Early research Triangular stabilizing fins for rockets were described as early as 1529-1556 by the Austrian military engineer
Conrad Haas and in the 17th century by the Polish-Lithuanian military engineer
Kazimierz Siemienowicz. However, a true lifting wing in delta form did not appear until 1867, when it was
patented by J.W. Butler and E. Edwards in a design for a low-aspect-ratio, dart-shaped rocket-propelled aeroplane. This was followed by various similarly dart-shaped proposals, such as a biplane version by Butler and Edwards, and a jet-propelled version by the Russian
Nicholas de Telescheff. In 1909 a variant with a
canard foreplane was experimented with by the Spanish sculptor Ricardo Causarás. Also in 1909, British aeronautical pioneer
J. W. Dunne patented his tailless stable aircraft with conical wing development. The patent included a broad-span biconical delta, with each side bulging upwards towards the rear in a manner characteristic of the modern
Rogallo wing. During the following year, in America U. G. Lee and W. A. Darrah patented a similar biconical delta winged aeroplane with an explicitly rigid wing. It also incorporated a proposal for a flight control system and covered both gliding and powered flight. None of these early designs is known to have successfully flown although, in 1904, Lavezzani's hang glider featuring independent left and right triangular wings had left the ground, and Dunne's other tailless swept designs based on the same principle would fly. These prototypes were not easy to handle at low speed and none saw widespread use.
Subsonic thick wing bomber had a thick wing. During the latter years of
World War II, Alexander Lippisch refined his ideas on the high-speed delta, substantially increasing the sweepback of the wing's leading edge. An experimental glider, the
DM-1, was built to test the aerodynamics of the proposed
P.13a high-speed
interceptor. Following the end of hostilities, the DM-1 was completed on behalf of the
United States and the shipped to
Langley Field in
Virginia for examination by
NACA (National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, forerunner of today's
NASA) It underwent significant alterations in the US, typically to lower its drag, resulting in the replacement of its large vertical stabilizer with a smaller and more conventional counterpart, along with a normal cockpit canopy taken from a
Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star. The work of French designer
Nicolas Roland Payen somewhat paralleled that of Lippisch. During the 1930s, he had developed a tandem delta configuration with a straight fore wing and steep delta aft wing, similar to that of Causarás. The outbreak of the Second World War brought a halt to flight testing of the
Pa-22, although work continued for a time after the project garnered German attention. During the
postwar era, Payen flew an experimental tailless delta jet, the
Pa.49, in 1954, as well as the tailless pusher-configuration
Arbalète series from 1965. Further derivatives based on Payen's work were proposed but ultimately went undeveloped. Following the war, the British developed a number of subsonic jet aircraft that harnessed data gathered from Lippisch's work. One such aircraft, the
Avro 707 research aircraft, made its first flight in 1949. British military aircraft such as the
Avro Vulcan (a
strategic bomber) and
Gloster Javelin (an all-weather fighter) were among the first delta-equipped aircraft to enter production. Whereas the Vulcan was a classic tailless design, the Javelin incorporated a tailplane in order to improve low-speed handling and high-speed manoeuvrability, as well as to allow a greater
centre of gravity range. Gloster proposed a refinement of the Javelin that would have, amongst other changes, decreased wing thickness in order to achieve supersonic speeds of up to Mach 1.6.
