Boom Supersonic, the company building the world's fastest airliner, Overture, partnered with NASA to capture specialized ...
This story was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center. It is part one of a four-part series. Jose Gonzalez* wore no mask, despite the toxic chemicals he worked with in the oilfield.
The National Park Service and an Australian company are at odds over an old Mojave Desert gold mine, where the company is ...
A version of this article originally appeared in Quartz’s members-only Weekend Brief newsletter. Quartz members get access to ...
If you've been keeping tabs on aviation news as of late, you saw that Boom Supersonic just recently ... 1.122 during its test flight over the Mojave Desert in California. No other independently ...
But Boom CEO Blake Scholl is hopeful that the firm's technology — dubbed Boomless ... 1 prototype hit Mach 1.12 while flying over the Mojave Desert. The firm said it placed microphones on ...
Boom Supersonic passed a major milestone last ... experimental plane while flying as high as 36,514 feet above the Mojave Desert. This time, however, the XB-1 demonstrated another important ...
Boom attributed the high-altitude Mach capability to technology being developed for ... Mach 1 during its 12th test flight above the Mojave desert Tuesday morning. Screenshot from Boom Supersonic ...
An aircraft developed by Boom Supersonic became the first independently ... 35,000 feet during a test flight Tuesday in the same Mojave Desert airspace in California where Charles “Chuck ...
"XB-1's supersonic flight demonstrates that the technology for passenger supersonic ... soaring high above the Mojave Desert as a crowd watched in excitement. The XB-1, developed by Boom Supersonic, ...
The XB-1 aircraft accelerated to Mach 1.05 at about 35,000 feet during a test flight Tuesday in the same Mojave Desert airspace ... than the Concorde. Boom's founder and CEO Blake Scholl says the ...