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China Is Leading the World in Hypersonic Technology But It May Not All Be About High Speed Travel

High-speed technology could make travel faster than ever. It will also make warfare deadlier.

China Is Leading the World in Hypersonic Technology But It May Not All Be About High Speed Travel
Screenshot via boomsupersonic.com

As the world gets smaller and more tightly interconnected, high-speed travel may be making a comeback. Boom, a Colorado-based company, plans to bring back the supersonic jet by 2023. The company says a London to New York ticket will cost about the same as a business class ticket for a flight that takes just 3 hours 15 minutes. With a planned cruising speed of 1,451 mph, the plane is almost 100 mph faster than the Concorde, the iconic high-speed passenger jet that met its end when high oil prices and a crash in 2000 took the company down.

Elon Musk’s Hyperloop, a high-speed, futuristic transport system that moves magnetically levitated passenger pods at high-speeds through a network of tubes, is getting closer to reality. Several firms are now testing equipment and setting up routes in the U.S. and beyond. “It’s happening far faster than I would have ever expected, and it’s happening all over the world,” said David Goldsmith, a transportation researcher at Virginia Tech.

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