For Dr. Heinrich H. Bülthoff -- one of the leading researchers on the 'MyCopter' project -- it's a serious question.
Making an idiot-proof
flying car that anyone can pilot has involved years of painstaking
research and may be the secret to the long-held dream of firing up the
rotors, levitating and simply flying out of the bumper-to-bumper grind.
Now the European Union
wants to make the dream a reality, researching the feasibility of small
commuter air vehicles to ease the world's traffic congestion.
"It's been a dream of
mine since I read it in science fiction books and in the movies as a
kid, but science fiction is becoming the reality these days," says Dr.
Bülthoff, director of perception, cognition and action at the Max Planck
Institute in Tübingen, Germany.
Under the four-year
project, the EU has drawn together six institutes from across Europe to
look at the problems associated with commuting in personal aviation
vehicles (PAVs). At the center of the research is a focus, not so much
on building the vehicle, but on all the issues and challenges
surrounding commuter aviation.
In the case of his institute, it's how to make the machine accessible to ordinary drivers.
A flying car for everybody
"There's no intention
with this project to actually build the system," explains Dr.Bülthoff
whose research is part of a 2007 EU report called "Out of the Box: Ideas
About the Future of Air Transport". "They said to us 'please, not
another proposal for a flying vehicle' - we have received so many -
there are so many other issues to address," he said.
These challenges involve
setting up "virtual corridor" traffic systems in the sky that guide
PAVs under existing aircraft, using advances in swarm technology to stop
them crashing into each other and working on landing systems that do
not involve air traffic controllers.
"If you want to make a
flying car it should be for everybody, but you can't make every car
driver into a pilot," he said. "The idea is to fly in uncontrolled
airspace without interfering with all the other aircraft."
He said the plan is to
make the flying vehicles so intelligent, they communicate with each
other and avoid collisions without any human input.
Keeping it simple
His institute, in
particular, is focused on the problems of the human-machine interface:
creating a design that reduces the withering array of dials and monitors
in a helicopter or plane into a few simple controls on a dashboard.
Keeping the simple
steering wheel on a flying vehicle -- where controls must make
adjustments for traveling through three rather than two dimensions --
has been just one of the challenges of the project.
"For more than 100 years
cars have used the steering wheel. It was a good idea for cars, but if
you make the transition to the air why should a driver learn something
completely new?" he said.
Pilotless planes
The aircraft would be
largely autonomous and would, for the most part, need no piloting at
all. Flying through "highways in the sky" - flight paths designed to
host swarms of PAVs flying in formation - the PAVs would avoid obstacles
and select landing spots autonomously by using intelligent sight
sensors.
The controls would be
shared between the pilot and the machine allowing for what researchers
call "comprehensive situational awareness." So-called "haptic" controls
that put a feeling of resistance in the steering wheel would allow
drivers to know when they were edging towards the confines of the
"highway in the sky".
Other aspects of the study have looked at the social impact of PAVs as the commuter vehicle of the future.
A flying car it should be for everybody, but you can't make every car driver into a pilot
Dr. Heinrich H. Bülthoff
Dr. Heinrich H. Bülthoff
"Many people might ask whether we really want thousands of these things buzzing around in the sky," Dr Bülthoff said.
Researchers have been
looking at ways of constructing PAV flight paths above existing freeways
and roads to minimize the environmental impact, keeping the flight
ceiling at 50 meters to avoid commercial aircraft.
While flying time is
relatively short due to the constraints of battery life using current
technology, researchers on the project had found that 90 percent of
commuter trips were shorter than 25 km (15 miles) and averaged about 30
minutes with peak hour delays of about 15 minutes, making a PAV perfect
for short hop journeys from work to home.
Google holds open the door
Dr Bülthoff said recent
advances, and social acceptance of, Google's driverless car had given
real hope to researchers on the project.
"That really makes me
very optimistic," he said. "The car industry has been producing the same
basic model of automobile for more than 100 years. Google is doing
something that is making the car industry wake up. I would never have
expected that several states in the United States have legalized
autonomous driving, for example."
"Even so, there are many
issues still to be examined. Legally, for instance, if there's no
driver we don't know who's responsible in case of a crash. These
questions still need to be answered."
While the driverless car
is now a reality, he says it might be some time yet before anyone can
walk into a dealership and buy a personal aviation vehicle.
"The timescale is to
have them available by 2050," says Dr Bülthoff. "But I am not likely to
be around in 2050, so I'm quietly optimistic that we will have one
before that."
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