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"Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight

"Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight 

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  #1  
11-29-2011, 06:45 PM
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"Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight

With the wingspan of a jumbo jet and a scooter-sized engine, the Solar Impulse is a one of a kind.
Thanks to nearly 12,000 solar cells and four electrically-powered propellers, it's the first aircraft in the world that can fly without any fuel -- day or night.
The 63-meter wide, 1,600 kilogram plane is already a record breaker, staying in the air for 26 unbroken hours in 2010.
But it's about more than just flying, says pilot Andre Borschberg.
"We want to show what can be done with these technologies," Borschberg said.
"We can keep our quality of life but reduce our energy consumptions, reduce our dependency on oil and nuclear energy."
The idea for Solar Impulse came from Bertrand Piccard, the first man to travel non-stop around the world in a balloon.
"We almost failed (because of) lack of fuel," Piccard said of his epic journey back in 1999.
what can be done with these technologies.
Andre Borschberg
"At that moment, I made a promise that the next time I would fly around the world it would be with no fuel at all. And that's how the vision of solar impulse was born," he said.
But it wasn't until he met Borschberg seven years ago that he began to fulfill that promise.
With a budget of $134 million at their disposal, the Solar Impulse team have the sponsors and the support to realize their goal of flying around the world without fuel in 2014 -- a first in aviation history.
"Everything we do is new. Each time it's a pioneering step," Piccard said.
"When the Wright Brothers did that first flight in 1903, it took 25 years for Charles Lindbergh to cross the Atlantic. He did it alone. (It then took) another 25 years to have 100 passengers flying over the Atlantic."
With fair winds behind them, Piccard and Borschberg are confident that the future of solar flying is bright and that Solar Impulse will soar into the record books, securing their place in aviation history as 21st century pioneers of flight.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/11/29/tech/s...lse/index.html
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  #2  
11-30-2011, 11:04 AM
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Re: "Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight

Is it the first "manned" solar plane?
  #3  
11-30-2011, 12:16 PM
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Re: "Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight

I should have done my research the Solar Impulse is not the first solar powered plane. There have been earlier manned flights. The Solar Impulse is the only solar powered plane to fly the whole night while manned. And it holds the record for time in the air.


The Solar Impulse is not the first solar airplane imagined by man, but it is certainly the most ambitious. None of its predecessors has ever managed to make an entire night flight with a pilot on board...

Solar aviation began with reduced models in the 1970s, when affordable solar cells appeared on the market. But it was not until 1980 that the first human flights were realised. In the United States, Paul MacCready's team developed the Gossamer Penguin, which opened up the way for the Solar Challenger. This aircraft, with a maximum power of 2.5 kW, succeeded in crossing the Channel in 1981 and in quick succession covered distances of several hundred kilometres with an endurance of several hours. In Europe, during this time, Günter Rochelt was making his first flights with the Solair 1 fitted with 2500 photovoltaic cells, allowing the generation of a maximum power of 2.2kW.

In 1990, the American Eric Raymond crossed the United States with Sunseeker in 21 stages over almost two months. The longest lap was 400 kilometres. The Sunseeker was a solar motor bike-sail plane with a smoothness of 30 for a tare weight of 89 kg and was equipped with solar cells of amorphous silicon.

In the middle of the 1990s, several airplanes were built to participate in the "Berblinger" competition. The aim was to be able to go up to an altitude of 450m with the aid of batteries and to maintain a horizontal flight with the power of at least 500W/m2 of solar energy, which corresponds to about half of the power emitted by the sun at midday on the equator. The prize was won in 1996 by Professeur Voit-Nitschmann's team of Stuttgart University, with Icare 2 (25 meters wingspan with a surface of 26 m2 of solar cells.)

Even if it did not allow a pilot on board, one could not forget Helios, developed by the American AeroVironment Society on behalf of NASA. This remote controlled aircraft, with a wingspan of more than 70 meters, established a record altitude of nearly 30'000 meters in 2001. It was destroyed during a flight two years later, probably because of turbulence, and crashed in the Pacific Ocean.

In 2005, Alan Cocconi (picture), founder of AC Propulsion, succeeded in flying an unmanned airplane with a 5-meter wingspan for 48 hours non-stop, propelled entirely by solar energy. This was the first time an airplane of this type was able to fly through a whole night, thanks to the energy collected by, and stored in, the solar batteries mounted on the plane.
http://www.solarimpulse.com/en/docum...roup=challenge
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12-01-2011, 07:44 PM
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Re: "Solar Impulse' the First Solar Powered Plane Takes Flight

Yeah, I was just saying I remember the ugliest piece of shit I had ever seen a long time ago. You probably know what I am talking about.
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