Solar Impulse
Solar Impulse | |
---|---|
Solar Impulse 1 landing at Brussels Airport after its first international flight on 13 May 2011 | |
Role | Experimental solar-powered aircraft |
National origin | Swiss |
Manufacturer | Solar Impulse |
First flight | 3 December 2009 |
Number built | 2 (including prototype) |
|
Solar Impulse is a Swiss long-range experimental solar-powered aircraft project, and also the name of the project's two operational aircraft.[1] The privately financed project is led by Swiss engineer and businessman André Borschberg and Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut Bertrand Piccard, who co-piloted Breitling Orbiter 3, the first balloon to circle the world non-stop.[2] The Solar Impulse project intends to achieve the first circumnavigation of the Earth by a piloted fixed-wing aircraft using only solar power. Reflecting on the project's goal, Mike Scott wrote in Forbes magazine: "If we can fly around the world using only the power of the sun and the optimisation of energy efficiency technologies, the potential of clean technologies in other applications is immense."[3]
The aircraft are single-seat monoplanes powered by photovoltaic cells and capable of taking off under their own power. The prototype, often referred to as Solar Impulse 1, was designed to remain airborne up to 36 hours.[4] It conducted its first test flight in December 2009. In July 2010, it flew an entire diurnal solar cycle, including nearly nine hours of night flying, in a 26-hour flight.[5] Piccard and Borschberg completed successful solar-powered flights from Switzerland to Spain and then Morocco in 2012,[6] and conducted a multi-stage flight across the United States in 2013.[7][8]
A second aircraft, completed in 2014 and named Solar Impulse 2, carries more solar cells and more powerful motors, among other improvements. In March 2015, Piccard and Borschberg began an attempt to circumnavigate the globe with Solar Impulse 2, departing from Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates.[9] The aircraft was scheduled to return to Abu Dhabi in August 2015 after a multi-stage journey.[10] By June 2015, the plane had traversed Asia,[11] and in July 2015, it completed the longest leg of its journey, from Japan to Hawaii.[12] During that leg, however, the aircraft's batteries experienced thermal damage that took months to repair.[13] Solar Impulse 2 resumed the circumnavigation on 21 April 2016[14] reaching California, on April 23.[15] On May 2, it continued to Phoenix, Arizona.[16]
Project development and funding
Bertrand Piccard initiated the Solar Impulse project in November 2003 after undertaking a feasibility study in partnership with the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne.[17] As a mechanical engineer, co-founder André Borschberg directed the construction of each aircraft and oversees the preparation of the flight missions.[18] By 2009, they had assembled a multi-disciplinary team of 50 engineers and technical specialists from six countries, assisted by about 100 outside advisers and 80 technological partners.[19][20]
The project is financed by a number of private companies and individuals, as well as receiving around CHF6 million (US$6.4 million) in funding from the Swiss government.[21] The project's private financial backers include Omega SA, Solvay, Schindler, ABB[22] and Peter Diamandis.[23] The EPFL, the European Space Agency and Dassault have provided technical expertise, while SunPower provided the aircraft's photovoltaic cells.[24][25]
Piccard stated that the entire project from its beginnings in 2003 until mid-2015 had cost €150 million.[26] It raised another €20 million in late 2015 to continue the round-the-world flight.[27]
Timeline
- 2003: Feasibility study at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
- 2004–2005: Development of the concept
- 2006: Simulation of long-haul flights
- 2006–09: Construction of first prototype (HB-SIA; Solar Impulse 1)
