Solar Plane To Make Public Debut 76
vigmeister writes "Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard has unveiled a prototype of the solar-powered plane he hopes eventually to fly around the world. The initial version, spanning 61m but weighing just 1,500kg, will undergo trials to prove it can fly at night. Dr. Piccard, who made history by circling the globe non-stop in a balloon in 1999, says he wants to demonstrate the potential of renewable energies. He expects to make a crossing of the Atlantic in 2012. The HB-SIA has the look of a glider but is on the scale of a modern airliner. The airplane incorporates composite materials to keep it extremely light and uses super-efficient solar cells, batteries, motors, and propellers to get it through the dark hours. The public unveiling on Friday of the HB-SIA took place at Dubendorf airfield near Zürich."
Making it so... (Score:4, Funny)
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Actually: right Piccard! He is the grandson of Auguste Piccard the famous balloonist who the Star Trek character was named for. And his father Jacques was one of the two submariners to (ever) visit the deepest part of the ocean.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertrand_Piccard [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Piccard [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auguste_Piccard [wikipedia.org]
Wikipedia tells me that Auguste Piccard was also the inspiration for Professor Cuthbert Calculus from Tintin.
Helios (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Helios (Score:4, Interesting)
Great reference, thank you!
The Helios is an amazing technological feat: it reached an altitude of about 30 Km, which is the highest a non-rocket aircraft has ever achieved. And due to its propellent being unexhaustable, it could, conceivably, stay in the air forever, provided that it climbs high enough during sun-time.
The Helios is stuff I'd like to see more development in.
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Technically inaccurate. The highest altitude a non-rocket engined aircraft has achieved is 37,650 meters, set in a MiG-25 on a "zoom flight" (Think pointing up, full throttle until the engine dies, and seeing how far up you can go). It holds the record for highest SUSTAINED altitude, beating the SR-71's old record by 5 km.
Don't take the red-eye! (Score:3, Funny)
The battery thing for dark hours makes me nervous.
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Modern passenger aircraft can glide with engines on for about 30-60min before crashing. That thing, made for gliding can glide from 10.000 m whole night, I suppose... I wouldn't be so nervous about it.
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Autopilot? (Score:5, Interesting)
From the article:
"The aeroplane could do it theoretically non-stop - but not the pilot," said Dr Piccard.
""In a balloon you can sleep, because it stays in the air even if you sleep. We believe the maximum for one pilot is five days."
Seems autopilot should be the least complicated part of this endeavor, especially considering that there have already been several unmanned solar powered aircraft demonstrated already. Turn on the autopilot and catch some Z's.
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Complexity yes, weight no.
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With such a light weight, huge wing area and flying at low altitude this plane will get tossed about like a leaf in a hurricane in the slightest turbulence. I don't think autopilots can cope with that.
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Unmanned means there is nobody on the actual aircraft itself, but that doesn't mean there is no one near the radio controls connected to it, or the monitoring tools back at home. Those people, probably a team of people I am guessing, would, again I am guessing, take shifts to make sure the craft was doing well on its first flight.
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A boat in the water will stay afloat unless something causes it to sink. A plane in the air will fall unless something causes it to fly.
I would sleep much better as the sole operator in a boat rather than the sole operator in a plane. In a boat the worst that's likely to happen is you've gone off-course. And even without GPS an experienced navigator will get back on track. In a plane the worst that's like
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At night, a grid of halogen headlamps mounted over the solar panels is activated.
Reminds me of the Looney Tunes and WIle E. Coyote. He would get a platform on wheels and put a sail on it and then a fan, also mounted on the same platform, would blow air at the sail and ... somehow this would get him moving.
Re:They solved the night flying problem nicely (Score:4, Interesting)
If the sail was positioned at 90 degrees and then the fan blew across the front of it, you'd create the Bernoulli effect, with the lower pressure air behind the sail pushing you forward. Of course in the configuration in the cartoon I expect Wile E. was just blowing it from behind, in which case it wouldn't work at all.
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Actually that might work... Sails on boats work like wings, that's how it's possible to sail upwind. If the sail was positioned at 90 degrees and then the fan blew across the front of it, you'd create the Bernoulli effect, with the lower pressure air behind the sail pushing you forward. Of course in the configuration in the cartoon I expect Wile E. was just blowing it from behind, in which case it wouldn't work at all.
Yes, the cartoon portrayed the latter case. The way Wile E. was doing it, any force acting on the sail (wanting to move it forward) would be entirely counteracted and cancelled out by an equal and opposite force acting on the fan (wanting to move it backward). Yet somehow he got moving, and quickly. Of course he didn't get the roadrunner...
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Actually lower pressure pulls to toward it.
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"Sails on boats work like wings, that's how it's possible to sail upwind."
