Solar Craft Flies Through Two Nights 156
An anonymous reader writes "A solar-powered, unmanned craft has flown for 54 hours — a record for both unmanned aerial vehicles and solar craft. None before has managed to store enough solar energy to fly through more than one night. There is also a video showing the 18m carbon fiber wing craft being launched."
more (Score:5, Interesting)
It should not be a surprise that the Global Hawk record did not stand. Look at the two craft. If a global hawk hit the zephyr it probably wouldn't even notice.
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engouh solar energy (Score:5, Funny)
"Engouh Solar Energy (ESE) is a newly-discovered form of solar energy capable of lighting even the darkest parents' basement to the point where the average nerd can neither see his keyboard nor the inevitable typos he'll make on internet discussion boards."
Glass houses... (Score:5, Funny)
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The i is not missing, it is simply invisible, out of reverence for Her Holy Horn (H^3).
Either that, or the full username was already taken and this looked the most like that.
What constitutes Solar Power? (Score:4, Interesting)
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At 20% overall efficiency (assuming arbitrary battery losses from a 30% solar cell), you need to be able to collect ten times the operational requirements of your vehicle in order to pull off what you describe. That's qui
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And that's why *2* nights is interesting -- on the first day/night cycle the plane demonstrates that it can climb to altitude without using the batteries, and that it can survive the night on batteries-only.
On the second day/night cycle
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Why use batteries though? What about miniature flywheels and what not? Batteries would be the last type of energy storage I'd look at for this sort of application.
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You're right, flywheels can store the same energy using less mass, and can be more efficient. I suspect, though, that heavey flywheels on a light airframe would make for some difficult gyroscopic effects.
In fact, see this page with a Flywheel vs Battery Energy Storage [axeonpower.com] comparison. It's just past halfway down the page:
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Solar powered aircraft have been quite successful for some time for instance the Pathfinder and Helios aircraft by NASA the biggest issue is to get through the night on battery power. I believe the NASA aircraft had to resort to gliding and soaring which this aircraft does not.
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This is something that will get solved - the only interesting part is 'when'. The fact that it's happening now is what's interesting.
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The endurance-record for not-collecting-energy is the Global Hawk, it uses jet-fuel which has a lot more energy relative to weight compared to batteries, and it still manages "only" max 30 hours.
I'm guessing the max for a batteries-only plane would be in the single-digit-hours, indeed for this
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I'm wondering if there are plans to put these things in motion with cameras equipped for continual updating of surface images in populated areas. A team of
Innovative solution to the nighttime problem (Score:5, Funny)
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What the? (Score:2, Insightful)
What the hell kind of spelling mistake is that? Come on editors, at least READ the edited summary...
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Why? So you could mod up the post bitching about a frivilous typo instead of working to lower the signal-to-noise-ratio?
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Question? (Score:2)
What if it flew in the opposite direction of sun (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What if it flew in the opposite direction of su (Score:2)
Tipping Point (Score:3, Informative)
When a vehicle can go 24h on only 12h prior charge, that will be the next major milestone. Still not enough for uninterrupted travel past a latitude where nights are longer than a whole couple of days (depending on the battery - a yearlong discharge battery would be good anywhere with current performance).
The next parallel milestone is automated rechargers leaving ground charging stations to recharge the permanently aloft vehicle in flight.
After that, there's not a lot more demand for improvement, except overall efficiency for carrying heavier loads and more demanding equipment.
Like a network of these permanently in high atmosphere propelling solar sails through the solar system and down to blimp spaceports.
Re:Tipping Point (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know if that is the case here.. just saying that it doesn't necessarily follow that the plane can stay up indefinitely.
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Helios was cooler (Score:2)
Talk about doing it the hard way (Score:3, Interesting)
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Grousing about submissions (Score:5, Informative)
Though the previous one also did gliding/non-powered flight part of the time. Still, up for 48 hours.
AC Propulsion did this a while back (Score:4, Informative)
AC Propulsion said that they could do it indefinitely, but their pilots got worn out.
Thad Beier
Re:AC Propulsion did this a while back [2yrs ago!] (Score:2)
This was done by AC Propulsion two years ago.
Thad
Attaining altitude (Score:4, Interesting)
Insolation is going to me much better at high altitudes. I just hope the photovoltaic cells are designed to take advantage of the increased amount of energy available in the UV spectrum. How about filling the free space in the wings with hydrogen? That might help lift a little, at least from the ground. However, there would have to be some way of dealing with the reduced pressure at operational altitude.
There's been a lot of interesting improvements in PV efficiency lately. However, most of these seem to only happen when the cell is operated at insolation far above normal. These are obtained by focusing the sunlight. Unfortunately, all of the technologies I know of which could do this are heavier than simply adding more, less efficient cells which operate at normal insolation or the slight improvement that high-atmosphere flight provides.
