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Sonic boom in Hertfordshire today: What is a sonic boom and why did we hear it?

Sonic boom in Hertfordshire today: What is a sonic boom and why did we hear it?
hertfordshiremercury.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hertfordshiremercury.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Sonic Boom Heard Across East England as RAF Jet Scrambled

Sonic Boom Heard Across East England as RAF Jet Scrambled A Royal Air Force jet was scrambled to intercept an aircraft that wasn’t responding to traffic control on Tuesday, breaking the sound barrier and shocking people across the East of England with a sonic boom. According to the RAF, the Typhoon jet established communications on reaching the civilian aircraft and escorted it to a nearby airport. “RAF Typhoon aircraft were scrambled on a Quick Reaction Alert operation today after a civilian aircraft lost comms in UK Airspace,” a brief statement from the RAF on Jan. 12 said. “Our jets went supersonic to reach the aircraft quickly. The aircraft was intercepted and comms re-established.”

Sonic boom heard across Suffolk and Essex explained | East Anglian Daily Times

Two Eurofighter Typhoon jets were scrambled from RAF Coningsby to intercept the civilian aircraft - Credit: Archant A sonic boom, which was heard as far as Essex, Suffolk and Cambridgshire this afternoon, has been revealed to have been due to a civilian aircraft being intercepted by two RAF jets. The huge boom, which happened around 1pm today, was the noise of two Quick Reaction Alert Typhoon aircraft going supersonic after being scrambled from RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire.  Flight tracking website ADSBexchange.com recorded a Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4 reaching a peak speed of over 1,000 knots (1,150mph) above Ickleton, just south of Cambridge.

UK defense secretary: Britain is paving a path for modernization and appropriate funding

Your most-read Scottish stories of 2020

Your most-read Scottish stories of 2020 Published 1. Rail crash Three people, including the driver and a conductor, died after a passenger train derailed near Stonehaven in Aberdeenshire in August. It was the first accident in the UK in which a passenger was killed on a train since 2007. Driver Brett McCullough, 45, conductor Donald Dinnie, 58, and passenger Christopher Stuchbury, 62, died in the derailment, which happened as heavy rain and thunderstorms caused flooding across Scotland. It took place when the 06:38 Aberdeen to Glasgow service struck a landslip 1.4 miles north east of Carmont. image copyrightPA Media In June, a man was shot dead by police after a stabbing attack at a hotel in Glasgow city centre.

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