|
Helios PrototypeHelios Prototype is the name of a solar- and fuel cell system-powered uninhabited aerial vehicle NASA tested. AeroVironment, Inc. developed the vehicle under NASA's Environmental Research Aircraft and Sensor Technology program. In August, 2001, it set an unofficial world record for sustained altitude by a winged aircraft. It sustained flight at above 96,000 feet for forty minutes, and at one time it flew as high as 96,863 feet. Later, in June, 2003, the Prototype fell into the Pacific Ocean about ten miles west of the Hawaiian Island Kauai. NASA claimed if the concept the Prototype embodied proves itself, then multi-month flight will become possible. Accordingly, Helios was a forerunner of what some call artificial "atmospheric satellites". NASA claimed such atmospheric satellites might someday replace conventional artificial satellites. NASA established two major goals for the Helios Prototype, as follows.
Helios' designSunnyvale, California-based Sunpower Corporation supplied solar cells for Helios. The cells featured a rear-contact cell design that placed wires on the underside of the cells, so as not to obstruct the cells' exposure to solar radiation. The fuel cell systems designed for the Helios Prototype included both regenerative and non-regenerative designs. External links
References
Categories: UAVs and drones | US experimental aircraft 1990-1999
|
|
|