See my previous reply. The air might be travelling at supersonic speed but the model remains stationary.
I think what he's trying to say, is not that the object is travelling at the speed of sound, but more that it is just breaking the sound barrier. There's a difference between the two.
i figured so like if i was standing in a 600 mph wind or how ever fast it is i would thereticaly break the sound barrear or the wind would
See my previous reply. The air might be travelling at supersonic speed but the model remains stationary.
The way I see it is that the Mach number is a convenient way of measuring the speed of an object or fluid flow. Sound actually has very little to do with it.
As a matter of interest I must have been one of the youngest people ever to break the so-called "sound barrier" in 1959 at the tender age of 16. I can confirm that the only way of telling that we'd reached the magic speed was by watching the needle on the Mach meter.
BTW, what are the circumstances behind your breaking of the sound barrier at 16?
I've enjoyed this discussion but I still think you're overcomplicating things. All Richard wanted was an answer to a simple question. I'm not convinced that any of us have answered it satifactorily. The question remains; in a strong (very strong in this case) wind, is it the air or the objects that are moving with regard to stationary objects on the ground? I say it's the air.
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