Bangkok Post

Plane that can fly into stratosphe­re

-

PAYERNE, SWITZERLAN­D: Just months after two Swiss pilots completed a historic round-the-world trip in a Sun-powered plane, another Swiss adventurer on Wednesday unveiled a solar plane aimed at reaching the stratosphe­re.

The SolarStrat­os, a sleek, white twoseater aircraft with long wings covered with 22 square metres (237 square feet) of solar panels, is set to become the first manned solar plane to make a stratosphe­ric flight, according to Raphael Domjan, who is behind the project.

“Our goal is to demonstrat­e that current technology offers us the possibilit­y to achieve above and beyond what fossil fuels offer,” he said in a statement, after unveiling the plane at the Payerne airbase in western Switzerlan­d.

“Electric and solar vehicles are amongst the major challenges of the 21st century,” said the youthful 44-year-old, adding that the SolarStrat­os “can fly at an altitude of 25,000 metres (82,000 feet).”

SolarStrat­os is scheduled to begin test flights next February, while medium altitude flights are planned for next summer, and the first stratosphe­ric flights should take place in 2018, according to a statement.

“To keep down the weight, the plane will not be pressurise­d, and Domjan will wear a spacesuit, also powered by solar energy, which will also mark a world first,’’ it added.

The statement also claimed the craft could “reach space.”

“Travelling to the stratosphe­re will take approximat­ely five hours: 2.5 hours to reach space, 15 minutes of broad daylight and stars, then three hours to return to Earth,” it said.

The stratosphe­re lies above Earth’s lowest atmospheri­c layer, called the tropospher­e.

At middle latitudes, the stratosphe­re runs from a lower boundary of about 10,000 metres to an upper boundary of about 50,000 metres.

Aeronautic­s engineers use a rough benchmark called the Karman line, located at about 100,000 metres above sea level, for defining the boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and space.

The announceme­nt came after two of Domjan’s compatriot­s, Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg, completed the firstever round-the-globe trip in a solar plane last July, in a bid to showcase the possibilit­ies for the future of renewable energy.

Solar Impulse 2 circumnavi­gated the globe in 17 stages, covering a remarkable 43,000 kilometres (26,700 miles) across four continents, two oceans and three seas, in 23 days of flying without using a drop of fuel.

Domjan meanwhile launched his SolarStrat­os project in 2014, two years after he became the first person to sail around the world in a fully solar-powered boat.

He insisted on Wednesday that the new aircraft’s ability to pierce the stratosphe­re “opens the door to the possibilit­y of electric and solar commercial aviation, close to space.”

Until now, reaching the stratosphe­re has until now required large quantities of energy or helium.

But the SolarStrat­os aircraft, could do so leaving only “the equivalent environmen­tal footprint of an electric car”, Wednesday’s statement said.

“The project opens the door to new scientific knowledge, at an affordable price, exploratio­n and the peaceful use of our stratosphe­re,” said Roland Loos, who heads SolarXplor­ers, the organisati­on in charge of developing the project.

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP ?? People gather around the SolarStrat­os after its roll-out in Payerne, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.
AFP People gather around the SolarStrat­os after its roll-out in Payerne, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand