Student Team Builds Solar-Powered Helicopter

Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!

Originally published on Nexus Media.
By Jeremy Deaton

This year we saw a solar-powered plane circumnavigate the globe and a solar-powered boat gear up to do the same. As of last week, we can add to that list of clean energy marvels the first-ever piloted flight of a solar-powered helicopter.

1-udn-pcfps4jdfvrj1ocwbqA team of undergraduates at the University of Maryland has developed a four-rotor helicopter equipped with an array of solar panels. The craft took to the air for nine seconds, lifting more than a foot off of the ground. (By point of comparison, the Wright Brothers’ first flight lasted just 12 seconds.)

Source: University of Maryland

The team that built the aircraft previously achieved the longest-ever flight of a human-powered helicopter. (Eat your heart out, Leonardo da Vinci.) Either tired from pedaling or low on carbs, they turned their sights to the sun. Their new invention builds off of the previous design, but it requires a lot less legwork.

“This project has come a long way in the past six or seven years from human-power to solar-power,” said University of Maryland PhD candidate William Staruk, who assisted with the flight. “So we are breaking barriers of all sorts in aviation with this one airframe, and we are very proud of that work here at the University of Maryland.”

Reprinted with permission.


Have a tip for CleanTechnica? Want to advertise? Want to suggest a guest for our CleanTech Talk podcast? Contact us here.

Latest CleanTechnica.TV Video


Advertisement
 
CleanTechnica uses affiliate links. See our policy here.

Guest Contributor

We publish a number of guest posts from experts in a large variety of fields. This is our contributor account for those special people, organizations, agencies, and companies.

Guest Contributor has 4389 posts and counting. See all posts by Guest Contributor