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jueves, 26 de mayo de 2016

Solar Impulse lands in Pennsylvania


Landing in Lehigh Valley

Image copyright

EPA


The sun-powered aircraft Solar Impulse has landed in Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania, after a 16-hour flight.


The plane started its flight on Wednesday in Dayton, Ohio, travelling 750km to reach the East Coast waypoint.


The journey is the 13th leg in a quest that started in Abu Dhabi last year to circumnavigate the globe on zero fuel.


Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard is in the pilot’s seat of the 72m-wingspan, electric plane.


The aircraft took off from Dayton International Airport just after 04:00 local time (08:00 GMT).


It landed in Lehigh Valley just before 02:00 BST (21:00 local time).


The achievement will position the project to make its entry into New York in the coming days.


The “Big Apple” is set to be the base for Solar Impulse as it waits for a weather window to fly the Atlantic.


Deciding when to cross the ocean will be a tricky decision. The slow-moving, ultra-light plane needs benign winds, and the team concedes that the right conditions may not present themselves for several weeks.


Image copyright

SOLAR IMPULSE


Wednesday’s flight to Lehigh Valley was postponed for 24 hours for checks on the aircraft following a power problem in its mobile hangar.


The air fans that hold up the inflatable structure briefly failed on Tuesday, allowing the canvas to collapse and touch the plane’s fuselage and the wings.


Once engineers had concluded that Solar Impulse had not been affected in any way, they cleared the mission to resume.


The hop to New York will likely occur next week, after the Memorial Day weekend.


Although it is a short distance from Lehigh Valley to John F Kennedy Airport, the time taken to complete the leg will be extended by two factors.


One is the desire to fly around the Statue of Liberty to take some pictures; the other will be the wait for air traffic controllers to find a landing slot at one of the busiest airports in the world.


“It’s going to be a long flight – more than 26 hours. But it’s going to be extraordinary because it will be so symbolic to be at [the Statue of Liberty],” said Andre Borschberg, who will pilot the stage.


“I was just visiting the Wright Brothers museum here in Dayton, and one of the flights he did – I think it was Orville – was the first airplane flight over the Statue of Liberty. He didn’t have to deal with co-ordinating the traffic because he knew there was nobody else, no other airplane flying at the time!”


Image copyright

SOLAR IMPULSE



Image caption

Engineers had to be sure that the mobile hangar had not inflicted any damage


The project has made excellent progress since renewing its global challenge a month ago in Hawaii.


From Kalaeloa in the central Pacific, it flew to Mountain View, California; and from there it reached across to Phoenix, Arizona, then to Tulsa, Oklahoma, before landing in Dayton on Saturday.


In 2015, Solar Impulse flew eight stages from Abu Dhabi to Kalaeloa, including a remarkable 4-day, 21-hour leg over the western Pacific – the longest (time duration) flight in aviation history.


It was damage to its batteries on that stage, however, that forced Solar Impulse to lay up for 10 months, for repairs and to wait for optimum daylight length in the northern hemisphere to return.



LEG 1: 9 March. Abu Dhabi (UAE) to Muscat (Oman) – 772km; 13 Hours 1 Minute


LEG 2: 10 March. Muscat (Oman) to Ahmedabad (India) – 1,593km; 15 Hours 20 Minutes


LEG 3: 18 March. Ahmedabad (India) to Varanasi (India) – 1,170km; 13 Hours 15 Minutes


LEG 4: 18 March. Varanasi (India) to Mandalay (Myanmar) – 1,536km; 13 Hours 29 Minutes


LEG 5: 29 March. Mandalay (Myanmar) to Chongqing (China) – 1,636km; 20 Hours 29 Minutes


LEG 6: 21 April. Chongqing (China) to Nanjing (China) – 1,384km; 17 Hours 22 Minutes


LEG 7: 30 May. Nanjing (China) to Nagoya (Japan) – 2,942km; 1 Day 20 Hours 9 Minutes


LEG 8: 28 June. Nagoya (Japan) to Kalaeloa, Hawaii (US) – 8,924km; 4 Days 21 Hours 52 Minutes


LEG 9: 21 April. Kalaeloa, Hawaii (US) to Mountain View, California (US) – 4,523km; 2 Days 17 Hours 29 Minutes


LEG 10: 2 May. Mountain View, California (US) to Phoenix, Arizona (US) – 1,199km; 15 Hours 52 Minutes


LEG 11: 12 May. Phoenix, Arizona (US) to Tulsa, Oklahoma (US) – 1,570 km; 18 Hours 10 Minutes


LEG 12: 21 May. Tulsa, Oklahoma (US) to Dayton, Ohio (US) – 1,113 km; 16 Hours 34 Minutes


LEG 13: 25 May. Dayton, Ohio (US) to Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania (US)


LEG 14: June. Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania (US) to New York (US)




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Solar Impulse lands in Pennsylvania
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