attached to the underside The X-43A aircraft was a small unpiloted test vehicle measuring just over in
length. The vehicle was a
lifting body design, where the body of the aircraft provides a significant amount of
lift for flight, rather than relying on
wings. The aircraft weighed roughly . The X-43A was designed to be fully controllable in high-speed flight, even when
gliding without
propulsion. However, the aircraft was not designed to land and be recovered. Test vehicles crashed into the
Pacific Ocean when the test was over. Traveling at Mach speeds produces significant heat due to the
compression shock waves involved in supersonic
aerodynamic drag. At high Mach speeds, heat can become so intense that metal portions of the airframe could melt. The X-43A compensated for this by cycling water behind the engine cowl and sidewall leading edges, cooling those surfaces. In tests, the water circulation was activated at about Mach 3.
Engine , high-temperature
wind tunnel The craft was created to develop and test a supersonic-combustion ramjet, or "
scramjet" engine, an engine variation where external combustion takes place within air that is flowing at supersonic speeds. The X-43A's developers designed the aircraft's airframe to be part of the
propulsion system: the forebody is a part of the intake airflow, while the aft section functions as an exhaust nozzle. The engine of the X-43A was primarily fueled with
hydrogen fuel. In the successful test, about of the fuel was used. For initial ignition, a mixture of hydrogen with 20% of
monosilane, a
pyrophoric gas, was used. Unlike rockets, scramjet-powered vehicles do not carry oxygen on board for fueling the engine. Removing the need to carry oxygen significantly reduces the vehicle's size and weight. In the future, such lighter vehicles could take heavier
payloads into
space or carry payloads of the same weight much more efficiently. Scramjets only operate at speeds in the range of Mach 4.5 or higher, so rockets or other jet engines are required to initially boost scramjet-powered aircraft to this base velocity. In the case of the X-43A, the aircraft was accelerated to high speed with a
Pegasus rocket launched from a converted
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bomber. The combined X-43A and Pegasus vehicle was referred to as the "stack" by the program's team members. The engines in the X-43A test vehicles were specifically designed for a certain speed range, only able to compress and ignite the fuel-air mixture when the incoming airflow is moving as expected. The first two X-43A aircraft were intended for flight at approximately Mach 7, while the third was designed to operate at speeds greater than at altitudes of or more. ==Operational testing==