You are wrong. If you were right then a sailboat would not need a keel. Remove the keel on a sailboat and the boat will not sail upwind, not matter what sails it has, it will sail downwind.
A sailboat sails upwind because the pressure of the wind on the sails causes the keel to press against water below the boat. These two forces acting against each other just aft of the boats centre of gravity force the boat forward.
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See http://www.physclips.unsw.edu.au/jw/sailing.html [unsw.edu.au] for more.
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Ah, the heat from the lamps causes the air to rise, providing upward suction on the wings. Brilliant!
Ultralight? (Score:2)
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Solar-powered plane makes me think of one thing... (Score:2)
Captain PLAAANEEET!
'Cause the Planeteers had one, or something.
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Good luck getting your moped to go across any water, or over rugged mountain ranges.
the bleeding edge (Score:3, Interesting)
The point is not to impress you, but to prove that a solar powered plane can be built. If you have a large capital investment but you don't have to pay for fuel for 20 years, it opens up the transportation market in novel ways.
I imagine the solution will be vehicles that can ride the jetstream. The ticket will be one way, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't be effective to circle the globe if the fuel is cheap or free.
Faster plane (Score:2, Interesting)
The plane is too slow. If they had a faster design it could fly around the world in continuous daylight.
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There's really not much chance of achieving that - it would have to be much much faster.
The circumference of the earth is about 40 000 km. If you could start first thing in the morning, and arrive by nightfall the next day, that would allow a maximum of about 36 hours. I really don't see a solar powered plan managing 1111 km/hr.
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Start a little further north and start in dark with charged batteries. They never follow the equator exactly on these around the world records.
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The only solution is climbing high enough during sun-hours, and sailing during night-time. Until we invent new power storage technology, such as super-flywheels or such.
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The earth is 24.8k miles in circumference, so you need to fly about 1,030 miles per hour to stay under the sun at all times.
Good luck getting a solar-powered electric prop plane to fly just under mach two.
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Of course, once you get to the arctic/antarctic circles, you have an option of quite a bit more daylight for part of the year.
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And you can circumnavigate the globe much easier as well. Technically you could just take a tight diameter (say one mile) spin directly around the North pole and qualify on a technicality.
While not stated explicitly, I think the idea is to fly 24.8k miles in one direction and come back to where you started. That could be pole to other pole and back or around the equator or something in between. In any case you have to be traveling faster than the speed of sound to do it the honest way with the sun overhe
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Ok if 89.9 degrees latitude does not count what is the maximum? As always, wiki has an answer:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumnavigation#Aviation [wikipedia.org]
"For powered aviation, the course of a round-the-world record must start and finish at the same point and cross all meridians; the course must be at least 36,787.559 kilometres (22,858.729 mi) long (which is the length of the Tropic of Cancer). The course must include set control points at latitudes outside the Arctic and Antarctic circles.[3]"
So there you go.
!soulplane (Score:2)
Can I drive it? (Score:2)
It's no good unless I can drive it like a car!
SOMEONE give me the flying car I was promised!
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Even if.... (Score:2)
Even if it was going to be such a problem to fly at night, does it mean we cant take these and make use of them during the day only, and keep the older gas powered planes for night time...I mean do they have to replace all the planes over night...no pun intended!
Dr. Piccard? (Score:2)
Jean-Luc and Beverly's son?
Reverse Vampire Airlines (Score:1)
OK, let's test the instrument flight now. (Score:2)
"into the clouds, rely on instruments."
uh, inspector, we have a problem here.... everything seems to have gone dead.
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Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
My God, an airliner-sized plane that costs millions of dollars and carries a single passenger at nearly the speed of a moped!
Now we all just need millions of dollars, a large runway for every home, parking for them wherever we want to go, and we'll finally break out of those nasty fossile fuel addictions.
I'm not trying to be a hater, but it seems like they are pouring way too much into this to get too little to be that impressive.
Please don't ruin my life, Monsieur Piccard.
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This guy is Bertrand Piccard [wikipedia.org], is the first man to go round the globe non-stop on a balloon. His father was Jacques Piccard [wikipedia.org], the first man that used a build and used a capsule to go down the Mariana Trench, the deepest point of the world's oceans. His grandfather was Auguste Piccard [wikipedia.org], the first man to build and used a balloon to go to the stratosphere, setting a record of 23,000
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Well, you have to start somewhere, don't you?
No idea is born perfect.
They should talk to Burt Rutan (Score:2)
Voyager made it around the world, non-stop, with two pilots and an autopilot. If they could do it in that aircraft in the mid '80s there should be no problem doing it now for this solar aircraft!
There is no reason to go trough the night! (Score:2)
Just follow the sun. "Heliostationary" relative to earth, if you will. :)