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It makes the same kind of pulsing sound as the one on this audio,' he told MailOnline after listening to a recording of the bangs that was taken in south London on Saturday night. ‘When we run a test engine it’s a real industrial noise and you can hear it for miles. We have people coming to us asking to make less noise or keep it to the daytime.' Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk... on-reveals-sounds-identical-unexplained-noises.html#ixzz3KgGZIxmP Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
While the MoD said it had no reports of aircraft in British airspace capable of making a supersonic or hypersonic boom - or any alternative explanation - one expert claimed the noises could have come from thousands of miles away. That could explain how the same sounds were apparently heard on both sides of the Atlantic at the same time. Steven Aftergood, a government secrecy expert at the Federation of American Scientists, said: 'If an aircraft is responsible, then it’s worth noting that it may not be local at all. 'Because the sound wave that causes the boom can be reflected by the stratosphere, the source of the event could conceivably be hundreds or thousands of miles away from the place where it is heard on the ground.' The video of the PDE was filmed in 2008 at UT Arlington Aerodynamics Research Center. It shows two ground tests of a hydrogen and air pulsed detonation engine. It is slightly faster than the sounds recorded over the UK, but the repetitive nature is the same. A PDE works by sending liquid methane or liquid hydrogen through the engine. The fuel mist is then ignited. This detonation is made inside a specially designed chamber and occurs when the aircraft is travelling beyond the speed of sound. At these speeds, a 'thrust wall' is created. This is when the craft is travelling so fast, air is pushed near the aircraft's nose that creates a 'wall'. When the detonation occurs, the aircraft's thrust wall is pushed forward, and this is repeated numerous times to propel the aircraft. As a result, the contrails created by such engines appear to look like rings on a rope, or even a spine. It can theoretically power planes at five times the speed of sound. The technology builds upon 'pulsejet' principles which first emerged in the early 1900s and were used in German V-1 flying bombs. Test flights using the most recent forms of the technology have lasted only a few seconds, but it is still listed by conspiracy theorists as a potential source of power for the so-called Aurora spy jet Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk... on-reveals-sounds-identical-unexplained-noises.html#ixzz3KgGlvvWh Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: kingofyo1
Too bad they suck as aircraft engines.
I've never once heard of a sonic boom of any kind, even the shuttle, being heard more than a few hundred miles at most. I don't know where they get "thousands of miles" from.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: Bigburgh
Look at the timing. First report from the UK was 1900. Reports from New York at 1530-1600ish. There's a five hour difference from the UK to New York. That means it was heard at least an hour and a half later in the US.
originally posted by: Zaphod58
a reply to: kingofyo1
Too bad they suck as aircraft engines.
I've never once heard of a sonic boom of any kind, even the shuttle, being heard more than a few hundred miles at most. I don't know where they get "thousands of miles" from.
originally posted by: Sammamishman
a reply to: Bigburgh
Just throwing in some rough calculation: The distance from the middle of UK to the middle of NY is aprox. 3400 miles. If an aircraft made that distance in roughly 90 minutes it would have to travel at 2266 mph , or around mach 3. A reasonable cruising speed for an advanced ISR platform possible using a new fuel that looks green under full power sprint on a return trip to the states.
That's just speculation though.