Gray Creech blogs from NASA's Green Aviation Summit
Posted on Sep 08, 2010 01:05:28 PM | Kevin J Rohrer | 1 Comments
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(Editor's Note – NASA's
Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate is holding a two-day Green Aviation
Summit conference Sept. 8-9 at NASA's Ames Research Center in Northern
California. Gray Creech of NASA Dryden Flight Research Center's public affairs
staff is attending the summit, and will be periodically blogging on the
highlights of the event as they proceed. His first blog is posted below.)
By Gray Creech NASA Dryden public affairs Sept. 8, 2010, 8:15 a.m. PDT Welcome to the 2010 NASA Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate’s Green Aviation Summit, a proverbial peek-behind-the- curtain for a look at the future of green aviation!
We’re “summiting” here at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., just a stone’s throw from the southern end of San Francisco Bay, in the heart of Silicon Valley. Bear with me as I get our blog going. I could use a cup ‘o java to help bring coherence to the conversation…
Let me introduce “green aviation” -- It’s more than “eco-friendly” flight; it’s a compilation of radical ideas about the next generation of airplanes making less noise, producing less harmful emissions, and achieving better fuel economy.
Imagine standing at the end of an airport runway as a jetliner swoops low, and still being able to hear someone next to you whisper. Imagine these quieter planes being less polluting because of leaner combustion technologies and cleaner fuels. And imagine these aircraft consuming fuel in a miserly fashion, due to better aerodynamics and lightweight composite construction, etc.
I’ll keep you posted the next two days as the Summit unfolds – after I get that first cup of coffee! I’ll be back soon…
Hi Grey,
I caught the tail-end of the Summit as covered by NASA TV, but unfortunately cannot find a video link to see the whole thing.
Who was that last speaker who laid out the challenges with such wise design philosophy? A text of his comments would be great.
TIA for any help locating these sources,
dave santos