Not cars but…
X-57 Electric Plane (nicknamed Maxwell). NASA has announced an experimental electric airplane called the X-57, which could reduce flight times and carbon emissions for passenger planes in the future. The plane, which will test the space agency’s new propulsion technology, is nicknamed after James Clerk Maxwell, the 19th century Scottish physicist who worked in the field of electromagnetism. The space agency’s Scalable Convergent Electric Propulsion Technology Operations Research project plans to build the plane by modifying the existing Italian-designed Tecnam P2006T twin-engine light aircraft. The X-57 will use a long skinny wing embedded with 14 electric motors. Twelve of the motors will be positioned on the leading edge of the plane for take offs and landings, while the larger motor on each wing tip will be used while at cruise altitude. It will be powered only by batteries, eliminating carbon emissions altogether. NASA hopes to demonstrate that X-57 technology could benefit travellers by reducing journey times, aircraft noise and fuel usage, as well as reducing operational costs for small airplanes by as much as 40%. While fuel-powered planes typically need to fly slower in order to get the best fuel efficiency, electric propulsion could help to tackle this problem, according to the space agency. X-57 is part of NASA’s decade-long New Aviation Horizons initiative, which will see it develop as many as five larger X-Planes with the aim of eventually producing them commercially.
source
“To make this journey, we’ll need imagination, but imagination alone is not enough, because the reality of nature is far more wondrous than anything we can imagine.”
These are just a few of the beautiful visual effects from Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey
IC 2944 // Running Chicken Nebula
Also visible are star clusters: Pearl Cluster (left) & Collinder 249 (inside nebula)
Itty bitty Mercury transits the Sun. It was a terribly cloudy morning with really poor seeing, but managed to snap this.
Enceladus, the sixth-largest moon of Saturn
js
Jupiters Clouds from New Horizons via NASA http://ift.tt/291jPFi
Just Space, math/science and nature. Sometimes other things unrelated may pop up.
119 posts