high altitude airships now flight testing: Rich Murray 2011.12.29
This technology, now growing exponentially, will in a decade put huge solar powered airships into one-week spirals into orbit, and then into orbit around Moon, Mars, and entire solar system, in perfect safety without polluting, for hundreds of people in luxury at low costs. http://airshipstothearctic.com/itinerary.html Airships to the Arctic VI [ conference ]: A Game-Changer December 5-6, 2011, Seattle Wa. The sixth Airships to the Arctic conference explores the forward and backward linkages of the emerging airship industry. The introduction of transport airships will require new locations for transshipment and generate economic opportunities that do not exist today. Just as these other modes of transport spawned an array of input suppliers, this conference examines the supply base of the airship industry. Construction of large transport airships will create the need for materials, engines, pilots, avionics and many other large and small input suppliers. http://airshipstothearctic.com/presenations.html "Lockheed has an airship in the works dubbed SkyTug that should be commercially available by late 2013 with a range of 1,000 nautical miles and a 20-ton payload. The 50-ton Skyfreighter is expected to follow in late 2014." Lockheed Martin's P-791 prototype airship sits on the tarmac following its initial flight in 2006. Lockheed and several other aerospace companies see modern airships as a low-carbon future for the cargo industry. Photo courtesy Lockheed Martin. May 3, 2011 A safer generation of airships is trying to usher in a low-carbon future for air cargo. The initial target: Developing markets -- China, Africa, northern Canada - where transportation infrastructure is nonexistent. By Bruce Dorminey For The Daily Climate The notion that airships represent the future of air cargo is being revived by a new generation of entrepreneurs some 75 years after a catastrophic fireball brought the industry to a screeching halt. We may always carry freight in the bellies of passenger jets. But in a fully mature hybrid market, airships should replace the rest of the fixed-wing cargo fleet. -- Barry Prentice, University of Manitoba Far safer than the Hindenburg, whose tragic 1937 docking remains an icon of aerospace gone wrong, these modern airships are a hybrid of lighter-than-air and fixed-wing aircraft. They can loft enormous payloads without requiring the acres of tarmac or miles of roadway necessary for conventional air and truck transport. And they do so at a fraction of the fuel and cost of aircraft. Airships "give you access and much larger payloads at much lower costs," said Peter DeRobertis, project leader for commercial hybrid air vehicles at Lockheed Martin's Aeronautics and Skunk Works division in Fort Worth, Texas. "It's also a green aircraft; you're not polluting." Today's airships could conceivably be used to transport everything from ripe pineapples to heavy industrial equipment direct to the customer. Shippers, for example, could roll tractors, backhoes, and road graders onto a 50-ton hybrid vehicle at a factory and roll them off at the job site, easing logistics and cost. A handful of companies have prototypes under development. Lockheed has an airship in the works dubbed SkyTug that should be commercially available by late 2013 with a range of 1,000 nautical miles and a 20-ton payload. The 50-ton Skyfreighter is expected to follow in late 2014. The industry's future is initially aimed at leapfrogging the conventional cargo transport infrastructure, freighting goods where highways and airports don't exist -- Canada's frozen north; China's western frontier; remote parts of Africa, Asia, and South America. No airships are commercially available for cargo transport there yet. But once established on the frontiers, experts say their versatility, cost and fuel advantages should allow airships to penetrate mature freight markets like the United States.... http://www.blimpinfo.com/uncategorized/argus-one-scheduled-for-flight-testing/ Argus One Scheduled for Flight Testing Posted on November 19, 2011 by LighterThanAirSociety Source: UPI.com KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla., Nov. 18 (UPI) -- The mid-altitude Argus One unmanned airship will undergo free-flight testing in December at the U.S. Department of Energy Nevada Test Site. World Surveillance Group, maker of the unmanned aerial vehicle, said the tests and demonstrations are sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense and were rescheduled from a proving ground facility in Yuma, Ariz. Pentagon sponsors will provide pre-flight, frequency and free flight coordination testing and access to facilities, while flight preparation and testing will be conducted by WSGI’s technical partner, Eastcor Engineering. The Argus One (Credit: World Surveillance Group, Inc.) WSGI says its Argus One is equipped with a “newly developed stabilization system that autonomously controls the level of rigidity” of the airship in flight and features an integrated payload bay that can carry high-tech sensors, cameras or electronics packages. It also features automated control for individual body modules for improved flight stability and aerodynamic control. The Argus One (Credit: World Surveillance Group, Inc.) Florida-based WSGI said in addition to the Nevada tests, it also is looking to conduct tests in Oklahoma through a recent agreement with Oklahoma State University-University Multispectral Laboratories LLC. World Surveillance Group Inc. is a designer and developer of unmanned, lighter-than-air vehicles for security and/or wireless communications solutions at low to high altitudes. Source: UPI.com http://www.blimp-n2a.com/news.htm http://www.vancouversun.com/news/canada-in-afghanistan/Huge+heavy+lift+airships+their+Canada+North/5362626/story.html Huge heavy-lift airships on their way to Canada's North September 7, 2011 What floats in the air, is shaped like a giant white cigar, stands up to six storeys high and may soon be seen over Nunavut? It's an airship, and many hope these new flying machines, which have been called "new wave blimps," will be able to provide mining industries with cheaper and cleaner travel by 2014. Discovery Air Innovations, a specialty aviation company based in Yellowknife, and Hybrid Air Vehicles Ltd., a British company, recently signed an agreement that makes Discovery Air the first customer for Hybrid Air Vehicles's "commercial heavy lift" program. The company is already designing a "long-endurance multi-intelligence vehicle" for the United States military to use for surveillance in Afghanistan. Its huge hybrid air vehicles -- due to begin construction in 2012 -- will be able to fly at speeds near 290 km/h and carry at least 50 tonnes of cargo, nearly double the payload of a fullyloaded C-130 Hercules. http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/nasa---goes-back-to-the-future-airships-20110905-1jtcp.html NASA goes back to the future: airships September 5, 2011 NASA may no longer be flying space shuttles, but it is set to put another craft into the skies ... airships. The US agency is building airships it believes will revolutionise the transport of cargo around the world, with its first prototype set to take off next year, London's Daily Telegraph reported. "One of NASA's jobs is to solve the nation's air transportation challenges with research, and airships haven't seen much research in the past few decades," said Dr Pete Worden, the director of NASA research arm Ames at an airship conference in Alaska last month. ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |