly (at five miles per second), with almost no need for additional propulsion. DOCKING ON THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING At the time, no airship had docked at the Empire State Building. That didn’t happen until September 1931, when a privately-owned dirigible docked for a mere three minutes, in a 40-mile-per-hour wind. “Traffic was tied up in the streets below for more than a half hour as the pilot, Lieutenant William McCraken jockeyed for position in the NASA'S ART RIDES THE RAILS It was one of those in-between moments: I was surveying the scene in the parking lot next to the railroad crossing in Taneytown, Maryland, an unspoiled pre-Revolutionary War town of about 5,000 souls. For a while I chatted with Chief Melvin Diggs, who had pulled up next to me in a patrol car to see WHO DISCOVERED WATER ON THE MOON? A recent article tells how Soviet scientists studying soil samples returned from the Moon in 1976 by the unmanned Luna 24 mission first discovered lunar water. This assertion is based on a paper published in the Russian journal Geokhimiia (vol. 285, p. 285-288, February 1978). The measurement used infrared absorption spectroscopy to look for the “water band” centered around 2.8 microns THE CULT OF THE SONIC CRUISER Before it was announced, on March 29, 2001, only a few potential customers knew about the Sonic Cruiser, and they had been sworn to silence. Boeing stalled media requests for briefings until the Paris airshow in June, where all would be revealed. ACCESSIBILITY NAVIGATION Primary Navigation Content _Toggle_ _Share_ _Search_ _Search Close_Search Search
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THE PILOTS WHO FIGHT CALIFORNIA’S WILDFIRES WITH A SQUADRON OF ANCIENT AIRPLANES, THESE FIREFIGHTERS ARE USUALLY THE FIRST ON THE SCENE. THE PROWLER'S LAST PROWL THE ICONIC NORTHROP GRUMMAN EA-6B FLIES INTO HISTORY—AND THE NATIONAL AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM COLLECTION. THE HELICOPTER GOES TO WAR TOWARD THE END OF WW2, THE STRANGE NEW CRAFT BECAME VITAL INGUERRILLA WARFARE.
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THE PILOTS WHO FIGHT CALIFORNIA’S WILDFIRES WITH A SQUADRON OF ANCIENT AIRPLANES, THESE FIREFIGHTERS ARE USUALLY THE FIRST ON THE SCENE. THE PROWLER'S LAST PROWL THE ICONIC NORTHROP GRUMMAN EA-6B FLIES INTO HISTORY—AND THE NATIONAL AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM COLLECTION. THE HELICOPTER GOES TO WAR TOWARD THE END OF WW2, THE STRANGE NEW CRAFT BECAME VITAL INGUERRILLA WARFARE.
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