[フレーム]

Our adventure

In 2015 started the attempt of the First Round-The-World Solar Flight, from Abu Dhabi to Hawaii, already achieving the longest solo solar flight ever achieved in aviation history. In 2016, Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg, our two Pilots and Founders, completed the first circumnavigation of the globe with no fuel. With their solar aircraft, a flying laboratory full of clean technologies, they flew 40,000 km to promote the use of renewable energies and energy efficiency on the ground, for a better quality of life. Across the Round-The-World flight, the team overcame technical, human and operational challenges that had never been faced before.

Route

Around the world in a solar airplane

watch the video

After the 8 world records set by the Solar Impulse prototype, when it became the first solar airplane ever to fly through the night, between two continents, and across the United States, Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg accomplished the ultimate phase of the adventure: the 2015-2016 First Round-The-World Solar Flight.

40,000 km from Abu Dhabi, our departure and arrival Host City, to India, Myanmar, China, Japan, U.S.A and back to Europe and Abu Dhabi. As with all great firsts, there were no benchmarks. Strategies had to be invented from scratch to allow Solar Impulse 2 to fly across the Pacific for 5 consecutive days and nights, and become the first solar airplane to accomplish an oceanic crossing. This historic and record-breaking flight from Japan to Hawaii was achieved by André Borschberg in July 2015, proving that clean technologies can accomplish incredible things. Bertrand Piccard then finished crossing the Pacific, and flew over the Atlantic, making Si2 furthermore the first solar plane to have crossed the world’s two biggest oceans.

Read more

Leg 1
Abu Dhabi to Muscat
2015年03月09日

Leg 2
Muscat to Ahmedabad
2015年03月10日

Leg 3
Ahmedabad to Varanasi
2015年03月18日

Leg 4
Varanasi to Mandalay
2015年03月19日

Leg 5
Mandalay to Chongqing
2015年03月30日

Leg 6
Chongqing to Nanjing
2015年04月21日

Leg 7
Nanjing to Nagoya
2015年06月01日

Leg 8
Nagoya to Hawaii
2015年07月03日

Leg 9
Hawaii to San Francisco
2016年04月24日

Leg 10
San Francisco to Phoenix
2016年05月03日

Leg 11
Phoenix to Tulsa
2016年05月13日

Leg 12
Tulsa to Dayton
2016年05月22日

Leg 13
Dayton to Lehigh Valley
2016年05月26日

Leg 14
Lehigh Valley to New York
2016年06月11日

Leg 15
New York to Seville
2016年06月23日

Leg 16
Seville to Cairo
2016年07月13日

Leg 17
Cairo to Abu Dhabi
2016年07月26日

2 years around the world to achieve 40 000km without a drop of fuel is an aviation first as well as a first for energy. Discover the wrap up of the mission, the key moments and outcomes

Read more about the mission's key numbers

Record breaking

ANDRE BORSCHBERG’S 117 HOURS OCEANIC FLIGHT REALIZES BERTRAND PICCARD’S VISION

watch the video

An historic aviation first as well as a premiere for renewable energies and clean technologies. Bertrand Piccard’s vision of an airplane of perpetual endurance, able to fly day and night without fuel is now realized. André Borschberg, leaving Nagoya and landing in Hawaii 5 days and nights later, proved we can achieve incredible things with clean technologies.

Landing on July 3rd 2015 after 117hours and 52minutes, André Borschberg’s flight from Japan to Hawaii marks the completion of 13 years of pioneering research and development. Bertrand Piccard’s vision, coupled with André Borschberg’s entrepreneurial mindset, and the skills of a multi-disciplinary team, have enabled an idea to become a reality. And this even though no aviation specialist, apart from Dassault, believed it could be possible: "Too big, too light and impossible to control in flight", they all said.

Read more about the flight...

Zero-fuel aircraft

The airplane of perpetual endurance

Solar Impulse is not the first solar airplane, but it is the first to fly day and night, without any fuel, only using energy stored in its batteries. It is also the first to have crossed oceans: 5 days and nights from Nagoya, Japan, to Kalaeloa, Hawaii; 3 days and 2 nights from Kalaeloa to San Francisco; and 3 days and nights from New York to Seville, Spain. Behind Solar Impulse’s achievements, there is always the same goal: show that if an airplane can fly several days and nights in a row with no fuel, then clean technologies can be used on the ground to reduce our energy consumption, and create profit and jobs.

The plane’s unusual look undoubtedly helped the message of the project to be spread worldwide. The wingspan of a Boeing 747 Jumbo Jet, the weight of a family car, the power of a small motorcycle, Solar Impulse 2 is the largest aircraft ever built with such a low weight.