- 2009: First flight of Solar Impulse 1
- 2009–11: Manned test flights[28]
- 2011–12: Further test flights through Europe and North Africa
- 2011–13: Construction of second prototype (HB-SIB; Solar Impulse 2)
- 2013: Continental flight across the US by Solar Impulse 1 (Mission Across America)[1][7][8]
- 2014: First flight of Solar Impulse 2
- 2015–2016: Ongoing attempt to circumnavigate the Earth by Solar Impulse 2, conducted in fifteen stages over two years[29][30]
Solar Impulse 1 (HB-SIA)
The first Solar Impulse aircraft, registered as HB-SIA, was primarily designed as a demonstration aircraft. It has a non-pressurized cockpit and a single wing with a wingspan similar to that of the Airbus A340 airliner. Under the wing are four nacelles, each with a set of lithium polymer batteries, a 10 hp (7.5 kW) electric motor and one twin-bladed propeller. To keep the wing as light as possible, a customised carbon fibre honeycomb sandwich structure was used.[31] 11,628 photovoltaic cells on the upper wing surface and the horizontal stabilizer generate electricity during the day to power the electric motors and to charge the batteries allowing flight at night, theoretically enabling the single-seat plane to stay in the air indefinitely.[32][33]
The aircraft's major design constraint is the capacity of the lithium polymer batteries. Over an optimum 24-hour cycle, the motors can deliver a combined average of about 8 hp (6 kW), roughly the power used by the Wright brothers' Flyer, the first successful powered aircraft, in 1903.[31] In addition to the charge stored in its batteries, the aircraft uses the potential energy of height gained during the day to power its night flights.[34]
Specifications
Data from Solar Impulse Project[31] and Diaz[35]
General characteristics
- Crew: 1
- Length: 21.85 m (71.7 ft)
- Wingspan: 63.4 m (208 ft)
- Height: 6.40 m (21.0 ft)
- Wing area: 11,628 photovoltaic cells rated at 45 kW peak: 200 m2 (2,200 sq ft)
- Aspect ratio: 19.7
- Loaded weight: 1,600 kg (3,500 lb)
- Max. takeoff weight: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb)
- Powerplant: 4 × electric motors, 4 x 21 kWh lithium-ion batteries (450 kg), providing 7.5 kW (10 HP) each
- Propeller diameter: 3.5 m at 200 to 400 rpm (11 ft)
- Take-off speed: 35 kilometres per hour (22 mph)
Performance
- Cruise speed: 70 kilometres per hour (43 mph)
- Endurance: 36 hours (projected)
- Service ceiling: 8,500 m (27,900 ft) with a maximum altitude of 12,000 metres (39,000 ft)
Operational history
Maiden flight and other early flights
On 26 June 2009, Solar Impulse 1 was first presented to the public at the Dübendorf Air Base, Switzerland. Following taxi testing, a short-hop test flight was made on 3 December 2009,[36] piloted by Markus Scherdel.[37] Borschberg, co-leader of the project team, said of the flight:
"It was an unbelievable day. The airplane flew for about 350 metres (1,150 ft) and about 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) above the ground ... The aim was not to get high but to land on the same runway at a speed to test its controllability and get a first feeling of its flying characteristics ... the craft behaved just as the engineers had hoped. It is the end of the engineering phase and the start of the flight testing phase."[37]
On 7 April 2010, the plane conducted an 87-minute test flight, piloted by Markus Scherdel. This flight reached an altitude of 1,200 m (3,937 ft).[38][39] On 28 May 2010, the aircraft made its first flight powered entirely by solar energy, charging its batteries in flight.[40]
First overnight flight
Wikinews has related news: Solar-powered plane completes 26-hour flight |
