Slides on HyperLoop For college Seminar. Which is fifth mode of transportation. Started working in Los Angelous, India is also working on it to implement in hyderabad. In recent India has won prize for best model development route from mumbai to chennai via bangalore.
2. 1. RAIL relatively slow and expensive
2. ROAD relatively slow
3. WATER relatively slow
4. AIR expensive
5. PIPELINE ?
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3. Hyperloop is a new mode of transport ?
Proposed by ELON MUSK American business magnate,
investor, and inventor. He is currently the CEO & CTO of
SpaceX and CEO & Chief Product Architect of Tesla
Motors.
A high-speed train that promises travel at twice the speed of
a commercial aircraft, transporting passengers from Los
Angeles to San Francisco in just 30 minutes.
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4. A high-level alpha design for the system was published
on August 12, 2013, in a whitepaper posted to the Tesla
and SpaceX blogs.
Musk has also said he invites feedback to "see if the
people can find ways to improve it"; it will be an open
source design, with anyone free to use and modify it.
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5. A Hyperloop would be "an elevated, reduced-pressure
tube that contains pressurized capsules driven within
the tube by a number of linear electric motors.”
This system can achieve an average speed of 598 mph
(962 km/h), and a top speed of 760 mph (1,220 km/h).
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6. Hyperloop consists of a low pressure tube with
capsules that are transported at both low and high
speeds throughout the length of the tube.
Hyperloop conceptual diagram.
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10. Sealed capsules carrying 28 passengers each that travel
along the interior of the tube depart on average every 2
minutes from Los Angeles or San Francisco (up to
every 30 seconds during peak usage hours).
The maximum width is 4.43 ft (1.35 m) and maximum
height is 6.11 ft (1.10 m). With rounded corners, this is
equivalent to a 15 ft2 (1.4 m2) frontal area, not
including any propulsion or suspension components.
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11. The capsules are accelerated via a magnetic linear
accelerator affixed at various stations on the low
pressure tube with rotors contained in each capsule.
Hyperloop passenger capsule subsystem notional locations (not to scale).
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12. For travel at high speeds, the greatest power
requirement is normally to overcome air resistance.
Aerodynamic drag increases with the square of speed,
and thus the power requirement increases with the cube
of speed.
For example, to travel twice as fast a vehicle must
overcome four times the aerodynamic resistance, and
input eight times the power.
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13. The capsules are separated within the tube by
approximately 23 miles (37 km) on average during
operation.
The capsules are supported via air bearings that operate
using a compressed air reservoir and aerodynamic lift.
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19. The tube is made of steel. Two tubes will be welded
together in a side by side configuration to allow the
capsules to travel both directions.
Pylons are placed every 100 ft (30 m) to support the tube.
Solar arrays will cover the top of the tubes in order to
provide power to the system.
high-speed transport more generally, have historically been
impeded by the difficulties in managing friction and air
resistance, both of which become substantial when vehicles
approach high speeds.
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20. Hyperloop capsule in tube cutaway with attached solar arrays.
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high-speed transport more generally, have historically been
impeded by the difficulties in managing friction and air
resistance, both of which become substantial when vehicles
approach high speeds.
21. The expected pressure inside the tube will be
maintained around 100pa (less pressure).
This low pressure minimizes the drag force on the
capsule while maintaining the relative ease of pumping
out the air from the tube.
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22. Linear accelerators are constructed along the length of
the tube at various locations to accelerate the capsules.
Stators are located on the capsules to transfer
momentum to the capsules via the linear accelerators.
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23. There will be a station at Los Angeles and San
Francisco. Several stations along the way will be
possible with splits in the tube.
The majority of the route will follow highway and the
tube will be constructed in the median
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25. Total cost of the Hyperloop passenger transportation system.
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26. Ready when the passenger is ready to travel (road)
Inexpensive (road)
Fast (air)
Environmentally friendly (rail/road via electric cars)
Sustainable (uses solar energy)
Runs trough the median of existing highway
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27. A number of economists and transportation experts
have expressed the belief that the US$6 billion price
tag dramatically understates the cost of designing,
developing, constructing and testing an all-new form of
transportation.
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28. In 1812 the British mechanical engineer and
inventor George Medhurst wrote a book detailing his idea
of transporting passengers and goods through air-tight tubes
using air propulsion.
Atmospheric railways were built in Ireland and England,
most notably the London and Croydon Railway, the first
stage opening in 1846.
The Crystal Palace pneumatic railway operated around
1864 and used large fans, some 22 feet (6.7 m) in diameter,
that were powered by a steam engine. The tunnels are now
lost but the line operated successfully for over a year.
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29. Hyperloop is a new idea of solar powered
transportation system with high speed of up to 800mph,
which is developed by US entrepreneur Elon Musk.
He proposed this transportation system to the route
from the Los Angeles region to the San Francisco Bay
Area. In this presentation, the possibilities and
construction of the system is explained with the details
of different components of the system.
The technical details of the Hyperloop in this
presentation are based on the design details released by
Elon musk on 12th august, 2013.
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30. ◦ Musk, Elon (August 12, 2013). "Hyperloop Alpha". SpaceX.
◦ “Hyperloop” ,Wikipedia
◦ Garber, Megan (July 13, 2012). "The Real iPod: Elon
Musk's Wild Idea for a 'Jetson Tunnel' from S.F. to
L.A.". The Atlantic.
◦ "Beyond the hype of Hyperloop: An analysis of Elon
Musk's proposed transit system".Gizmag.com. August 22,
2013.
◦ Bilton, Nick. "Could the Hyperloop Really Cost $6 Billion?
Critics Say No". The New York Times.
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