Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
    • A-E
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
    • F-L
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
    • M-S
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
    • T-Z
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    • March 2025
    • Dec 2024/Jan 2025
    • Showcase 2025
    • September 2024
    • June 2024
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Subscribe to magazine Subscribe to email newsletter Media Pack
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    1. March 2025
    2. Dec 2024/Jan 2025
    3. Showcase 2025
    4. September 2024
    5. June 2024
    6. March 2024
    7. Archive Issues
    8. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    19th March 2025

    In this issue: March 2025

    Online Magazines By Ben Sampson
    Recent

    In this issue: March 2025

    19th March 2025
    contents and front cover of magazine

    In this issue: December / January 2025

    19th December 2024
    Showcase 2025

    In this issue – Showcase 2025

    6th November 2024
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
  • Jobs
    • Browse Jobs
    • Post a Job – It’s FREE!
    • Manage Jobs (Employers)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
Uncategorized

Texas University opens hypersonic wind tunnel

Ben SampsonBy Ben Sampson19th May 20213 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
Chris Combs with wind tunnel
The wind tunnel at the University of Texas at San Antonio is capable of recreating Mach 7 conditions

The University of Texas at San Antonio has commissioned a US$1.5 million hypersonic wind tunnel after three years of construction.

The 50ft (15m) long Mach 7 (5,000mph) Ludwieg Tube Wind Tunnel which weighs more than 7,000 lbs (3,200kg) and is part of the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) Hypersonics Lab. The wind tunnel can host a a variety of tests under Mach 7 conditions

Chris Combs, assistant professor in aerodynamics in the UTSA Department of Mechanical Engineering said, “I’d put ours up with anybody else’s in terms of Mach 7 testing situations we can reproduce in our lab.

“Couple that with our high-speed cameras and non-intrusive diagnostic capability, and it’s exceptionally rare to have those both under one roof at a university that is student-operated.”

A high-speed camera capable of capturing up to two million frames per second records images and video as the air passes through the test section. A laser detection device is sometimes added to help zero in on the results.

“As the air flows through the pipe, it enters a nozzle that is contoured to give us a shape to expand as needed, all the way to Mach 7,” Combs said. “You have high pressure on one side, low pressure on the other side. It’s separated by a metal diaphragm that bursts at a specified pressure. All that air then flows into a very large vacuum dump tank.”

“We can measure just about anything you want. We can find a way to do it. We can do velocity, temperature, pressure, density, concentration. There are ways to make all of those measurements in our lab and get any kind of key quantity.”

Combs and his team typically test the hypersonic impact on rockets, missiles, high-speed aircraft, high-speed engine inlets, propulsion systems and more. Many of the scenarios measure the extreme conditions that sections of a spacecraft experience as they enter the Earth’s atmosphere.

“We can measure characteristics of flow around a particular shape, the aerodynamics and how it’s going to perform to better understand what’s going on. The data we collect can help improve computational models so that vehicle designers can eventually use predictive tools to streamline the design process.”

Students are highly involved in setting up and executing experiments with the wind tunnel. “We’re giving students excellent opportunities to be working hands-on running a hypersonic wind tunnel facility themselves,” Combs said.

“There’s a big gap right now in the hypersonic workforce that the US is trying to fill. We’re putting students in a position to be highly competitive for some really cool jobs that are out there right now.”

Combs hopes the Mach 7 facility will also make the UTSA more competitive to secure projects from Department of Defense, NASA and other US governmental agencies. “It’s exciting and I’m looking forward to the opportunities it’s going to create for our students and UTSA, along with advancing hypersonic travel,” he added.

Share. Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Email
Previous ArticlePodcast: Brandon Robinson, Horizon Aircraft
Next Article Airbus releases flight testing video series
Ben Sampson

Ben has worked as a journalist and editor, covering technology, engineering and industry for the last 20 years. Initially writing about subjects from nuclear submarines to autonomous cars to future design and manufacturing technologies, he was editor of a leading UK-based engineering magazine before becoming editor of Aerospace Testing in 2017.

Related Posts

Defense

US military flies Talon-A reusable hypersonic test vehicle

6th May 20253 Mins Read
Industry News

Spirit AeroSystems split finalized by Airbus and Boeing

28th April 20252 Mins Read
Piper Alpha fuselage
Electric & Hybrid

Fit and fly: Inside the test program for CAE’s training aircraft mod

8th April 202510 Mins Read
Latest Posts

Boom picks Colorado for Symphony engine testing

8th May 2025

T-7A Red Hawk completes successful Escape System Sled Test

8th May 2025

Autonomous Black Hawk helicopter tested for firefighting

7th May 2025
Supplier Spotlights
Our Social Channels
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Getting in Touch
  • Subscribe To Magazine
  • Contact Us
  • Meet the Team
  • Media Pack
Related Topics
  • Aircraft Interiors
  • Business Jet Interiors
FREE WEEKLY NEWS EMAIL!

Get the 'best of the week' from this website direct to your inbox every Wednesday

© 2023 Mark Allen Group Ltd | All Rights Reserved
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.