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use these planes as communication links or surveillance platforms.
So who cares how you get the bird up as long as you can do it on
short notice and with acceptable costs?
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Props are not counter-rotating? (Score:2)
First 2 night Heavier than Air Craft (Score:2)
The article says that it landed 54 hours later, but didn't specify where. If this thing doesn't have enough power to keep up with the winds above a city, it won't be much use as a satellite replacement. However if it can keep up and fly in circles above the weather it'd make an ideal replaceme
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Huh??? (Score:3, Insightful)
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I assume the problem is pilots, so this one would have to be automated.
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Re:An idea (Score:5, Interesting)
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I wonder if anyone has been flying for like a week in northern latitudes during midnight-sun. It should help a lot to have 24 hours of sunshine, but the problem is that sunshine comes in almost horisontally, so it's a lot harder to make use of it if your solar-cells are mounted ontop of the wings as is customary.
Re:An idea (Score:5, Informative)
Storing energy is the key. You might be able to store it in batteries like these people have done, or store it in your altitude and just let it glide down at night -- but that would require a really efficient plane. This looks to be a really efficient plane, but it's obviously not quite efficient enough to do that.
That would be cool if they'd try to fly it across the Atlantic -- it would be the first electric plane to do so, and the first solar powered plane to do so. TAM 5 [plannet21.com] took 39 hours to cross the Atlantic, and this plane was up longer than that -- but it's a lot slower too. TAM 5 averaged about 48 mph, and I'll bet this plane is less than half that.
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And also the plane would have to fly at approximately right angles to the sun -- if not, the solar panels would be at an angle, and power would drop eve
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I didn't do the math, so this is more a question than a statement:
A + B = C + D
A hours good sunlight + B hours crappy sunlight < C hours good sunlight + D hours NO sunlight ?
The reason is doesn't work is that rate climb is a function of excess power. (i.e., power in excess of what's required for level flight.)
Let's say an electric aircraft (powered glider, really) requires 10 watts for level flight. If it gets 9 watts for 24 hours, it will never have enough power to sustain level flight. Launch it, it lands.
Give it 18 watts for 12 hours, and it will climb for 12 hours. (The rate of climb will depend on the weight of the aircraft - just turn 9 watt-hours into poetntial
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D'oh! 18 - 10 = 8 in most places. Make that 8 watt-hours.
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Now, what
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In space, you'd be correct though.
If you could get the plane up to 50+K feet, that might be close enough to space to make it work, and yet close enough to Earth to have some atmosphere to fly in? Perhaps aerotowing with another plane could get it up to altitude, then let the solar panels and motors take over, as they'd produce more power up there?
Helios [nasa.gov] came pretty close to 100K feet. Our `Polar flyer' would be a lot less efficient, as the solar cells would have to be on a second, rotatable by almost 90 degrees, wing, adding lift a
Re:An idea (Score:4, Informative)
That would work only in the summer.
That would be handy only if you needed that aircraft over the polar region during the summer months.
Then you have the really big problem...
The solar panels are mounted on the wings... The sun at the poles never climbs very high in the sky so the panels would have to be mounted on the sides of the aircraft. That would limit your collecting area a lot and or produce a lot of drag.
So the idea while interesting at first glance really is far from practical.
Re:An idea (Score:4, Funny)
I have an idea- how about mounting some LEDs on the wings which could help boost the amount of light the solar panels recieve? You could keep going for like, forever.
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I am going to be pedantic and point out that the speed you give is at sea level, looking this up in wikipedia I read that the speed of sound in air is not heavily dependent on air pressure but more on temperature (it is slower as you go up since it gets colder).
At 29,000 the speed of sound is merely 1083 km/h.
Ann Rice's vampires do this (Score:2, Offtopic)
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As it happens, Solar Powered Vampires is opening at the Whisky a Go Go tomorrow night.
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Until the next solar eclipse, that is.
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Have you done the math? How big is the Earth? It would have to fly all
the way around once every 24 hours. It works out to just over 1000 miles
per hour. Millitary jet fighters can do this speed for short sprints but you
can't really do that with an electric driven propeller.
Re:What good is it? (Score:5, Insightful)
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He can't open his eyes right now -- too much solar energy.
Re:What good is it? (Score:4, Funny)
Well if you're in the used battery business, this thing is a gold mine!
what is it good for? (Score:2)
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It could grasp it by the husk?
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I read it as "enough". Then again, I read this article [slashdot.org] earlier.
Re:What the...? (Score:4, Funny)
What the hell kind of spelling mistake is that?
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Robotic, solar powered flying overlords?
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There's Billions waiting for something like that.
They're already advertising [weebls-stuff.com].