• DocumentCode
    1365950
  • Title

    Tom swift and his electric airship

  • Author

    Blair-Smith, Hugh

  • Author_Institution
    Down to the Metal, Dennis, MA, USA
  • Volume
    26
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    4
  • Lastpage
    11
  • Abstract
    Sooner or later, the practices we call “green” will have to expand from the token gestures we make today (turning down the thermostat and driving hybrids) to a nearly universal avoidance of oxidizing fossil carbon. In terms of aviation, it´s time to start thinking about how to move people and goods, in commercial quantities, with a zero-carbon footprint; indeed there are several schemes afoot. The pioneering Boeing and Lange/DLR fuel-cell prototype airplanes are an encouraging sign up to a point, but it seems more than bold to suggest that these models can be scaled up to commercial adequacy. The USAF/DARPA high-altitude Intel blimp provides ample carrying capacity and a ceiling of 65,000 feet, but again, not much of a useful turn of speed. Popular Science has reported on multiple-gas vehicles like the Sanswire STS-111 Stratellite and airship concepts such as Igor Pasternak´s Aeroscraft. Of these, only the last seems to be well-targeted toward the goal, according to some accounts. This undertakes to apply some of the perennial concerns participants to a global fleet of dirigibles featuring fuel-cell-powered propulsion. That is, it adopts a global-system view taking the development of suitable vehicles for granted, rather than focusing on the vehicle innovations as their developers must primarily do. Discussions include performance and safety requirements for the airships, new terminal area concepts, collaborative-autonomous situational awareness and collision avoidance, weather considerations, in-flight refueling and towing, and intermodal possibilities.
  • Keywords
    aerospace propulsion; airships; fuel cell vehicles; Lange-DLR fuel-cell prototype airplanes; Tom swift; USAF-DARPA high-altitude Intel blimp; collision avoidance; commercial quantities; electric airship; fossil carbon; fuel-cell-powered propulsion; igor pasternak aeroscraft; in-flight refueling; intermodal possibilities; multiple-gas vehicles; sanswire STS-111 stratellite; zero-carbon footprint; Aerospace electronics; Aircraft manufacture; Electric vehicles; Energy consumption; Fuel cells; Green design;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Aerospace and Electronic Systems Magazine, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0885-8985
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MAES.2011.6065652
  • Filename
    6065652