Why doesn't everyone have a jetpack? - Richard Browning

290,582 views ・ 2022-02-10

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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On April 12, 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
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piloted a 2,400 kilogram spacecraft in humanity’s first manned space flight.
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One week later, Bell Aerosystems debuted another advancement in aviation:
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the gas-powered rocket pack.
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Capable of flying 35 meters in just 13 seconds,
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the rocket pack thrilled onlookers.
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But the device’s engineers were less enthused.
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Despite years of cutting-edge work,
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they knew this short flight was all the rocket pack could muster.
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So why was a massive spacecraft easier to send flying than a single pilot?
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According to Newton's laws of motion,
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the physics behind flight are actually quite simple.
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All you need is a powerful enough upward force
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to counteract the downward force of gravity.
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And since objects with more mass experience stronger gravitational forces,
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lighter objects should be easier to get off the ground.
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However, modern jet engines, our primary tool for flight,
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actually get more efficient the larger they are.
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Jet engines work by sucking in huge volumes of air,
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and then expelling that air as quickly as possible.
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While most of this actually bypasses the inner machinery,
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it still contributes to a huge portion of the engine's thrust.
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But the air that does enter the engine’s core gets compressed
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by a series of tightly packed blades.
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That compressed air then enters the combustion chamber,
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where it is injected with jet fuel and ignited.
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The heat causes the compressed air to rapidly expand,
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bursting out of the exhaust and propelling the engine forward.
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As air leaves the engine it also turns a turbine embedded in the exhaust nozzle.
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This turbine powers the fan and the compressor blades,
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creating a cycle that maintains thrust for as long as there’s fuel to burn.
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The more air an engine can take in and expel the more thrust it can produce.
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On a modern jet, the diameter of a frontal fan is larger than a truck.
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And even spinning at relatively low speeds,
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these engines produce more than enough thrust to maintain the necessary speed
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for flying a passenger aircraft.
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But smaller engines simply can’t take in this much air.
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For most of the 20th century, engineers couldn’t produce an engine
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small and light enough for an individual to wear,
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yet powerful enough to lift itself alongside its pilot and fuel.
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Designs could only carry enough fuel for 30 seconds of flight,
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and when airborne, the powerful thrust in a single direction
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made jetpacks difficult and dangerous to control.
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But the new millennium brought advances in materials, manufacturing,
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and computing technology,
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including systems which could manage fuel injection with incredible precision.
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Together, these dramatically improved the fuel efficiency
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and power-to-weight ratio of jet engines.
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By 2016, micro-engines the size of a coffee can
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and weighing less than 2kg
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could achieve 220 Newtons of force.
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This was when an English engineer named Richard Browning
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saw the opportunity to create a new kind of lightweight jetpack.
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In addition to a single engine strapped to the back,
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this so-called Jet Suit involved a pair of micro-engines on each arm
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to split and balance the thrust.
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Working with the back engine, these provided three-points of stability,
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which some pilots describe as being akin to comfortably leaning on crutches
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while a friend supports your back.
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It may seem complicated to manage all these engines at once,
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but many pilots master it in less than a day
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with the help of another advanced computer system— their brain.
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Various brain regions and multiple sensory systems
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perfectly calibrate our sense of balance and spatial orientation,
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helping pilots smoothly direct their flights.
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Slight movements of the arms allow operators to increase and decrease lift,
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quickly turn in mid-air, or glide forward for up to 5 minutes.
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This technology is still fairly new,
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and without major advances in fuel efficiency and engine technology,
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don’t expect to have a jetpack of your own any time soon.
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But if reaching for the sky already got us this far,
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who knows where we'll fly next?
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