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Yes. It's impossible to tell the Mach number of the Raptor based off that photo.
Actually...<Comic Book Guy speak>...
According to my math the raptor's going at least M1.15, or at least parts of it are.
Actually you can tell the mach number from a photograph. It's impossible to be precise but it's possible to get an estimate based off of the shock wave angle. According to my math the raptor's going at least M1.15, or at least parts of it are. It's probably going faster than that but that's the best guess I can give.
I suspect all the parts are moving at the same velocity, it's the air that is being moved at different velocities due to aerodynamic surfaces of the Raptor.
To continue with the nerd theme in this thread...
Technically the speed of sound is based upon temperature. Given that mach is a ratio of the speed of the aircraft to the speed of sound, different parts of the aircraft could have different mach numbers. Granted they'd be a small difference.
/end nerd stuff
I'm just playing. I know what you were pointing out, I'm just having fun with all this nerd speak. And Beans is right about the right photograph and all that other stuff. My aero brain is limited as I was more on the astro side of the aerospace stuff.
But it's the temperature of the air, not the aircraft, yes? Someone wearing coke-bottle glasses (and who has never seen a woman's genitals) please back me up here.
Brett
This thread just proves that if you studied too much in primary you got jets...
The rest of us who ended up as prop weenies or rotorheads were too busy sleeping with women to learn all this nonsense.
Smiles in full effect.