If realized, the Boom concept plane could fly New York to London in 3.4 hours or Los Angeles to Sydney in six.
Boom
Richard Branson is on board —
The Virgin Group has optioned 10 Boom planes, in a deal reported to be worth $2 billion.
Boom
Where is the plane of the future? —
The race to build the aircraft of the future is on. Designs like these NASA concept planes developed with Boeing are on the drawing board, so when will they become a reality?
NASA/ Lillian Gipson
New planes, old designs —
Many of today's designs wouldn't look out of place in the 1960s. Though packed with vastly improved technology, the new Boeing 737 MAX is similar in appearance to the 737-700 of 50 years ago.
Getty Images
Concorde —
Concorde, to date still the world's only supersonic scheduled passenger aircraft, was retired in 2003. No viable replacement is currently scheduled for service.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
Aerion AS2 —
The Aerion Corporation's supersonic private jet is expected to enter service early in the next decade. It'll be able to carry up to 12 passengers at speeds of Mach 1.6.
Courtesy Aerion Supersonic
QueSST —
If realized, NASA's Low Boom Flight Demonstration Quiet Supersonic Transport (QueSST) X-plane design will be part of a new generation of more efficient, quieter supersonic airliners. These could revive commercial supersonic air travel as a viable proposition.
NASA/LOCKHEED MARTIN
Boeing's SUGAR program —
The SUGAR program -- Subsonic Ultra Green Aircraft Research -- has come up with innovative aerodynamic and propulsion solutions. These include an aircraft with eye-catching truss-braced wings and a hybrid gas-electric propulsion system.
Courtesy Boeing
Airbus future aircraft concept —
Airbus has created a depiction of what would be possible if all of the futuristic technologies envisaged by Airbus could be combined to create the ideal airliner.
Courtesy Airbus
Lapcat —
Some researchers are working on aircraft concepts capable of Mach 5 to 8 -- five to eight times faster than sound. Realistically these revolutionary concept aircraft are several decades away.
Reaction Engines
SpaceLiner —
The German Aerospace Center's ambitious SpaceLiner concept would work by reaching speeds of up to Mach 25, enough to travel from London to Australia in under 90 minutes.
Courtesy of the German Aerospace Center (DLR)
Skreemr —
Other wilder creations have also been envisioned. These include the Skreemr -- a jet launched from a magnetic rail gun at speeds of up to Mach 4.
Ray Mattison/Courtesy Charles Bombardier
Antipode —
Another Charles Bombardier concept, the Antipode would use rocket boosters, a scramjet and advanced aerodynamics to enable it to fly between London and New York in 11 minutes.