A New Wing Shape Takes to the Skies
NASA has successfully flown an experimental scale-model wing designed to maintain smoother airflow over swept-back surfaces, a breakthrough that could meaningfully reduce fuel consumption for the next generation of commercial airliners. The first test flight of the Crossflow Attenuated Natural Laminar Flow (CATNLF) wing took place on January 29, 2026, at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, aboard one of the agency's F-15B research jets.
The 40-inch CATNLF model was mounted vertically beneath the aircraft's fuselage, resembling a ventral fin. During the 75-minute flight, the research team put the jet through a series of maneuvers -- including turns, steady holds, and gentle pitch adjustments -- at altitudes ranging from approximately 20,000 to nearly 34,000 feet. The primary objective was confirming that the aircraft could maneuver safely with the test article attached before moving on to more demanding research flights.
The Science of Smoother Air
The core challenge CATNLF addresses is a phenomenon known as crossflow instability, which occurs when air flowing over swept-back wings -- the kind used on virtually every commercial aircraft and fighter jet -- becomes turbulent. When airflow transitions from smooth (laminar) to turbulent, it generates significantly more drag, which in turn forces engines to work harder and burn more fuel. By reshaping the wing geometry to attenuate the conditions that trigger crossflow turbulence, NASA's design aims to keep air flowing smoothly over a larger portion of the wing surface.
"It was incredible to see CATNLF fly after all of the hard work the team has put into preparing," said Michelle Banchy, the research principal investigator for the project. "Finally seeing that F-15 take off and get CATNLF into the air made all that hard work worth it." Banchy noted that the first flight focused on envelope expansion -- establishing the safe operating parameters of the aircraft with the test article -- before progressing to dedicated research maneuvers in subsequent flights.


