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Solar plane attempts 24-hour flight

By | July 7, 2010, 7:49 AM PDT

The plane took off at 1 AM EDT today (a little before 7 AM Swiss time) from the Payerne airfield in clear blue skies.

By mid-morning it was cruising at around 10,000 feet. Pilot Andre Borschberg, who has been conducting interviews with journalists from the cockpit, will slowly ascend to 28,000 feet — taking time to adjust to the colder temperatures and lower oxygen levels he will encounter there — before deciding by tonight (or 2 PM EDT) whether to continue flying in darkness.

From the plane’s Web site:

At that point he will still be flying purely on solar energy, not on the batteries charged up by the wings’ 10,748 solar cells. But approximately an hour later, the angle of the sun will be too low for him to maintain his altitude on solar power alone. The technical term is that he will “lose energy balance.”

Not wanting to expend any battery power until absolutely necessary, he’ll then start a very shallow glide downward, using potential energy rather than his battery power to stay aloft.

This is the plane’s third test flight, and it’s critical to seeing whether the aircraft is capable of flying around the world, which the organizers of the project — including the balloonist Bertrand Piccard — want to do by 2012.

Wired reports the plane as having four, 10-horsepower electric motors with a cruise speed of roughly 40 miles per hour (70 km/h), 11,628 solar cells to power the motors and charge polymer lithium batteries, and a wingspan of 208 feet (63.40 meters) — as wide as a jumbo jet, but with a weight of only 3,520 pounds (1,600 kilograms), about the same as a car.

You can follow the flight in progress and see features of the plane here.

Here, meanwhile, is a short video from the BBC that includes a tour of the plane’s cockpit.

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Deborah Gage

About Deborah Gage

Deborah Gage was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet in 2010.

Deborah Gage

Deborah Gage

Contributing Editor, Technology

Deborah Gage has written for the San Francisco Chronicle, Minnesota Public Radio, Baseline and various magazines and newspapers. She is based in San Francisco.

Follow her on Twitter.

Deborah Gage

Deborah Gage

I pride myself on being an independent journalist. My reporting and writing are not influenced by any financial holdings, and I have no business affiliations with companies other than the publishers I write for as a journalist.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Solar plane attempts 24-hour flight
NASA was playing with one of these over a decade ago. Wonder what came of it...
Posted by mlamoreaux@...
7th Jul 2010
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RE: Solar plane attempts 24-hour flight
Here's something on the NASA site from 2003: http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/technologies/solarFarm.html. Theirs was called the Helios.
Posted by mlamoreaux@...
7th Jul 2010
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Irrelevant
unless a solar powered plane can carry people and other payloads. good luck with that.
Posted by pizzaman7
8th Jul 2010
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