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Items tagged with: greenaviationtech
NASA, GE Aerospace Advancing Hybrid-Electric Airliners with HyTEC - NASA
NASA is working with GE Aerospace to design and build a hybrid-electric engine that burns less fuel using new components to help electrically power the engine.John Gould (NASA)
Research Plane Dons New Colors for NASA Hybrid Electric Flight Tests - NASA
Parked under the lights inside a hangar in Seattle, a hybrid electric research aircraft from electric motor manufacturer magniX showed off a new lookAnisha Engineer (NASA)
NASA Composite Manufacturing Initiative Gains Two New Members - NASA
Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation and Fives Machining Systems Inc. have joined 20 other organizations to support NASA’s Hi-Rate Composite AircraftJim Banke (NASA)
Boneyard Airplane Sees New Life as a NASA X-66 Simulator - NASA
NASA’s X-66 aircraft, the centerpiece of its Sustainable Flight Demonstrator project, is taking the term “sustainable” to heart by reusing an old MD-90NASA
NASA, MagniX Altitude Tests Lay Groundwork for Hybrid Electric Planes - NASA
At NASA’s Electric Aircraft Testbed (NEAT) facility, engineers at magniX demonstrated the capabilities of a battery-powered engine that could help turn hybrid electric flight into a reality.Anisha Engineer (NASA)
NASA to Start Designing More Sustainable Jet Engine Core - NASA
NASA’s is developing a small core for a hybrid-electric turbofan jet engine that could reduce fuel burn by 10% compared to today’s engines.John Gould (NASA)
NASA Uses Small Engine to Enhance Sustainable Jet Research - NASA
Located inside a high-tech NASA laboratory in Cleveland is something you could almost miss at first glance: a small-scale, fully operational jet engine toJohn Gould (NASA)
New Look at NASA Boeing Sustainable Experimental Airliner
As NASA and Boeing enter the early stages of producing the X-66, the first X-plane specifically focused on helping the United States achieve net-zero aviationNASA
NASA and Partners Study Contrail Formation
In a collaboration between multiple partners in the aviation industry, NASA is helping determine if the latest advances in aircraft engines and fuels canNASA