National Security Journal on MSN
At 7,346 mph, the X-43A crossed Atlantic distance in 25 minutes — 22 years later, nobody has built anything faster
The U.S. is spending $3.9 billion in 2026 to develop hypersonic weapons NASA already proved possible 22 years ago. In 2004, ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scramjet vs. rocket: The 2 propulsion systems powering the hypersonic missile race, explained
In March 2025, a missile launched from a test range in the Pacific arced into the upper atmosphere, separated its rocket ...
Hitting a target with a missile anywhere in the world in less than an hour – that’s the Pentagon’s goal with its ongoing development of hypersonic weapons. Moving from the experimental phase to ...
India’s long-anticipated push toward developing the BrahMos-2 hypersonic cruise missile appears to be encountering ...
India set for hypersonic missiles soon: Double the speed of BrahMos, no defence system can stop them
The country's missile programme is entering a phase where speed, range and precision are being developed together, ...
The Senate Appropriations Committee has approved funding for research on new technology that could one day allow planes to travel anywhere in the world within two hours. The $25 million research ...
The race to field reusable hypersonic aircraft got a whole lot hotter last month, with GE Aerospace announcing a breakthrough in high-speed jet engine design that could potentially allow conventional.
The Indian Ministry of Defence (MoD) regards the ground test of an active cooled scramjet combustor as being a milestone in its development of next-generation hypersonic missiles. (Defence Research ...
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