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NASA Breakthrough For Solar Powered Aircraft

gilgsn writes "Planenews.com just received a news release from NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center about a breakthrough in fuel cell technology for solar powered aircrafts and how they used internet technology to broadcast data and HDTV video from the stratosphere above the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Their Helios Prototype could now fly through the night. I am sure that besides public communications, this will interest the military for their drones.."

3 of 23 comments (clear)

  1. Why not gravity? by cperciva · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If I'm reading the story right (and it's 2:30 AM here, so maybe I'm not), the "news" here is that NASA has thrown a more efficient type of fuel cell onto a solar powered wing, thereby allowing it to store energy so that it can remain powered overnight.

    Why don't they just use gravity instead? These wings already have motors and propellors; at night, these could be used as generators. The energy obtainable by dropping a few kilometers -- hardly a big deal for a wing 40km up -- would be just as much as could be stored in fuel cells, and the entire system would be much simpler and cheaper.

    The NASA guys are pretty smart, so I'm sure I've missed something here; but what?

  2. Helios -- way cool by MacAndrew · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Apple Computer did a nice piece on Helios -- self-promotion, but it's still nice.

    I don't think the military will be *too* interested in Helios. A very easy target to shoot down! The Predator is a lot faster, and I'm pretty sure they lost at least one to hostile fire in Afghanistan. On the other hand ... it would be useful for peacekeeping functions such as maintaining surveillance over [region] for long periods of time at low cost, such as to monitor (ahem) an arms control agreement. And I suppose it could drop bombs on things, though I'd rather it didn't.

    Now with Helios, that unending 14-hour transoceanic flight you complained about really could be unending. You could just have the thing endlessly circling the globe, weather permitting.

  3. This is so NASA, again. by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Here we have a commercial project, done by a private company, and partially funded by the Japanese Ministry of Telecommunications. And there's NASA, taking the credit.