The future of human flight arrived quietly, at a time when no one was clocking up air miles. It was June 2020 and the skies were unusually empty as the world reeled at the speed of the COVID-19 outbreak. But down on the ground, something pretty huge was happening with a very small aircraft.
EASA, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, certified a two-seater plane made in Slovenia as safe to fly. Within a few years it was certified by equivalent bodies in the UK, the US and elsewhere. The Pipistrel Velis Electro became the first fully certified electric aircraft in the world. It's still the only one. "The achievement represents a growing interest and trust in the reliability of electric aircraft," says Dr Tine Tomažič, director of engineering and programmes at Pipistrel. "We recently completed production of our 100th Velis Electro, marking a significant milestone for Pipistrel and the industry."
The future is already here, says Tomažič, but to borrow a line from sci-fi author William Gibson, it's far from evenly distributed. Despite a growing number of cleaner aircraft in development, there remain big questions about the alternative fuels required to fly them, and more still about the political will to make it all happen. After several abandoned take-offs, is this the moment that air travel finally goes green? Or is zerocarbon flight still the stuff of blue-sky thinking?
CLIMATE IMPACT
"Right now, aviation isn't a major contributor to climate change," says Dr Guy Gratton, somewhat unexpectedly. Gratton is associate professor of aviation and the environment at Cranfield University in the UK. An aeronautical engineer by trade, he's also a test pilot who flies experimental electric aircraft - in other words, he knows what he's talking about.
Bu hikaye BBC Science Focus dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye BBC Science Focus dergisinin June 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
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IS IT SAFE TO RUN EVERY DAY, OR SHOULD I DITCH MY RUN STREAK TO SAVE MY KNEES?
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WHAT IS MEXICO'S BLUE HOLE?
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HOW CAN I TELL IF I'VE GOT HIGH CORTISOL LEVELS?
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THE LUNGFISH
In 1836, European scientists discovered a peculiar animal from the River Amazon that they struggled to identify. Its eel-like body was a few feet long and its air-filled lungs persuaded anatomists it must be a reptile.
ARE WE THE ONLY SPECIES TO HAVE BEEN THROUGH A STONE AGE?
The Stone Age might conjure up images of early humans, sitting around a campfire or hunting prehistoric beasts, but evidence shows that we're not the only species that has learned how to work with stone tools. Wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) use stone tools to crack open nuts.
Should we scrap daylight saving time?
Most of us look forward to the extra hour we get in bed every October, but researchers argue that changing the clocks twice a year harms our health
THE INTERNET OF ANIMALS
SCIENTISTS ARE USING ELECTRONIC TAGS AND SATELLITES TO TRACK WILD ANIMALS AND CREATE A DATA NETWORK THAT COULD HELP US ADDRESS THE BIODIVERSITY CRISIS
MUSIC FOR A DISTRACTED GENERATION
The number of things competing for our attention is often overwhelming. Can dreamy soundscapes created with neuroscience help our bewildered brains to concentrate?