| Since the
dawn of powered flight, all aircraft have had to carry onboard
fuel to stay aloft. But a team of researchers from the Marshall
Center, NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif.,
and the University of Alabama in Huntsville is trying to change
that. The team has developed and demonstrated the first -ever
small -scale aircraft that flies solely from power delivered by an
invisible, ground -based laser.

Ever since the dawn of powered flight, it has been necessary for
all aircraft to carry onboard fuel — whether in the form of
batteries, fuel, solar cells, or even a human "engine" — in order
to stay aloft.
But a team of researchers from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
in Huntsville, Ala., NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at
Edwards, Calif., and the University of Alabama in Huntsville is
trying to change that.
They have now chalked up a major accomplishment… and a "first."
The team has developed and demonstrated a small -scale aircraft
that flies solely by means of propulsive power delivered by an
invisible, ground -based laser. The laser tracks the aircraft in
flight, directing its energy beam at specially designed
photovoltaic cells carried onboard to power the plane's propeller.

"The craft could keep flying as long as the energy
source, in this case the laser beam, is uninterrupted," said
Robert Burdine, Marshall's laser project manager for the test.
"This is the first time that we know of that a plane has been
powered only by the energy of laser light. It really is a
groundbreaking development for aviation."
"We feel this really was a tremendous success for the project,"
added David Bushman, project manager for beamed power at Dryden.
"We are always trying to develop new technologies that will enable
new capabilities in flight, and we think this is a step in the
right direction."

The plane, with its five -foot wingspan, weighs
only 11 ounces and is constructed from balsa wood, carbon fiber
tubing and is covered with Mylar film, a cellophane -like
material. Designed and built at Dryden, the aircraft is a one -of
-a -kind, radio -controlled model airplane. A special panel of
photovoltaic cells, selected and tested by team participants at
the University of Alabama in Huntsville, is designed to
efficiently convert the energy from the laser wavelength into
electricity to power a small electric motor that spins the
propeller.

The lightweight, low -speed plane was flown
indoors at Marshall to prevent wind and weather from affecting the
test flights. After the craft was released from a launching
platform inside the building, the laser beam was aimed at the
airplane panels, causing the propeller to spin and propel the
craft around the building, lap after lap. When the laser beam was
turned off, the airplane glided to a landing.
The team made a similar series of demonstration flights in 2002 at
Dryden, using a theatrical searchlight as a power source. The
recent flights at Marshall are the first known demonstration of an
aircraft flying totally powered by a ground -based laser. The
demonstration is a key step toward the capability to beam power to
a plane aloft. Without the need for onboard fuel or batteries,
such a plane could carry scientific or communication equipment,
for instance, and stay in flight indefinitely. The concept offers
potential commercial value to the remote sensing and
telecommunications industries, according to Bushman.
"A telecommunications company could put transponders on an
airplane and fly it over a city," Bushman said. "The aircraft
could be used for everything from relaying cell phone calls to
cable television or Internet connections."
Laser power beaming is a promising technology for future
development of aircraft design and operations. The concept
supports NASA’s mission -critical goals for the development of
revolutionary aerospace technologies. |