High-flying wing destroyed in crash.The unmanned NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. aircraft that holds the world record for high-altitude flight without rocket propulsion Rocket propulsion The process of imparting a force to a flying vehicle, such as a missile or a spacecraft, by the momentum of ejected matter. This matter, called propellant, is stored in the vehicle and ejected at high velocity. recently broke up over the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii. The solar-powered flyer, known as Helios, was of a remarkable design intended to achieve slow, long-duration flights at extreme heights. A single, 75-meter-long wing, the craft was equipped with landing gear and electrically driven propellers. During a low-altitude flight on June 26, Helios began to pitch back and forth, and then it fell apart, NASA reports. The remote control aircraft apparently had accelerated to a faster speed than it was intended to handle, says Robert F. Curtin of AeroVironment of Monrovia, Calif., the company that designed and built Helios. For years, NASA has been developing Helios and a sister aircraft known as Pathfinder pathfinder /path·find·er/ (path´find?er) 1. an instrument for locating urethral strictures. 2. a dental instrument for tracing the course of root canals. path·find·er n. (SN: 8/2/97, p. 75) as substitutes for satellites that relay telecommunications signals and survey Earth. A subsidiary of AeroVironment plans to commercialize such aircraft as conduits for Internet traffic Internet traffic is the flow of data around the Internet. It includes web traffic, which is the amount of that data that is related to the World Wide Web, along with the traffic from other major uses of the Internet, such as electronic mail and peer-to-peer networks. , high-definition-television broadcasts, and cell phone signals. Sticking to those goals, both NASA and AeroVironment say they intend to learn from the mishap (language) MISHAP - An early system on the IBM 1130. [Listed in CACM 2(5):16, May 1959]. and push forward. A new Helios-like vehicle will cost about $15 million, Curtin says.--P.W. |
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