On 8 July 2010, Solar Impulse 1 achieved the world's first manned 26-hour solar-powered flight.[41][42][43] The airplane was flown by Borschberg, and took off at 6:51 a.m. Central European Summer Time (UTC+2) on 7 July from Payerne Air Base, Switzerland. It returned for a landing the following morning at 9:00 a.m. local time.[44] During the flight, the plane reached a maximum altitude of 8,700 m (28,500 ft).[45] At the time, the flight was the longest and highest ever flown by a manned solar-powered aircraft; these records were officially recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) in October 2010.[46][47]
International and intranational flights
Belgium and France (2011)
On 13 May 2011 at 21:30 local time, the plane landed at Brussels Airport, after completing a 13-hour flight from its home base in Switzerland. It was the first international flight by the Solar Impulse, which flew at an average altitude of 6,000 ft (1,800 m) for a distance of 630 km (391 mi), with an average speed of 50 km/h (31 mph). The aircraft's slow cruising speed required operating at a mid-altitude, allowing much faster air traffic to be routed around it.[48] The aircraft was piloted by Borschberg. The project's other co-founder, Piccard, said in an interview after the landing: "Our goal is to create a revolution in the minds of people...to promote solar energies – not necessarily a revolution in aviation."[49][50]
A second international flight to the Paris Air Show was attempted on 12 June 2011, but the plane turned back and returned to Brussels, due to adverse weather conditions.[51] In a second attempt on 14 June, Borschberg successfully landed the aircraft at Paris' Le Bourget Airport at 9:15 pm after a 16-hour flight.[52]
First intercontinental flight (2012)
On 5 June 2012, the Solar Impulse successfully completed its first intercontinental flight, a 19-hour trip from Madrid, Spain, to Rabat, Morocco.[6] During the first leg of the flight from Payerne Air Base to Madrid, the aircraft broke several further records for solar flight, including the longest solar-powered flight between pre-declared waypoints (1,099.3 km (683 mi)) and along a course (1,116 km (693 mi)).[53]
United States (2013)
On 3 May 2013, the plane began its cross-US flight with a journey from Moffett Field in Mountain View, California, to Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Arizona. Successive legs of the flight took the Solar Impulse to Dallas-Fort Worth airport, Lambert–St. Louis International Airport, an overnight stop at Cincinnati Municipal Lunken Airport, and Washington Dulles International Airport; it concluded at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport on 6 July. Each flight leg took between 19 and 25 hours, with multi-day stops in each city (except Cincinnati) between flights.[54][7] The aircraft's second leg of its trip on 23 May to Dallas-Fort Worth covered 1,541 kilometres (958 mi) and set several new world distance records in solar aviation.[55]
On 4 June, the plane landed in St. Louis, Missouri.[56] It departed for Washington DC on 14 June, stopping overnight in Cincinnati, Ohio, to change pilots and avoid strong winds.[57] On 16 June, the plane landed at Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia.[58] On 6 July 2013, following a lengthy layover in Washington, Solar Impulse completed its cross-country journey, landing at New York City's JFK International Airport at 11:09 p.m. EDT.[8][59] The landing occurred three hours earlier than originally intended, because a planned flyby of the Statue of Liberty was cancelled due to damage to the covering on the left wing.[8] Solar Impulse 1 was placed on public display at JFK after its landing. In August 2013, it was disassembled and transported to Dübendorf Air Base where it was placed in storage in a hangar.
- Detailed route
Source:[60]
Leg | Start | Stop | Origin | Destination | Distance | Flight time | Avg. speed | Pilot |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3 May 2013, 06:12 PDT (UTC−7) | 4 May 2013, 00:30 MST (UTC−7) | Moffett Field, California (KNUQ) | Phoenix, Arizona (KPHX) | km | 18 hrs 18 mins | km/h | Bertrand Piccard |
