What Is The Sound Barrier?

Imagine you are running through a crowded hallway. If you run slowly, people move out of the way before you get there. But if you run super fast, everyone bumps into each other at once, creating a messy wall that tries to stop you.

The Air Wall

Air is not empty space; it is made of tiny particles like billiard balls. When an airplane flies, it pushes these air particles away. At normal speeds, the air has time to slide aside smoothly. This is called subsonic flight.

However, when a plane gets as fast as sound itself, something special happens. The air in front of the plane cannot get out of the way quickly enough. It piles up into a thick, invisible wall of pressure. This wall acts like a brake, making it very hard for the plane to go any faster.

Breaking Through

This big resistance is what people call the sound barrier. For a long time, pilots were afraid they would crash if they tried to break through this wall. But in 1947, a pilot named Chuck Yeager flew a rocket ship called the X-1 at exactly the speed of sound.

When he broke the wall, the air suddenly rushed back together behind him with a loud boom. This loud noise is called a sonic boom. Once he got past the initial pile-up, the plane could fly even faster than sound, which we call supersonic. Today, fighter jets do this all the time without anyone noticing!

Chuck Yeager broke the barrier not by pushing harder, but by going smoother.

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Examples

  1. A jet fighter shoots past a cloud and leaves a visible white cone in its wake.
  2. You hear a loud bang from the sky right after seeing a fast plane zoom overhead.
  3. A car engine roars louder when it hits top speed, just like air piling up around a fast plane.

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