Capacity
1 pilot
Wingspan
72 m
Weight
2.3 tons
Number of solar cells
17,248
Number of propellers and batteries
4
Total energy produced from Abu Dhabi to Abu Dhabi
11655 kWh
Maximum flight time achieved
117 hours 52 minutes (André Borschberg)
Maximum altitude
28,000 feet
Average airspeed
75 km/h
Maximum recorded ground speed
216 km/h
Fuel consumption
0 L

« To build an airplane of the size of a 747 with the weight of a car, something which was considered impossible by the aviation industry, we had to develop the right mindset in order to push the limits of the technologies. With Partners who believed in the same vision we developed solutions to make our airplanes very energy efficient. All these technologies can be used today in other applications to make our world more energy efficient as well. »
André Borscherg

Technical challenges

Engineering a revolutionary airplane

watch the video

Solar Impulse 2 was built to take up the challenge of achieving the first round-the-world solar flight. This revolutionary airplane had to do what no one had ever done before: fly through several consecutive days and nights to cross oceans without using any fuel. André Borschberg achieved such an oceanic crossing during his record-breaking flight from Nagoya to Hawaii.

Our challenge: to take an airplane to such a high level of energy efficiency that it could fly day and night relying only on the sun. This required the optimization of new kinds of technology and a drastic reduction in energy consumption. The components normally used in aircraft construction were far too heavy for Solar Impulse.

Solar Impulse’s 80 engineers and technicians, under André Borschberg’s leadership, thus had to find highly innovative solutions. What major civil and military aircraft makers thought impossible was achieved by the ingenuity of a small team.

« Imagine energy reserves increasing during flight! To make this dream a reality, we had to make maximum use of every single watt supplied by the sun, and store it in our batteries. We tracked down every possible source of energy efficiency. »
André Borschberg

Energy

Read more

Propulsion

Read more

Lightness

Read more

Human challenges

At the controls for 5 days and 5 nights

view the cockpit in 360

The long flights of this adventure represented a challenge of endurance and vigilance for a single pilot in an unheated and unpressurized 3.8m3 cockpit.

Crossing the Pacific and Atlantic oceans introduced a new kind of difficulty for our pilots Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg. The Round-The-World Solar Flight represented approximately a 40,000km journey. Although achieved in several legs, Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg cumulated around 500 flight hours in the tiny cockpit.

The pilot had to have exceptional stamina to control this plane which is sensitive to turbulence due to its broad wings and light weight.

« What is really special, is that it is the first and only airplane in the world which has unlimited endurance. We have an airplane which is fully sustainable in terms of energy, and our challenge now is to make the pilot sustainable as well. »
André Borschberg

Unpressurized & unheated cockpit

Read more

Endurance & Vigilance

Read more

Piloting performance

Read more

Flight strategies

Guiding Si2 around the world

Even though the pilot was on his own in the plane, he was not alone. He was in contact by satellite with the Monaco Mission Control Center (MCC), where the team monitored the route and managed performance and energy. Weathermen, mathematicians, air traffic controllers, planning engineers, flight director ... all gathered to predict all possible scenarios and prepare a flight strategy.

« The MCC is an essential link for the success of Solar Impulse's round-the-world tour. This is where the decisions are made for the departure and routes of each stage. It is via the MCC that the pilot is in contact with the whole world. »
André Borschberg

« The Mission Control Center is the nerve center of the the project. It is where all the information from the plane, takeoff and landing sites is gathered and shared with the world, to allow everyone to follow our adventure and understand our message about clean technologies. The fact that Monaco has been selected results from a long established friendship with Prince Albert II who, in addition to being a patron of Solar Impulse, is one of the only Heads of State to champion environmental protection at all political discussions. »
Bertrand Piccard

Multi-disciplinary team

Read more

A flight embedded in the MCC

Coming soon

Operational challenges

Behind the scenes

Landing on the biggest international airports with an experimental aircraft, no hangar big enough to house the aircraft... not a problem for the ground crew. The men and women behind the scene made it possible for Si2 and its pilot to go around in a safe and secured way, organizing aircraft safety, movements, technical tests and check-up in coordination with the mission engineers at the MCC.

« The ground crew is a team of about 20 members dealing with a lot of things, mainly the handling on the aircraft from the hangar to takeooff, and at landings until the aircraft is safe into a hangar or its mobile hangar. Add a lot of uncertainties on international airports and you can be sure the team has a lot of challenges! But it is also an immense pleasure to be at the forefront. »
Nils Ryser, Head of Ground Crew

Aircraft Handling

Coming soon

Aircraft Protection

Coming soon

Airplane Transportation

Coming soon

History

Solar Aviation History

Solar Impulse is not the first solar airplane ever designed, but it is certainly the most ambitious. None of its predecessors has ever managed to fly right through the night with a pilot on board.

Solar aviation began with model aircrafts in the 1970s, when affordable solar cells appeared on the market. But it was not until 1980 that the first human flights were accomplished.

« Solar Impulse was not built to carry passengers, but to carry messages. We want to demonstrate the importance of the pioneering spirit, to encourage people to question what they’ve always taken for granted. The world need to find new ways of improving the quality of life. Clean technologies and renewable forms of energy are part of the solution. »
Bertrand Piccard

1978: Solar One
Read more

1981: Gossamer Penguin & Solair 1
Read more

1990: Sunseeker
Read more

1996: Icaré II
Read more

2001: Helios
Read more

2005: Drone night flight
Read more

2010: Zephyr
Read more

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /