Swiss Pilots to Attempt First Around-The-world Solar Flight

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 Swiss pilots to attempt frst around- the-world solar ight Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg will take turns piloting the single seater Solar Impulse 2 plane that is propelled solely by the sun  Solar Impulse 2 solar plane ies over Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. hotograph! Solar Impulse " #evillard " #e$o.%h Karl Mathiesen-Sunda& ' (ar%h 2)*+   wo Swiss pilots are e pe%ted to emba r on (onda& morning on the frst attempt to & around the world in a plane propelled onl& b& the sun. /ertrand i%%ard and Andr0 /ors%hberg will tae turns piloting the single seater Solar Impulse 2 1or 2*,3 miles 45+,)))m6 over *2 legs, in%luding gruelling fve- to si-da& stints a%ross the Atlanti% and a%if% o%eans. he entire 7ourne& will tae fve months.  he pilots wil l endure r oughl& 2+) hour s ea%h inside a narrow %o%pit wi th no o&gen or temperature %ontrol. emperatures outside will range between

Transcript of Swiss Pilots to Attempt First Around-The-world Solar Flight

Swiss pilots to attempt first around-the-world solar flightBertrand Piccard and Andr Borschberg will take turns piloting the single seater Solar Impulse 2 plane that is propelled solely by the sunSolar Impulse 2 solar plane in Abu Dhabi, United Arab EmiratesSolar Impulse 2 solar plane flies over Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Photograph: Solar Impulse | Revillard | Rezo.chKarl Mathiesen-Sunday 8 March 2015

Two Swiss pilots are expected to embark on Monday morning on the first attempt to fly around the world in a plane propelled only by the sun.

Bertrand Piccard and Andr Borschberg will take turns piloting the single seater Solar Impulse 2 for 21,747 miles (35,000km) over 12 legs, including gruelling five- to six-day stints across the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The entire journey will take five months.The pilots will endure roughly 250 hours each inside a narrow cockpit with no oxygen or temperature control. Temperatures outside will range between -40C to 40C.Bertrand Piccard and Andr Borschberg, the pilots of Solar Impulse 2Pilots Bertrand Piccard and Andr BorschbergPhotograph: PRFalling asleep for long periods will be impossible as the flight will need constant attention. Piccard and Borschberg will survive on 20-minute naps every two to four hours.

The pilots will practise yoga to stave off the physical discomfort of remaining confined to a seat for days at a time. But Borschberg said the biggest challenge was maintaining concentration.

Piccard, who is a psychiatrist as well as being part ofthe team that in 1999 first circumnavigated the globe non-stop by balloon, has taught himself and Borschberg techniques of self-hypnosis and meditation in order to maintain concentration.

Time is not so important anymore, said Borschberg. You have plenty of time and the only way to cope with this duration is to be in the present moment. If you start thinking about how many hours left until you get to the destination you get crazy. So the only way is to be present ... In some ways its almost a spiritual experience that we are going through.

For the pilots, the entire journey will resemble circumnavigating the Earth in a family car. The aircraft weighs the same as a Volvo sedan and goes at comparable speeds. SI2s top speed is 87m/h (140km/h) but the pilots will conserve battery power by limiting the plane to roughly half that.The cockpit is only slightly larger than an average car and must contain the life support systems, food, oxygen supplies and the reclining pilots seat that triples as bed, chair and toilet.The plane will fly both day and night, carrying no fuel, powered by 17,000 solar panels set on its wings (which are wider than a Boeing 747s) and fuselage. A 633kg bank of lithium batteries, around a quarter of the entire weight, will store the energy to run the motors overnight.The stop-start journey harks back to the early days of intercontinental flight before enormous speeds and ranges were made achievable by jet engines. Qantas used to fly the Kangaroo Route from Sydney to London, hopping through Darwin, Singapore, Kolkata, Karachi, Cairo, and Tripoli en route.Borschberg said the success of the Solar Impulse project, which has already become the first solar-powered plane to fly through the night and the first to fly between two continents, must be seen as a primitive step toward a zero-carbon jumbo.Combustion of fossil fuels has dominated powered flight since the 19th century dirigible.Today,aviation burns the most carbon per passenger per kilometre of any mode of mass-transportand, despite efforts to limit emissions, remains the fastest growing anthropogenic source of greenhouse gases. The sector is identified by theUKs committee on climate change as the toughest major emissions source to decarbonise.Solar flight seeks to change this but remains decades away at a minimum, says Borschberg.We have to realise that we are between the Wright Brothers and Charles Lindbergh periods in the 20s of last century. So it will take, as it took in the past 25, 30, 35 years to fly clean. New technologies will have to be developed, this will take time.The deputy editor ofAerospace magazine, Bill Read, said that solar flight was not yet even remotely ready for any applications in commercial flights.Currently, an aircraft entirely covered in solar cells would not be able to generate enough power to enable it to fly. The Solar Impulse is only able to fly using solar power because it is specially constructed to be very light weight and with a huge wingspan. Unless there is a quantum leap forward in solar cell technology, solar cells cannot yet be considered as a sole power source for aircraft, said Read.But Borschberg said some of the advances made for the project have real-world uses today.To fly with the sun, day and night, we had to build an aircraft that is extremely energy efficient. These technologies that provide energy efficiency can be used in your home, in your car, in the appliances that you buy, he said.The four motors that power the aircraft generate about half the power of a motorcross bike. But unlike conventional engines they lose only 3% of their energy through heat. The standard loss, says Borschberg, an engineer, is around 70%.According to the International Energy Agency, energy efficiency is the single cheapest way to reduce carbon emissions across the world.With these technologies we can cope with a major part of the challenge we are facing today in terms of energy, environment, pollution, natural resources and so on, says Borschberg.

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