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- | ==== Lighter Than Air ==== | ||
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- | ===== In an airship, one does not fly, one does not drive. Instead, one travels in a most beautiful way that gives meaning to the word journey. | ||
- | "The Little Japan" vehicle was developed so hat its creator Kazuya Kanemaru and any volunteer could travel to towns and villages on it. | ||
- | They were searching for a place to launch the attached balloon that was shaped like Little Boy, the nuclear weapon dropped on Hiroshima, on August 6, 1945. | ||
- | {{aeromodeller-madrid_b.jpg|aeromodeller-madrid_b.jpg}}{{panamarenko-orbit-2.jpg|panamarenko-orbit-2.jpg}}\\ | ||
- | Aeromodeller te Madrid: Panamarenko 1969-1971\\ | ||
- | Aeromodeller 1969-1971 (1971): Panamarenko | ||
- | {{gladep.5050.jpg|gladep.5050.jpg}}\\ | ||
- | Silver Inflatable, | ||
- | source: http:// | ||
- | {{tophat_launch_72.jpg|tophat_launch_72.jpg}}\\ | + | |
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+ | ==== Lighter Than Air ==== | ||
+ | |||
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+ | ===== "In an airship, one does not fly, one does not drive. Instead, one travels in a most beautiful way that gives meaning to the word journey." | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
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+ | {{:6bikolp.jpg|}}\\ | ||
+ | "The Little Japan" vehicle was developed so that its creator Kazuya Kanemaru and any volunteer could travel to towns and villages on it.\\ | ||
+ | They were searching for a place to launch the attached balloon that was shaped like Little Boy, the nuclear weapon dropped on Hiroshima, on August 6, 1945.\\ | ||
+ | source: via www.we-make-money-not-art.com | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ----- | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{panamarenko-orbit-2.jpg? | ||
+ | Aeromodeller: | ||
+ | " | ||
+ | "Om te kunnen vliegen moest Panamarenko materiaal kiezen dat licht en stevig was", zegt Van Oosten. "Hij had polyetheen of polypropeen kunnen gebruiken, maar die plastics zijn niet transparant en hij wilde graag een doorzichtige ballon. Daarom koos hij voor 0,35 millimeter dik pvc, dat stevig is en ook transparant." | ||
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+ | |||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | -Unknown Air-oared airship and aeronaut at unknown location (baseball park) circa 1905\\ | ||
+ | -Air-oared airship ~ 1905. Airship build by Captain Thomas C. Baldwin was flown by l. Guy Mecklem | ||
+ | source: http:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{gladep.5050.jpg|gladep.5050.jpg}} | ||
+ | -Silver Inflatable, | ||
+ | source: http:// | ||
+ | -Joel Tauber, Searching for the Impossible: The Flying Project 2003\\ | ||
+ | source: http:// | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tophat_launch_72.jpg? | ||
" | " | ||
Such measurements have become increasingly important for providing information on the initial conditions from which the large-scale structure of the Universe has evolved. The detailed measurement phase promises quantitative answers to some of the fundamental questions of structure evolution in our Universe: How did matter first distribute itself to eventually form the bubbles, voids and galaxy clusters that we observe? What is the amplitude of the quantum fluctuations which existed before the Universe entered the `inflationary' | Such measurements have become increasingly important for providing information on the initial conditions from which the large-scale structure of the Universe has evolved. The detailed measurement phase promises quantitative answers to some of the fundamental questions of structure evolution in our Universe: How did matter first distribute itself to eventually form the bubbles, voids and galaxy clusters that we observe? What is the amplitude of the quantum fluctuations which existed before the Universe entered the `inflationary' | ||
source: http:// | source: http:// | ||
- | Top Hat_launch: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Mong05.jpg_COPYWRIGHT_FOTOT_PAOLO_OGGIONI_.jpg}}\\ | ||
+ | COPYWRIGHT_FOTOT_PAOLO_OGGIONI_FEst: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | NASA's Dryden Flight Research center Photo Collection. | ||
+ | photo ED01-0209-3, | ||
+ | The Helios Prototype wing is shown over the Pacific Ocean during its first testflight on solar-power.\\ | ||
+ | source: www.dfrc.nasa.gov/ | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | Breitling Orbiter, photographed by Jeremy l. Hinton, 1973\\ | ||
+ | Breitling Orbiter 3 was the first balloon to fly around the world non-stop, piloted by Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones. Designed and built by Cameron Balloons, of Bristol, England, Breitling Orbiter 3 stood 55 m (180 ft) tall when fully inflated. The propane gas that fueled the six burners was contained in 28 titanium cylinders mounted in two rows along the sides of the gondola. Concerned about fuel consumption, | ||
- | COPYWRIGHT_FOTOT_PAOLO_OGGIONI_FEst: | ||
- | {{Mong05.jpg_COPYWRIGHT_FOTOT_PAOLO_OGGIONI_.jpg}} | + | {{:wd-below2.jpg? |
+ | {{white-diamond-3.jpg?500}}{{: | ||
+ | In 1995, Graham Dorrington (see links) flew a helium-filled airship (" | ||
+ | source: http:// | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | {{: | ||
+ | Prospective Concepts, a Swiss company developed the Flying Stingray an ultralight lifting body in the shape of a stingray but still using propellers as propulsion.\\ | ||
+ | source: via www.myairship.com/ | ||
- | {{Bg23ana.jpg? | + | \\ |
- | {{Bgo76a.jpg_BREITLING_ORBITER_1..jpg|Bgo76a.jpg_BREITLING_ORBITER_1..jpg}}\\ | + | |
- | BREITLING_ORBITER | + | |
- | {{white-diamond-3.jpg|white-diamond-3.jpg}} | ||
- | {{white-diamond-1.jpg|white-diamond-1.jpg}}\\ | ||
- | The White-Diamond: | ||
- | Dr. Graham Dorrington, as he explores above the treetops of the rainforest canopy with a novel flying device � the dangerous, helium-filled Jungle Airship. | ||