2 | 22 May 2013, 04:47 MST (UTC−7) | 23 May 2013, 01:08 CDT (UTC−5) | Phoenix, Arizona (KPHX) | Dallas, Texas (KDFW) | 1541 km | 18 hrs 21 mins | 84 km/h | André Borschberg |
3 | 3 Jun 2013, 04:06 CDT (UTC−5) | 4 Jun 2013, 01:28 CDT (UTC−5) | Dallas, Texas (KDFW) | Saint Louis, Missouri (KSTL) | 1040 km | 21 hrs 22 mins | 49 km/h | Bertrand Piccard |
4 | 14 Jun 2013, 05:01 CDT (UTC−5) | 14 Jun 2013, 20:15 EDT (UTC−4) | Saint Louis, Missouri (KSTL) | Cincinnati, Ohio (KLUK) | 15 hrs 14 mins | André Borschberg | ||
5 | 15 Jun 2013, 10:10 EDT (UTC−4) | 16 Jun 2013, 00:15 EDT (UTC−4) | Cincinnati, Ohio (KLUK) | Washington, DC (KIAD) | 14 hrs 5 mins | Bertrand Piccard | ||
6 | 6 July 2013, 04:56 EDT (UTC−4) | 7 July 2013, 00:15 EDT (UTC−4) | Washington, DC (KIAD) | New York City, New York (KJFK) | 19 hrs 19 mins | André Borschberg | ||
Solar Impulse 2 (HB-SIB)
Construction history
Construction of the second aircraft, known as Solar Impulse 2 and carrying the Swiss registration HB-SIB, started in 2011. Completion was initially planned for 2013, with a 25-day circumnavigation of the globe planned for 2014. However, a structural failure of the aircraft's main spar occurred during static tests in July 2012, leading to delays in the flight testing schedule to allow for repairs. Solar Impulse 2's first flight occurred at Payerne Air Base on 2 June 2014.[61]
Design
The wingspan of Solar Impulse 2 is 71.9 m (236 ft), slightly less than that of an Airbus A380, the world's largest passenger airliner,[35] but unlike the 500-ton A380, the carbon-fibre Solar Impulse weighs only 2.3 tonnes (5,100 lb), little more than an average automobile. It features a non-pressurized cockpit 3.8 cubic meters in size[62] and advanced avionics, including an autopilot to allow for multi-day transcontinental and trans-oceanic flights.[19] Supplemental oxygen and various other environmental support systems allow the pilot to cruise up to an altitude of 12,000 metres (39,000 ft).[35]
Specifications
Data from Solar Impulse Project[20]
General characteristics
- Crew: 1
- Length: 22.4 m (73.5 ft)
- Wingspan: 71.9 m (236 ft)
- Height: 6.37 m (20.9 ft)
- Wing area: 17,248 photovoltaic cells cover the top of the wings, fuselage and tailplane for a total area of 269.5 m2 (rated at 66 kW peak)
- Loaded weight: 2,300 kg (5,100 lb)
- Powerplant: 4 × electric motors powered from solar cells and 4 x 41 kWh lithium-ion batteries (633 kg), providing 13 kW[28], electric motors (17.4 HP) each
- Propeller diameter: 4 m (13.1 ft)
- Take-off speed: 20 kn (36 km/h)
Performance
- Maximum speed: 77 kn (140 km/h) 87 mph
- Cruise speed: 49 kn (90 km/h) (33 kn (60 km/h) at night to save power)
- Service ceiling: 8,500 m (27,900 ft) with a maximum altitude of 12,000 metres (39,000 ft)
Operational history
Solar Impulse 2 was first publicly displayed on 9 April 2014.[20] Its inaugural flight took place on 2 June 2014, piloted by Markus Scherdel.[63] The aircraft averaged a ground speed of 30 knots, and reached an altitude of 5,500 feet.[64] The first night flight was completed on 26 October 2014, and the aircraft reached its maximum altitude during a flight on 28 October 2014.
Circumnavigation journey (2015–16)
Due to the repair work to the aircraft's main spar, Solar Impulse 2's circumnavigation of the Earth was delayed from 2012 to 2015.[65] The aircraft was delivered to Masdar in Abu Dhabi for the World Future Energy Summit in late January 2015,[66] and it began the journey on 9 March 2015.[9][67] It was scheduled to return to the same location in August 2015.[10][68] A mission control centre for the circumnavigation was established in Monaco, utilizing satellite links to gather real-time flight telemetry and remain in constant contact with the aircraft and the support team.[69]
