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NASA Investigates How People Respond to Electric Air Taxi Noise

New research from NASA has shared more insights into the sounds peo­ple might hear over­head once elec­tric air taxis take to the skies in cities and regions across the world.

NASA Aero­nau­tics has worked for years to enable new air trans­porta­tion options for peo­ple and goods, and to find ways to make sure they can be safe­ly and effec­tive­ly inte­grat­ed into U.S. com­mu­ni­ties. That’s why the agency con­tin­ues to study how peo­ple respond to air­craft noise.  

In this case, NASA’s work focused on air taxis, short­hand for a vari­ety of air­craft intend­ed to car­ry peo­ple short dis­tances for every­thing from per­son­al trav­el to med­ical treat­ment. Researchers inves­ti­gat­ed whether res­i­dents in loud cities would respond dif­fer­ent­ly to air taxi sounds than those in qui­eter sub­ur­ban set­tings.

From August through to Sep­tem­ber 2025, 359 par­tic­i­pants in the Los Ange­les, New York City, and Dal­las-Fort Worth areas took part in NASA’s Var­ied Advanced Air Mobil­i­ty Noise and Geo­graph­ic Area Response Dif­fer­ence (VANGARD) test.

Researchers played 67 unique sounds sim­u­lat­ing air­craft, includ­ing NASA-owned indus­try con­cept designs. To ensure unbi­ased feed­back, the research team with­held air­craft man­u­fac­tur­er names. Par­tic­i­pants were also not shown images of the air­craft they were hear­ing.

Ini­tial results reveal that res­i­dents liv­ing in noisy areas report­ed being more both­ered by the air taxi sounds than those in qui­eter areas. The VANGARD team mem­bers are cur­rent­ly ana­lyz­ing the data to bet­ter under­stand these find­ings, but so far, they’re hypoth­e­siz­ing that peo­ple in loud envi­ron­ments may sim­ply be more sen­si­tive to addi­tion­al noise. 

Researcher Sidd Krish­na­murthy tests the remote plat­form devel­oped to study human response to air taxi noise at NASAs Lan­g­ley Research Cen­ter in Hamp­ton Vir­ginia Cred­it NASAAlly Olney

Sidd Krish­na­murthy, lead researcher at NASA’s Lan­g­ley Research Cen­ter in Hamp­ton, Vir­ginia, said: “With air taxis com­ing soon, we need to under­stand how peo­ple will react to a vari­ety of future air­craft sounds.

“This test filled a crit­i­cal gap, and its results will improve how we pre­dict human reac­tions to noise, guid­ing the design and oper­a­tion of future air­craft.”

Dur­ing the study, par­tic­i­pants lis­tened to indi­vid­ual air­craft fly­over sounds and rat­ed their annoy­ance lev­els. The par­tic­i­pants also pro­vid­ed their zip codes, allow­ing the researchers to sort their loca­tions into high and low back­ground noise lev­els. 

Krish­na­murthy added: “We want­ed to know if peo­ple in low or high back­ground noise zones would be more annoyed by the air taxi sounds, and to what extent, even with­out their usu­al back­ground sounds present dur­ing the test.”

Most par­tic­i­pants lis­tened from their home loca­tions, with their own audio devices. But to com­ple­ment that test­ing, a con­trol group of 20 peo­ple lis­tened in-per­son at NASA Lan­g­ley in June, using tablets and head­phones with fixed audio set­tings.

Results showed that the con­trol group respond­ed sim­i­lar­ly to those who test­ed from home.

Many fac­tors influ­ence how humans respond to air­craft noise. This study was not designed to answer every ques­tion — for exam­ple, it did not look at the poten­tial effects of high back­ground noise mask­ing air taxi noise — but it pro­vid­ed the VANGARD team with ini­tial insights.

The results from this study, and any fol­low-on efforts, will guide the design and oper­a­tion of future advanced air mobil­i­ty air­craft to help design­ers and reg­u­la­tors deter­mine how and where these air­craft may fly.

This research was led under the Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Ver­ti­cal Lift Tech­nol­o­gy project and con­tributes to NASA’s Advanced Air Mobil­i­ty research.  The project falls under the Advanced Air Vehi­cles Pro­gram with­in NASA’s Aero­nau­tics Research Mis­sion Direc­torate.

Fea­tured image: This artist’s con­cept shows sev­er­al advanced air mobil­i­ty air­craft con­cepts staged for a med­ical trans­port. NASA’s recent air­craft noise study includ­ed sounds from mul­ti­ple types of advanced air mobil­i­ty con­cept air­craft. Cred­it: NASA/Lillian Gip­son

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Jason Pritchard

Jason Pritchard is the Editor of eVTOL Insights. He holds a BA from Leicester's De Montfort University and has worked in Journalism and Public Relations for more than a decade. Outside of work, Jason enjoys playing and watching football and golf. He also has a keen interest in Ancient Egypt.

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