The Scotsman

Platform

All aboard the Hyperloop, say Enrique Cervero and Carolina Toczycka

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An average train ride from Edinburgh to London costs £80 and lasts just under five hours; the same trip via plane sets one back £50 and is close to three hours total travel time. The dry reality of high costs is a facade for an even higher loss of time that could have been spent actively with colleagues, friends and family. Using Hyperloop technology, students from Edinburgh University have the ambition to shape the future of transporta­tion in the UK, drasticall­y reducing both the cost and journey time of the trip.

Hyperloop is the brainchild of Elon Musk, the South African billionair­e at the origin of Paypal, Tesla and Spacex. The Hyperloop consists of a passenger capsule (pod) that, while levitating using magnets or an air cushion, travels in a near vacuum environmen­t at near 750mph. Spacex, the aerospace manufactur­er, was aware that the concept sparked interest in standalone engineers and teams who would contribute to its developmen­t, but would have insufficie­nt resources to build their own vacuum tube tracks.

When the first Spacex Hyperloop Pod Competitio­n was announced in 2015, it led to the creation of the University of Edinburgh Hyperloop Team (“HYPED”). Starting as a group of five friends, it soon expanded to host 30 students from Engineerin­g and Arts. In January 2016, our modular design of the capsule won an award, signed by Elon Musk, which now proudly stands at our student union.

Our technical team pushed forward and spent six months preparing a rigorous design for our own Hyperloop prototype that would surpass the utmost level of scrutiny Spacex would receive it with. Following numerous presentati­ons and safety briefings, HYPED is officially the only British team, and one of four European teams, to race their prototype in the Spacex II finals on 27-29 August 2017. We are currently performing the finishing touches of assembling our prototype, now named “Poddy Mcpodface”, which will be shipped to the US in mid August.

But with an ever changing political landscape, uncertaint­y on the economic outlook and the HS2 project under close public scrutiny, what is the place for a new transport technology?

With a growing awareness of the new Hyperloop system in Britain, our team reflected on the social and economic implicatio­ns for a technology that is expected to have wide reaching socioecono­mic impacts. Considerin­g the vast inequaliti­es between North and South, the stagnant productivi­ty and ambitious environmen­tal targets, our team has built a case for a London to Edinburgh route, leading to a travel time of 35 minutes between the two capitals.

Given the long constructi­on timelines and the speed advantages, our route aims to complement the existing constructi­on pipeline beyond 2030. The economic case was presented to Hyperloop One, the US company looking to select three routes worldwide and build them. We were the only student team to present as one of the 35 semi-finalists, from 2,600 entries.

Finally, alongside developing the technology and conduction a socio-economic pre-feasibilit­y study, we are undertakin­g initiative­s to engage young people in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s) and engage university students in intradisci­plinary work. We believe that the universiti­es, as well as citizens, have a major role to play in the developmen­t of innovation­s. l Enrique Cervero and Carolina Toczycka are members of the University of Edinburgh Hyperloop Team

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