infrastructure
The Air Taxi Has to Win the Passenger Twice
NASA found that willingness to fly can fall when simulated vertical-flight motion crosses comfort thresholds.
Summary
NASA found that willingness to fly can fall when simulated vertical-flight motion crosses comfort thresholds.
NASA researchers used a motion simulator to study how passengers respond to the vibration and movement expected in electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing aircraft. The agency says the work connects physical ride characteristics with willingness to use an air taxi, giving designers evidence for comfort targets alongside performance and safety requirements. The study informs an emerging vehicle class; it does not certify a particular aircraft, predict adoption, or show that comfort is the only barrier to commercial service.
Why it matters
NASA found that willingness to fly can fall when simulated vertical-flight motion crosses comfort thresholds.
Limits and context
- The study informs an emerging vehicle class; it does not certify a particular aircraft, predict adoption, or show that comfort is the only barrier to commercial service.
Key claims
NASA found that willingness to fly can fall when simulated vertical-flight motion crosses comfort thresholds.
Qualification: The study informs an emerging vehicle class; it does not certify a particular aircraft, predict adoption, or show that comfort is the only barrier to commercial service.
Evidence: source-2026-07-14-009
Sources
- NASA: Study points to smoother air taxi ridesNASA · official announcement
Corrections
No corrections have been recorded for this story.