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Popular Mechanics interviews Boyd on hypersonic weapons tracking

Iain Boyd

Iain Boyd was interviewed for a new article in Popular Mechanics on efforts to track hypersonic weapons.

At issue? Hypersonic weapons often travel at fast enough speeds to generate a sheath of plasma, which can obscure them to radar. Traditional missiles travel at comparably slower speeds and are much easier to monitor and potentially intercept midflight.

β€œIt is only the very fastest hypersonic vehicles that create enough plasma for radar to be a consideration,” Boyd explains. Scramjet cruise missiles are β€œvery fast and create a lot of energy, but they are not fast enough to create all those charged particles.”

Boyd, a professor in the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences, is also the director of the CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Center for National Security Initiatives. He is a leading researcher in hypersonic aerothermodynamics.