The route being followed by Solar Impulse 2 is entirely in the northern hemisphere.[68][70] Twelve stops were originally planned to allow for the alternation of pilots Borschberg and Piccard and to await good weather conditions along each leg of the route.[71] For most of its time airborne, Solar Impulse 2 cruises at a ground speed of between 50 and 100 kilometers per hour – usually at the slower end of that range at night to save power. Legs of the flight crossing the Pacific and Atlantic oceans are the longest stages of the circumnavigation, each expected to take about five days.[10][72] On multi-day flights, the pilots take 20-minute naps and use Yoga or other exercises to promote blood flow and maintain alertness.[62]
By the end of May 2015, the plane had traversed Asia.[73] It made an unscheduled stop in Japan to await favourable weather over the Pacific, increasing the expected number of legs of the journey to 13.[11][74] The aircraft began the flight from Japan to Hawaii on 28 June 2015 (29 June, Japan local time).[75] With Borschberg in the cockpit, it reached Hawaii on 3 July, setting new records for the world's longest solar-powered flight both by time (117 hours, 52 minutes) and distance (7,212 km; 4,481 mi). The flight's duration was also a record for longest solo flight, by time, for any aircraft.[12][76][77] During that leg, however, the plane's batteries were damaged by overheating caused by being packed in too much insulation. New parts had to be ordered, and as it was late in the season, the plane was grounded in Hawaii, and the US Department of Transportation stored the aircraft in a hangar at Kalaeloa Airport on Oahu.[29][30]
New batteries were made and were installed in the plane in the early weeks of 2016. Test flights began in February[78] to prepare for resumption of the circumnavigation once northern hemisphere days lengthened enough to permit multi-day solar-powered flights.[27][13] A favorable weather window opened in April 2016, and the plane resumed its journey across the Pacific.[14][79] Solar Impulse landed at Moffett Field in Mountain View, California, near San Francisco, on April 23, local time.[15] On May 2, it flew to Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Phoenix, Arizona.[16][80]
Detailed route
Leg | Start[82] | Origin | Destination | Flight time | Distance | Avg. speed | Max. altitude | Pilot |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 March 2015 03:12 | Abu Dhabi, UAE (OMAD) | Muscat, Oman (OOMS) | 13 hrs 1 min | 238 nmi (441 km) | 18.3 kn (33.9 km/h) | 20,942 ft (6,383 m) | A. Borschberg[83] |
2 | 10 March 02:35 | Muscat, Oman (OOMS) | Ahmedabad, India (VAAH) | 15 hrs 20 mins | 802 nmi (1,485 km)[84] | 52.3 kn (96.8 km/h) | 29,114 ft (8,874 m) | B. Piccard[85] |
3 | 18 March 01:48 | Ahmedabad, India (VAAH) | Varanasi, India (VIBN) | 13 hrs 15 mins | 656 nmi (1,215 km) | 49.5 kn (91.7 km/h) | 17,001 ft (5,182 m) | Borschberg[86] |
4 | 18 March 23:52 | Varanasi, India (VIBN) | Mandalay, Myanmar (VYMD) | 13 hrs 29 mins | 755 nmi (1,398 km) | 56.0 kn (103.7 km/h) | 27,000 ft (8,230 m) | Piccard[87] |
5 | 29 March 21:06 | Mandalay, Myanmar (VYMD) | Chongqing, China (ZUCK) | 20 hrs 29 mins | 788 nmi (1,459 km) | 38.4 kn (71.2 km/h) | 28,327 ft (8,634 m) | Piccard[88] |
6 | 20 April 22:06 | Chongqing, China (ZUCK) | Nanjing, China (ZSNJ) | 17 hrs 22 mins | 726 nmi (1,344 km) | 41.8 kn (77.4 km/h) | 14,010 ft (4,270 m) | Piccard[89] |
7 | 30 May 18:39 | Nanjing, China (ZSNJ) | Nagoya, JapanN1 (RJNA) | 44 hrs 10 mins[90] | 1,540 nmi (2,852 km) | 34.9 kn (64.6 km/h) | 28,000 ft (8,500 m) | Borschberg[11][91] |
8 | 28 June 18:03 | Nagoya, Japan (RJNA) | Kalaeloa, Hawaii, USA (PHJR) | 117 hrs 52 mins[92] | 3,894 nmi (7,212 km) | 33.04 kn (61.19 km/h) | 28,327 ft (8,634 m) | Borschberg[76][93] |
9 | 21 April 2016 16:15 | Kalaeloa, Hawaii, USA (PHJR) | Mountain View, CA, USA (KNUQ) | 62 hrs 29 mins | 2,206 nmi (4,086 km) | 35.31 kn (65.39 km/h) | 28,327 ft (8,634 m) | Piccard[14][94] |
10 | 2 May 12:03 | Mountain View, CA, USA (KNUQ) | Phoenix, Ariz, USA (KGYR) | 15 hrs 52 mins | 601 nmi (1,113 km) | 22,001 ft (6,706 m) | Borschberg[95] | |
