Human-powered chopper flies into the record books



WASHINGTON: A Canadian-built helicopter that is powered by a human riding a bicycle has become the first winner of a decades-old $250,000 engineering prize. 

The American Helicopter Society had never given out its Igor Sikorsky Human-Powered Helicopter Award — initiated 33 years ago — until the team from the University of Toronto snatched it this week. 

The challenge was to create a flying machine that would be able to reach a height of three metres, fly for 60 seconds by human power alone, and stay in a 10 by 10 metre area. 

"It was long seen as impossible to win this," AHS International executive director Mike Hirschberg told AFP. 

The winning vehicle is called the Atlas, and was designed by a team of about 20 students and young professionals. 

The aircraft is extremely light — just 55 kg — but it spans a sprawling 162 feet (49.4 metres). 

"This is not about creating a practical machine," said Hirschberg. "This is to set a challenge for young engineers, to harness their creativity and technical skills and to experience working as a team against really, extremely challenging requirements ," he added. 

"It is sort of like climbing Mount Everest for the first time — to prove it can be done." 

The winning June 13 flight was pedalled by team leader Todd Reichert , 31, an aerodynamics expert and competitive speed skater. 

Reichert is chief aerodynamicist at a company called AeroVelo , which was created by the students in their mission to win the competition's cash. 

AeroVelo co-founder Cameron Robertson, 26, said the aircraft is designed to be ridden by someone 160 pounds or less. 

It also requires a fairly strong pedaller, requiring about one horsepower to operate, when the average person could probably manage a half horsepower, he said. 

Robertson said the team was motivated by the prospect of "showing people that impossible is nothing." 

The $250,000 prize, which was formally awarded Thursday after about a month of technical review of the winning flight, was also a key factor. 

Winning it will allow the team to invest more in AeroVelo and support research with the current crop of University of Toronto engineering students, Robertson said. 

The prize is named for Igor Sikorsky, a Russian born engineer and pilot who came to America in 1919 and in 1939 designed and flew the first successful single main rotor helicopter in the world. 

The amount was set at $10,000 when the award was initiated in 1980 and was soon raised to $25,000. 

But no-one ever won, and the program stagnated through much of the 1990s and 2000s until Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation agreed in 2009 to raise the amount to $250,000. 

"That quarter of a million dollars absolutely brought out some of the best innovators and the best talents in tackling this challenge," said Hirschberg. 

The first prize attempt at a human powered helicopter was by California Polytechnic State University, which flew its craft for 8.6 seconds at a height of eight inches off the ground in 1989, according to AHS. A team from Nihon University in Japan set the endurance record for the prize with almost 20 seconds in 1994.

For the winning University of Toronto AeroVelo team, Robertson said the next lofty challenge is building an extremely lightweight bicycle that can reach human-pedalled speeds of 120 kilometres per hour.

Internet use may help in dealing with depression: Study

Internet use may help in dealing with depression: Study
The New Zealand Mental Health Foundation has praised social media and has dubbed it as the modern equivalent to picking up the phone.(Thinkstock photos/Getty Images)
WELLINGTON: Mental health experts have analysed that the increased popularity of Internet use can be considered as helpful in easing depression.

According to Stuff.co.nz, mental health experts are now putting in more attention to what people suffering from depression say online in order to reach out for help.

The New Zealand Mental Health Foundation has praised social media and has dubbed it as the modern equivalent to picking up the phone.

Chief executive Judi Clements said that people started to recognise in the 1950s that someone would be more likely to phone a friend to tell them they were depressed than visit them, however, now people don't think of phone call, but think of Facebook.

Clements said that people would often find it easier to talk to strangers online, and it could be great therapy to allow them to talk without discomfort, embarrassment, or shame as they feel more liberated to talk to somebody that doesn't know them, doesn't know their history, doesn't know their baggage.

The report said that the foundation was looking to develop ways to set off an alert if someone on social media appeared to be at risk of hurting themselves.

On handling cases seeking help online, Clements said that one should give the person a number to call, send them the link, keep the dialogue open and give them any support or help one can.

Clements stressed that if it seemed like someone was in danger, one should not hesitate to call emergency services.

She believes that talking to somebody was always a great option, and it need not be a trained therapist or counselor and it was proven that exercise helps depression, the report added.

no exoplanet has the potential to be a home away from home


Astronomers find blue planet where it rains glass


PARIS: Astronomers said on Thursday they had found another blue planet a long, long way from Earth -- no water world, but a scorching, hostile place where it rains glass, sideways.
Using the Hubble Space Telescope, scientists from Nasa and its European counterpart, ESA, have for the first time determined the true colour of an exoplanet, celestial bodies which orbit stars other than our own Sun.
They concluded that HD 189733b, a gas giant 63 light-years from our own planet, was a deep cobalt blue, "reminiscent of Earth's colour as seen from space."
"But that's where the similarities end," said a statement.
This planet orbits very close to its host star and its atmosphere is heated to over 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 degrees Fahrenheit).
"It rains glass, sideways, in howling 7,000 kilometre-per-hour (4,350 miles-per-hour) winds," said the statement.
The planet is one of the nearest exoplanets to Earth that can be seen crossing the face of its star, and has been intensively studied by Hubble and other telescopes.
"Measuring its colour is a real first -- we can actually imagine what this planet would look like if we were able to look at it directly," said Frederic Pont of the University of Exeter, who co-wrote the paper in Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Pont and a team measured how much light was reflected off the planet's surface, a property known as Albedo, in order to calculate its colour.
The blue comes not from the reflection of a tropical ocean, as in Earth's case, but a hazy, turbulent atmosphere believed to be laced with silicate particles -- the stuff of which glass is made.
These particles scatter blue light, said the team.
HD 189733b is an example of a "hot Jupiter" planet, similar in size to the gas giants in our own Solar System, but closer to their parent star.
"It's difficult to know exactly what causes the colour of a planet's atmosphere, even for planets in the Solar System," said Pont.
"But these new observations add another piece of the puzzle over the nature and atmosphere of HD 189733b. We are slowly painting a more complete picture of this exotic planet."
A total of 723 confirmed extrasolar planets have been found since the first was spotted in 1995, according to a tally kept by the website http://exoplanets.org.
More than 3,000 sightings by the specialist Kepler orbital telescope await confirmation.
So far, no exoplanet spotted has the potential to be a home away from home; a rocky planet that orbits in a balmy zone, enabling water to exist in liquid form and thus nurture life as we know it.