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NASA conducts cutting-edge, fundamental research in traditional and
emerging disciplines to help transform the nation's air transportation
system, and to support future air and space vehicles.
Our goals are to improve airspace capacity and mobility, improve
aviation safety, and improve aircraft performance while reducing noise,
emissions and fuel burn.
Our world-class capability is built on a tradition of expertise in
aeronautical engineering and its core research areas, including
aerodynamics, aeroacoustics, materials and structures, propulsion,
dynamics and control, sensor and actuator technologies, advanced
computational and mathematical techniques, and experimental measurement
techniques.
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Feature: Marking 61 Years of Supersonic Curiosity
Sixty-one years after a sonic boom first rolled across the roof of the high desert
in southern California, there are still things yet to be discovered about supersonic flight.
+ Read More
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+ NASA Aeronautics Scholarship Program Updated
Scholarship applications are now being accepted through January 16, 2009
from undergraduate and graduate students for the fall 2009 cycle.
+ Fall 2008 Aeronautics Scholarship Recipients
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Upcoming Events
+ November 4, 2008: Technical Seminar: "Oil-Free Turbomachinery Technology for Rotorcraft Propulsion and Advanced Aerospace Propulsion and Power"
Washington, DC
Recent breakthroughs in gas-lubricated foil bearings, high temperature
solid lubricants and computer based modeling could enable the deployment
in rotorcraft engines of revolutionary oil-free turbomachinery systems
that weigh less and cost less to operate and maintain.
Recent Events
+ October 21-23, 2008: Aviation Safety Technical Conference
Denver, CO
+ October 7-9, 2008: Fundamental Aeronautics Program Annual Meeting
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