ADVERTISMENT
 
 
21 Nov 2009

Aurora - Secret Hypersonic Spyplane

- 10 Aug 2004
By Simon Gray   
Page 1 of 5

Continually growing evidence suggests that the answer to this question is yes. Perhaps the most well-known event which provides evidence of such a craft's existence is the sighting of a triangular plane over the North Sea in August 1989 by oil-exploration engineer Chris Gibson. As well as the famous "skyquakes" heard over Los Angeles since the early 1990s, found to be heading for the secret Groom Lake installation in the Nevada desert, numerous other facts provide an understanding of how the aircraft's technology works. Rumored to exist but routinely denied by U.S. officials, the name of this aircraft is Aurora.

The outside world uses the name Aurora because a censor's slip let it appear below the SR-71 Blackbird and U-2 in the 1985 Pentagon budget request. Even if this was the actual name of the project, it would have by now been changed after being compromised in such a manner. The plane's real name has been kept a secret along with its existence. This is not unfamiliar though, the F-117a stealth fighter was kept a secret for over ten years after its first pre-production test flight. The project is what is technically known as a Special Access Program (SAP). More often, such projects are referred to as "black programs". So what was the first sign of the existence of such an aircraft? On 6 March 1990, one of the United States Air Force's Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird spyplanes shattered the official air speed record from Los Angeles to Washington's Dulles Airport. There, a brief ceremony marked the end of the SR-71's operational career. Officially, the SR-71 was being retired to save the $200-$300 million a year it cost to operate the fleet. Some reporters were told the plane had been made redundant by sophisticated spy satellites.

But there was one problem, the USAF made no opposition towards the plane's retirement, and congressional attempts to revive the program were discouraged. Never in the history of the USAF had a program been closed without opposition. Aurora is the missing factor to the silent closure of the SR-71 program.

 
Have your say
 
This sounds like the donuts on a rope (vapor trail) airplane. Powered by, perhaps, a pulse detonation wave engine. ? aka Darkstar
Posted by: guest - 2009-04-27 - 13:21 GMT

Lets hope that one day the US government stops treating us like kids and admits that the Aurora existed. At least they can give us the version they have already retired.
Posted by: guest - 2009-03-12 - 09:34 GMT

Roses smell the best when you know what they are.
Posted by: guest - 2008-12-02 - 11:33 GMT

I was a security specialist in the Air Force and saw this plane or something very close to this fly in the summer of 89. I was at a place called Silver Flag Alpha, doing desert warefare training. Saw it fly 3 or 4 times..mostly slow n lows during the day, but heard that engine at night and heard the sonic booms...that engine sounds like nothing I had or have ever heard...and I have seen all of em..
Posted by: guest - 2008-09-12 - 11:47 GMT

Aurora exists
Posted by: guest - 2008-08-26 - 11:08 GMT

Post new comment
Please copy the 5 symbols from this security code image into the box below to submit comment.

I agree to terms and conditions       
 
FirstScience.com

About | Privacy policy | Terms & conditions
© 1995-2009 All rights reserved

Related articles
Flying into the Future
NASA researchers are studying insects and birds, and using...
Hypersoar - Space Hopping Hyperplane
From the doodlings of Leonardo da Vinci and the penned...
Hyper-X - Flight into the Millennium
Winged aircraft as we know them will be a thing of the past....
Try these books...
Latest News
> Find 1000s more science gadgets & gizmos