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The cruising speed of large jet airliners has not increased in the past four decades. The 747 cruised at Mach 0.85 and the new Dreamliner 787 also cruises at Mach 0.85 even though it was designed 40 years later (1969->2009) and uses advanced, composite materials and more powerful and efficient engines. Meanwhile, faster airliner designs have been shelved, most notably the Sonic Cruiser (Mach 0.98).

This seems to indicate that as long as we value fuel efficiency over travel time, that we have reached peak speed efficiency at Mach 0.85 and that the only difference will be the comfort (or discomfort) of travel at that speed.

Are there fixed physical limitations at Mach 0.85 that make this the most efficient speed for jet airliners? Does this mean that even with advances in materials science and jet engine technology, we will not see significant transoceanic speed increases in the foreseeable future - so long as fuel efficiency is primary? Will airline travel forty years from now -- 2054 -- still be at Mach 0.85?

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    $\begingroup$ Saving 10 minutes on a flight isn't that worthwhile when we're still spending hours waiting in airports. And it would in fact be a cost saving to abolish the security theater there. $\endgroup$
    – MSalters
    Jan 25, 2015 at 14:05
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    $\begingroup$ That is why I indicated transoceanic flights in my question. There, a modest increase in speed could knock off 2 hours on transpacific flights (NY->Singapore, for example). And taking a train or a bus wouldn't quite work as an alternative. :-) $\endgroup$
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 25, 2015 at 15:04

3 Answers 3

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Short answer: Increasing fuel prices would have driven down the most economical speed, but advances in aerodynamics have compensated for that and the maximum cruise Mach number is still at Mach 0.85. But there is a much simpler reason why this Mach 0.85 number seems so immutable.

Please note that we are talking about the maximum cruise Mach number; all airliners will fly more economical at slightly lower Mach numbers between 0.78 and 0.82.

Now we need to define efficiency. For airliners this is haul capacity per time, and can be expressed by the product of payload, range and speed. When none of the three constituents can be changed without making the product more costly to achieve, you have reached the point of best efficiency.

Engine Technology

The biggest change in the last 50 years was in engine technology. Bypass ratios have increased to values close to 10, the turbine inlet temperature is now 300°C higher than in the early jet age, and electronic control has improved especially the off-design performance of engines. This has made it less attractive to increase flight speed, so the optimum cruise Mach would be lower if no other effects had influenced it.

Another effect is the lower fuel consumption. Early designs had to use a high wing chord to pack enough fuel volume for transoceanic flights. The much lower consumption of modern engines has given them ranges which are more than what is needed to reach every point on earth directly. This made it possible to reduce wing area, thickness and mass, and to save some friction drag, helping fuel economy again. The lower thickness helps to make higher cruise Mach numbers possible.

Aerodynamics

Aerodynamics is the second factor. With the A310 supercritical airfoils were introduced, and they shifted the operating Mach number up because now a limited region of supersonic flow on the wing could be tolerated without a significant rise in drag. However, the benefit from that was used to reduce wing sweep, increase airfoil thickness and to attach bigger fuselages to those wings. In the end, the newer airplanes had the same cruise Mach numbers as their predecessors. Something made Mach 0.85 too attractive to abandon.

A second effect of supercritical airfoils is their blunter nose, which helps to reach a higher maximum lift coefficient. This also contributed to reducing wing chord, because now the wing area could be made smaller for the same landing speed.

The Real Reason

Every new airliner needs to compete with the older models. On fuel economy this is no problem, but speed is also important. A higher cruise Mach number allows shorter times for connections. Now you have to know that the electronic reservation systems would list connections sorted by flight time, shortest first. When a travel agent wanted to book a flight, he or she would rarely look beyond the first screen and pick one of the first flights listed. If a new type made the flight slip down in the listings, it was a non-seller. This is even true in the times of online bookings: The airlines don't make much profit from the bargain hunters in Economy, their target are the business people flying in Business or First Class. And those still order mostly through travel agencies, so the rules have not changed. This is why that Mach 0.85 speed seems to be so firmly set; flying any faster would drive up fuel consumption disproportionally, and even the newest jets will mostly be flown around Mach 0.82 to Mach 0.84.

Making this speed possible is still a struggle for the design engineers, especially when you consider that larger aircraft would need thicker wings for structural efficiency, but need to be fitted with wings thinner than optimal to let marketing claim a cruise speed of Mach 0.85.