Supersonic thin wing fighter had a conventional tail. The American aerodynamicist
Robert T. Jones, who worked at NACA during the Second World War, developed the theory of the thin delta wing for supersonic flight. First published in January 1945, his approach contrasted with that of Lippisch on thick delta wings. The thin delta wing first flew on the
Convair XF-92 in 1948, making it the first delta-winged jet plane to fly. It provided a successful basis for all practical supersonic deltas and the configuration became widely adopted. During the late 1940s, the British aircraft manufacturer
Fairey Aviation became interested in the delta wing, its proposals led to the experimental
Fairey Delta 1 being produced to
Air Ministry Specification E.10/47. A subsequent experimental aircraft, the
Fairey Delta 2 set a new
World air speed record on 10 March 1956, achieving 1,132 mph (1,811 km/h) or Mach 1.73. This raised the record above 1,000 mph for the first time and broke the previous record by 310 mph, or 37 per cent; never before had the record been raised by such a large margin. In its original tailless form, the thin delta was used extensively by the American aviation company
Convair and by the French aircraft manufacturer
Dassault Aviation. The supersonic
Convair F-102 Delta Dagger and transonic
Douglas F4D Skyray were two of the first operational jet fighters to feature a tailless delta wing when they entered service in 1956. Dassault's interest in the delta wing produced the
Dassault Mirage family of combat aircraft, especially the highly successful
Mirage III. Amongst other attributes, the Mirage III was the first Western European combat aircraft to exceed Mach 2 in horizontal flight. The tailed delta configuration was adopted by the
TsAGI (Central Aero and Hydrodynamic Institute,
Moscow), to improve high
angle-of-attack handling, manoeuvrability and centre of gravity range over a pure delta planform. The resulting TsAGI S-12 airfoil was used in the
Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 ("Fishbed"), which became the most widely built combat aircraft of the 1970s.
Close-coupled canard pioneered the close-coupled canard. Through the 1960s, the
Swedish aircraft manufacturer
Saab AB developed a close-coupled canard delta configuration, placing a delta foreplane just in front of and above the main delta wing.
Patented in 1963, this configuration was flown for the first time on the company's
Viggen combat aircraft in 1967. The close coupling modifies the airflow over the wing, most significantly when flying at high angles of attack. In contrast to the classic tail-mounted elevators, the canards add to the total lift as well as stabilising the airflow over the main wing. This enables more extreme manoeuvres, improves low-speed handling and reduces the takeoff run and landing speed. During the 1960s, this configuration was considered to be radical, but Saab's design team judged that it was the optimal approach available for satisfying the conflicting performance demands for the Viggen, which including favourable
STOL performance, supersonic speed, low turbulence sensitivity during low level flight, and efficient lift for subsonic flight. The close-coupled canard has since become common on supersonic fighter aircraft. Notable examples include the multinational
Eurofighter Typhoon, France's
Dassault Rafale, Saab's own
Gripen (a successor to the Viggen) and Israel's
IAI Kfir. One of the main reasons for its popularity has been the high level of agility in manoeuvring that it is capable of.
Supersonic transport When supersonic transport (SST) aircraft were developed, the tailless ogival delta wing was chosen for both the Anglo-French
Concorde and the Soviet
Tupolev Tu-144, the Concorde beginning test flights in 1965 and the Tupolev first flying in 1968. While both Concorde and the Tu-144 prototype featured an
ogival delta configuration, production models of the Tu-144 differed by changing to a
double delta wing. The delta wings required these airliners to adopt a higher
angle of attack at low speeds than conventional aircraft; in the case of Concorde, lift was maintained by allowed the formation of large low pressure vortices over the entire upper wing surface. Its typical landing speed was , considerably higher than subsonic airliners. Multiple proposed successors, such as the
Zero Emission Hyper Sonic Transport ZEHST), have reportedly adopted a similar configuration to that Concorde's basic design, thus the Delta wing remains a likely candidate for future supersonic civil endeavours.
Rogallo flexible wing During and after WWII, Francis and Gertrude Rogallo developed the idea of a flexible wing which could be collapsed for storage. Francis saw an application in spacecraft recovery and NASA became interested. In 1961, Ryan flew the
XV-8, an experimental "flying Jeep" or "fleep". The flexible wing chosen for it was a delta wing; in use, it billowed out into a double-cone profile which gave it aerodynamic stability. Although tested but ultimately never used for spacecraft recovery, this design soon became popular for
hang gliders and
ultra-light aircraft and has become known as the Rogallo wing. ==See also==