11 | Phoenix, Ariz, USA (KGYR) | TBD (mid-USA) | 30 hrs (planned) | 1,100 nmi (2,030 km) (planned) | [96] | |||
12 | TBD (mid-USA) | TBD (mid-USA) | TBD hrs (planned) | TBD distance (planned) | [97] | |||
13 | TBD (mid-USA) | New York, USA | 20 hrs (planned) | 775 nmi (1,436 km) (planned) | [98] | |||
14 | New York, USA | TBD (Southern Europe) | 120 hrs (planned) | 3,099 nmi (5,739 km) (planned) | [99] | |||
15 | TBD (Southern Europe) | Abu Dhabi, UAE | 120 hrs (planned) | 3,156 nmi (5,845 km) (planned) | [100] |
Notes:
- ^N1 — Leg 7 was planned as a 144-hour flight from Nanjing, China to Hawaii (4,931 nmi (9,132 km)). Deteriorating weather forced a diversion to Nagoya, Japan.[11]
See also
- Other solar aircraft
- Gossamer Penguin
- Helios Prototype
- QinetiQ Zephyr
- Solar Challenger
- Tûranor PlanetSolar, first solar vehicle to circumnavigate the Earth
- Records
References
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- ↑ "A Speck in the Sky". New York Times. 21 March 1999. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- ↑ Scott, Mike. "Solar Plane Takes to the Skies Again to Display Clean Energy's Power Potential", Forbes, 21 April 2016
- ↑ Solar Impulse Project. "HB-SIA Mission". Retrieved 5 December 2009.
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- ↑ Palmer, Jason (3 December 2009). "Record solar plane's first 'hop'". BBC. Retrieved 4 December 2009.
- 1 2 Tom Simonite (3 December 2009). "Solar-powered piloted plane makes its first 'flea hop'". Web Edition. New Scientist. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
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- ↑ Previous post Next post (7 April 2010). "Solar Airplane Completes Maiden Voyage". Wired.com. Retrieved 9 July 2010.
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- ↑ "The FAI ratifies Solar Impulse's World Records". Retrieved 22 October 2010.
- ↑ "Solar Impulse: Premier vol international réussi pour l’avion solaire" (in French). Planet Techno Science. 14 May 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- ↑ Osha Gray Davidson (13 May 2011). "Solar-Powered Airplane Makes Historic Flight". Forbes. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
- ↑ Niles, Russ (May 2011). "Solar Impulse Crosses Border". AvWeb. Retrieved 16 May 2011.
- ↑ "A setback for Solar Impulse: the solar plane favours safety and heads back to Brussels". June 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
- ↑ Marisa, Krystian (June 2011). "Solar Impulse Plane: A Rare Treat For Crowds in Paris". Retrieved 15 June 2011.
- ↑ Solar Impulse’s HB-SIA obtains two new world records. SolarImpulse.com. 26 September 2012. See also: FAI Record ID #16558 and FAI Record ID #16560.
- ↑ "Solar plane leaves Calif. on cross-country trip". Daytona Beach News Journal. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
- ↑ "Solar plane completes 2nd leg of trip in Texas". AP. 23 May 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2013.; "Solar Plane Completes Longest Leg of Cross-Country Flight". Yahoo News. 23 May 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2013.; "FAI Record ID #16815 – Straight distance, pre-declared waypoints". FAI. Retrieved 9 July 2013.; "FAI Record ID #16817 – Free Distance". FAI. Retrieved 9 July 2013.; and "FAI Record ID #16816 – Distance along a course, pre-declared waypoints". FAI. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ↑ "Solar Impulse lands in St Louis in trans-America bid". BBC. 4 June 2013. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
- ↑ "Two hops for trans-US solar plane". BBC. 14 June 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
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- ↑ "Solar Powered Plane Finishes Journey, Lands in NYC". AP. 7 July 2013. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
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- ↑ "First Flight for Solar Impulse 2". Sport Aviation: 14. July 2014.
