StratoBus seeks to occupy the midpoint between airship and satellite

will be able to hover at an altitude of 20 km (12 miles)
Will be able to hover at an altitude of 20 km (12 miles)
Will be able to hover at an altitude of 20 km (12 miles)

Satellites may be very useful for communications, navigation and other applications, but they’re awfully expensive to build and launch, and once they’re in orbit … well, there’s no reusing them. That’s why a consortium led by Thales Alenia Space is developing the StratoBus. It’s a planned autonomous airship that can be launched like a regular blimp, but that will be able to hover at an altitude of 20 km (12 miles) – that’s up in the stratosphere, hence the name.

According to the company, the StratoBus will be 70 to 100 meters long (230 to 328 ft), and 20 to 30 meters (66 to 98 ft) in width. Its envelope will be made mainly of UV-resistant woven carbon fiber, and its two fuel cell-powered prop motors will allow it to maintain its position, even when subjected to winds blowing at up to 90 km/h (56 mph).

The fuel cell will be located in its nacelle (the bottom part, that sits where the gondola would be on a manned airship), along with an electrolyzer for obtaining hydrogen from an onboard water supply, plus its communications and other electronics. Different nacelles will be swapped on and off of one airship body between missions, as each one will be specially outfitted for its intended purpose. Payloads of up to 200 lb (91 kg) will be possible.

The electrolyzer will be solar-powered. Sunlight will stream into the airship’s “balloon” through a transparent section of the envelope, then reflect off an internal concentrating mirror, and onto a row of solar panels. That section will be able to stay aligned with the sun, as the balloon will rotate relative to the rest of the vehicle.

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See Also
Simulated itinerary of a solar-powered airship in January (winter, blue line), April (spring – green), July (summer – orange) and October (fall – brown), between New York and London (left) and London to New York (right). The airship’s maximum altitude is 3020 meters. (Image: FAU)

 

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