The latest trend in aviation: flying thanks to human excrement
The new frontier of sustainable flying: human waste converted into jet fuel, a potential solution for a cleaner sky.
The new frontier of sustainable flying: human waste converted into jet fuel, a potential solution for a cleaner sky.
Maribor Airport, Slovenia, witnessed a small breakthrough in aviation: the first flight powered entirely by liquid hydrogen.
The US Air Force invests $235 million in JetZero for a prototype mixed-wing aircraft, promising efficiency and fuel economy.
Swiss startup Destinus aims to revolutionize aviation with hydrogen-powered hypersonic flights
They will change take-off, landing, everything. And together with sustainable fuels they will cut emissions. The 30s will be the decade of hybrid electric aircraft.
A milestone towards sustainable aviation fuel: the plant that synthesizes kerosene from the sun and CO2 works.
Two nacelles form wings, and inside there is everything: passengers, tank and hold. It consumes much less than current planes, and now someone has decided to make it seriously.
The US Air Force announces that it has successfully used laser weapons to shoot down missiles in flight. The system is designed to be mounted on aircraft and assume both defensive and offensive structure.
BAE Systems writes a new page in aviation history by developing the first aircraft that uses supersonic air jets instead of the classic "flaps" to provide direction.
Size matters, even when it comes to aircraft: the bulkier the aircraft, the better they fly, ...