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- ↑ "Solar Impulse Flies Aircraft For Round-the-World Attempt". Aviation Week & Space Technology. 9 June 2014. p. 14.
- ↑ Timeline: "Without a spar, what's next?" Solar Impulse. 19 July 2012. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
- ↑ "Our Adventure". Solar Impulse. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
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- ↑ "Solar Impulse launches Mission Control Center in Monaco". ABB Conversations. 23 February 2015. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
- ↑ "Solar Impulse lands in California after Pacific crossing", BBC, April 24,2016
- ↑ Molko, David. "Solar-powered plane on round-the-world flight gets stuck in China", CNN, April 17, 2015
- ↑ Keyrouz, Wissam (7 March 2015). "Solar plane revs up for historic round-the-world flight". AFP via Yahoo. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
- ↑ Amos, Jonathan. "Solar Impulse plane begins Pacific crossing", BBC News, May 31, 2015
- ↑ Randall, Tom. "This Plane Runs on Sun and Is About to Smash Some Records", Bloomberg.com, June 15, 2015
- ↑ Morelle, Rebecca. "Solar Impulse begins second bid to cross Pacific Ocean", BBC News, 28 June 2015
- 1 2 The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) website states that the "Free distance along course" was 7,039.9 km. FAI Record ID #17595, Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, accessed 29 July 2015
- ↑ The FAI does not record this record as official, since the FAI does not have an "any aircraft" category. See "FAI records page", Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, 29 July 2015
- ↑ "Solar Impulse plane makes first maintenance flight in Hawaii", Phys.org, 28 February 2016
- ↑ Delony, Jennifer. "Solar Impulse Live: Solar Airplane Pilot Gives Interview While Flying from Hawaii to California", RenewableEnergyWorld.com, 22 April 2016
- ↑ Chappell, Bill (3 May 2016). "Solar Airplane Lands In Phoenix After Flight From Silicon Valley". NPR. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
- ↑ "Solar Impule RTW". solarimpulse.com. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
- ↑ All start times are given as UTC, and all start dates are 2015.
- ↑ "Leg 1: Abu Dhabi to Muscat". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ The FAI website states that the record "Straight Distance - pre-declared waypoints" was 1468 km. FAI "Record ID #17429", Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, accessed 1 August 2015
- ↑ "Leg 2: Muscat to Ahmedabad". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 3: Ahmedabad to Varanasi". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 4; Varanasi to Mandalay". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 5: Mandalay to Chongqing". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 6: Chongqing to Nanjing". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "FAI Record ID #17557", Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, accessed 29 July 2015
- ↑ The FAI website states that the "Free distance along course" was 2614.5 km. FAI "Record ID #17558", Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, accessed 29 July 2015
- ↑ "FAI Record ID #17594", Fédération Aéronautique Internationale, accessed 29 July 2015
- ↑ "Leg 8: Nagoya to Hawaii", Solar Impulse, accessed 29 July 2015
- ↑ "Leg 9: Hawaii to Mountain View". Solar Impulse. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
- ↑ "Leg 10: San Francisco to Phoenix". Solar Impulse. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
- ↑ "Leg 11: Phoenix to Mid-USA 1". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 12: Mid-USA 1 to Mid-USA 2". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 13: Mid-USA 2 to New York". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 14: New York to Europe". Solar Impulse.
- ↑ "Leg 15: Europe to Abu Dhabi". Solar Impulse.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solar Impulse. |
- Official website and YouTube channel
- "Bertrand Piccard's solar-powered adventure" – lecture at TED (17 min). July 2009
- "Solar-powered plane aims to fly around the world". 60 Minutes. CBS News. December 2012
- "How does Solar Impulse work?" How It Works. 13 May 2011
- "Record-attempting solar powered plane's first 'hop'". BBC. 4 December 2009
- "Solar Impulse plane starts 24-hour test flight" . BBC. 7 July 2010