What is hyperloop technology and how fast will it go?
- by THE WEEK
- Jul 24, 2018
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The SpaceX hyperloop competition gives engineers the chance to show off their designs
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The Berlin university’s Warr Hyperloop win was their third in a row, having managed a time of 200mph (323kph) last year. The team hope that their pod design will be used when, or if, hyperloop trains are launched as a form of public transport.
What is hyperloop technology?
Hyperloop is a hi-tech, superfast transport concept that is the brainchild of Tesla and SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk.
The South African-born billionaire outlined the idea of the transport system in a 2013 research paper called Hyperloop Alpha, says tech news site ZDNet.
Musk envisages a train-like vehicle that can pass through near-vacuum tubes while levitating above a magnetic rail, a system referred to as maglev. The lack of friction resulting from the vacuum environment and maglev system means the vehicle can reach far higher speeds than standard trains.
However, Musk claims he is too busy running Tesla and SpaceX to explore the hyperloop concept, so he instead made the technology “available to anyone who wanted to develop it”, The Independent says. The annual SpaceX competition offers engineers the chance to showcase their ideas for the futuristic transport system.
The concept is also being developed by two other major firms, Hyperloop Transportation Technologies (HTT), based in California, and the Richard Branson-backed Virgin Hyperloop One.
HTT has yet to grab the headlines with new speed records, but according to news site CNBC, the company signed a deal with a Chinese government-owned transport company last week to build a test track in the province of Guizhou.
Virgin Hyperloop One, meanwhile, received a cash-injection of $50m (£38m) from Branson last December, bringing the company’s total funding up to $295m (£225m) since its inception in 2014.
How fast can it go?
In Musk’s 2013 research paper, the billionaire claimed that hyperloop systems would be capable of travelling at speeds of up to 620mph (1,000kph).
However, no one has managed to come close to that yet, with the 284mph run from the German students proving the fastest so far.
What’s more, while the students’ achievement is impressive, says CNet, their pod was “only about the size of a child”. Pods of the size required for transportation would cause more drag, potentially slowing them down.
Branson’s hyperloop firm has reportedly achieved a top speed of 240mph (385kph) during private testing using a full-scale transport pod, reports CNet.
“Which of these represents more progress toward the hyperloop dream” is still to be seen, the news site adds.
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