Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The sound barrier or sonic barrier is the large increase in aerodynamic drag and other undesirable effects experienced by an aircraft or other object when it approaches the speed of sound. When aircraft first approached the speed of sound, these effects were seen as constituting a barrier, making faster speeds very difficult or ...

  2. The Sound Barrier (conocida para su distribución en español como La barrera del sonido y Sin barreras en el cielo 1 ) es una película británica dirigida por David Lean en el año 1952 y protagonizado, en los roles protagonistas, por Ralph Richardson, Ann Todd, Nigel Patrick, John Justiny Denholm Elliott .

  3. The Sound Barrier is a 1952 British aviation drama film directed by David Lean. It is a fictional story about attempts by aircraft designers and test pilots to break the sound barrier. It was David Lean's third and final film with his wife Ann Todd, but it was his first for Alexander Korda's London Films, following the break-up of ...

  4. Sound barrier, sharp rise in aerodynamic drag that occurs as an aircraft approaches the speed of sound and that was formerly an obstacle to supersonic flight. If an aircraft flies at somewhat less than sonic speed, the pressure waves (sound waves) it creates outspeed their sources and spread out.

  5. 16 de feb. de 2017 · Langley was essential in helping the military to muscle through the sound barrier. The dial would be turned even higher as Langley’s “hypersonics” research ignited, ultimately leading to experimental craft capable of flight at several speed-of-sound multiples.

  6. THE SOUND BARRIER se inicia con una secuencia premonitoria –desarrollada en plena II Guerra Mundial: la presencia de los restos de un avión con la esvástica nazi lo delata-protagonizada por el joven piloto Philip Peel (John Justin), intentando una serie de pruebas de gran peligrosidad en la aeronave que pilota.

  7. Breaking the Sound Barrier. We began this chapter by transporting ourselves back to October 14, 1947, and riding with Chuck Yeager as he flew the Bell X-1 through the sound barrier, becoming the first human to fly faster than sound.