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| F-15B ACTIVE in flight from above over desert | ||
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| Photo Number: | EC96-43780-2 | |
| Photo Date: | Oct 1996 | |
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| Formats: | 558x480 JPEG Image (108 KBytes) 1190x1024 JPEG Image (713 KBytes) 3030x2606 JPEG Image (3,205 KBytes) |
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| Description: |
NASA's F-15B ACTIVE research aircraft flies over the desert near Boron, California, as it heads back to NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center following a research flight. ACTIVE is an acronym for Advanced Control Technology for Integrated Vehicles, a current flight research program at Dryden. ACTIVE employs thrust-vectoring of engine exhaust and an advanced control system to develop technology to improve cruise and maneuvering capabilities of future aircraft at both subsonic and supersonic speeds. The ACTIVE F-15B (Serial #71-0290) incorporates engine exhaust nozzles developed by Pratt and Whitney which can vector up to 20 degrees in both pitch and yaw, along with close-coupled canards ahead of the wings, to improve performance and maneuvering ability. |
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| Keywords: | F-15; F-15B; ACTIVE; Advanced Control Technology for Integrated Vehicles; thrust vectoring; nozzles; pitch; yaw; canards | |
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