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    $\begingroup$ @reirab: Yes, right. But in effect all jet transports of the last decade are long-range transports. The short-range category has become extinct. $\endgroup$ Jan 23, 2015 at 19:11
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    $\begingroup$ Fascinating answer, @PeterKämpf -- especially the 'real answer' which is not what I had thought would be a controlling parameter. I'll wait (to be polite) for other responses but I think your answer (as always) is the perfect response. $\endgroup$
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 23, 2015 at 20:45
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    $\begingroup$ @RoboKaren: No, reirab is right. I was thinking of A320 sized jets and above. He thinks of CL-600 and ERJ 145, and their range is mostly still below transoceanic. $\endgroup$ Jan 23, 2015 at 20:51
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    $\begingroup$ You might also consider that flight time is not just the time spent cruising at Mach 0.whatever, it's taxi, takeoff, climb, descend, land, taxi some more - and perhaps (I'm not sure if this is included in flight time, but it should be) the time to get those pesky passengers on and off the plane. A small increase in cruise speed doesn't translate to a proportionate decrease in flight time. $\endgroup$
    – jamesqf
    Jan 23, 2015 at 21:45
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    $\begingroup$ @jamesqf: This is especially true for short hops, so regional jets are content to operate at Mach 0.78, where their operating cost are lower. But on transoceanic flights the shorter flight time will make enough of a difference to strive for Mach 0.85 as the maximum cruise speed. $\endgroup$ Jan 24, 2015 at 11:09
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It's not anything inherent about Mach 0.85; it's Mach 1 that's the problem. The reason airliners are usually somewhere between Mach 0.8 and Mach 0.9 is because of the critical Mach number of the airframe in question. When the relative airspeed of the entire aircraft is at the critical Mach number, there will be some part of the airframe where the airflow actually reaches Mach 1. This is due to air accelerating around the airframe as the airframe moves through the air. The critical Mach number will be different for different airframes, but it's usually the limiting factor for the cruising speed of airliners. This question explains more about the critical Mach number.

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    $\begingroup$ Perhaps more to the point than the critical mach numbers (upper and lower) is the Drag Divergence Mach Number. More reading here... $\endgroup$
    – J...
    May 1, 2017 at 11:44
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More or less.

The problem is the "critical Mach number" of the wing planform. Most wings have a curved upper surface, which forces the air moving over that side of the wing to move faster, lowering its pressure, producing lift. At a forward airspeed of the entire airfoil near but less than Mach 1, the airflow over the top of the airfoil exceeds Mach 1 as it passes over the wing's leading edge, then slows again to subsonic speeds around the crest of the wing. This "transsonic" airflow increases drag on the aircraft at airspeeds between the critical Mach number and the speed at which all airflow over every surface of the aircraft is supersonic (when transsonic airflow is no longer a problem, but other leading-edge and wake drag forces come to dominate total drag).

Commercial airliners sometimes exceed the critical Mach number of their wings, producing a shockwave that is visible either as a mirage-like optical disturbance, or if conditions are just right, a vapor plume:

enter image description here

Fighter jets accelerating past Mach 1 commonly create "vapor cones" beginning at the transsonic border of their airflow, caused when the high variance in air pressure at this transsonic shockwave border forces water vapor to condense:

enter image description here

The critical Mach number is determined by the design of the planform. Wings with thicker cross-sections produce more lift for less area (and more induced drag from that lift) and generally also have a higher angle of attack (meaning, all other things being equal, a lower stall speed), but the tradeoff is a lower critical Mach number. The converse is true for a thinner cross-section; critical Mach number is increased, while lift, drag and critical AoA are reduced.

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    $\begingroup$ Where in your upper image is the vapor plume visible? Is it that thing on the right? Some arrow or circle would be nice. $\endgroup$
    – Giovanni
    Mar 20, 2021 at 7:03
  • $\begingroup$ @Giovanni I see what appears to be a "mirage-like optical disturbance" in the upper photo, right above the third rectangle from the left. It gives the appearance of a strange discontinuity artifact in the image. $\endgroup$
    – Michael
    Feb 15, 2023 at 23:38
  • $\begingroup$ @Michael you're right about the disturbance, but I can't even figure out the picture. Is it the top side of a wing looking backwards? $\endgroup$
    – Eugene
    Feb 16, 2023 at 6:20
  • $\begingroup$ @Eugene that's a great question. all the pictures I have taken out the window of a plane show a much more flat wing without any apparent edges or protrusions. I had assumed that the upper/left was the back but now I'm not so sure, it kind of looks like it may be the front. $\endgroup$
    – Michael
    Feb 17, 2023 at 22:37

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