http://web.mit.edu/invent/n-pressreleases/n-press-06SP.html

MIT STUDENT WINS PRESTIGIOUS AWARD
FOR FLYING CAR AND OTHER INNOVATIONS

Carl Dietrich Awarded $30,000 Lemelson-MIT
Student Prize for Inventiveness


CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (February 15, 2006) - Carl Dietrich sees life’s
irritations not as realities to tolerate, but as sources of inspiration.
The 28-year-old winner of this year’s $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize
has recently found inspiration in America’s congested highways and major
airports.

The Ph.D. candidate in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s
Aeronautics and Astronautics program received the prestigious award for a
portfolio of novel inventions, including a new Personal Air Vehicle; a
desktop-sized fusion reactor; and a lower-cost rocket engine.

"Carl joins a long line of independent inventors who are passionate about
finding innovative ways to address society’s fundamental problems," said
Merton Flemings, director of the Lemelson-MIT Program, which sponsors the
award. "He is not afraid to tackle the challenges many inventors before
him have abandoned. Carl’s ability to look at big problems in creative
ways and come up with practical solutions makes him just the type of
person we look to honor with the $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize."


Flight On Demand

Dietrich’s most recent invention is a Personal Air Vehicle concept he
calls Transition. It is a flying car that relies on the nation’s thousands
of underutilized public-access airports to provide a practical
transportation alternative to travelers whose trips range between 100 and
500 miles.

"If you were taking a trip between 100 and 500 miles right now, chances
are you’d probably drive unless you were going between two airport hubs,"
Dietrich said. "Driving is fine, but it can take you half a day to reach
your destination, and you are subject to unpredictable traffic. Commercial
airlines are effective for trips over 500 miles, but…they don’t really
attack the short-hop market very well. Personal Air Vehicles open up a lot
of possibilities in freedom to get around. They offer convenience and
flexibility to fit the traveler’s schedule."

Dietrich’s Transition can be driven on any surface road and requires only
a sport pilot’s license to fly. The SUV-sized vehicle can be stored in
most home garages and has folding wings that enable it to operate both on
the ground and in the air. It can carry two people with their bags up to
500 miles on a single tank of premium unleaded gasoline.

The Transition also offers modern safety features including an electronic
center of gravity calculator (important for weight distribution in flying
mode), GPS navigation unit, front and rear crumple zones, airbags, and
patent-pending deformable aerodynamic bumpers. Since the driver’s
visibility is impaired when the wings are folded up, a tiny camera system
embedded in the vertical tails provides direct views of blind spots. 


Timely Take Off

Dietrich admits a flying car is not a novel idea, but he points to a
confluence of circumstances that make the timing right for it to finally
take off. "Since 9/11, for the first time, average door-to-door travel
speed has really dropped substantially due to a combination of increased
security measures at airports and more road traffic," he noted.

He also calls Federal Aviation Administration regulations on light sport
aircraft that went into effect in 2004 "a huge opportunity in general
aviation." The new regulations reduced the training-hour requirements for
people seeking light-sport pilot licenses, and they reduced the amount of
paperwork necessary to bring a certified aircraft to market.

Dietrich and four MIT colleagues have recently launched a start-up company
called Terrafugia to further develop the Transition and eventually bring
it to market at a price that is accessible to the traveling and business
public.

"With the money from the $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize, I think we
will be able to build a full-scale mock-up of the vehicle to take to the
Experimental Aircraft Association’s AirVenture convention in Oshkosh
[Wis.]," Dietrich said. "Our goal is to make a really solid impression and
start taking refundable orders." 


Beyond Freeways and Flight Plans

Dietrich has patents pending for the Transition’s overall configuration,
deformable aerodynamic bumpers, embedded lights and license plate holder,
and an RFID system for rapid access to local airports. But his invention
portfolio touches other fields, as well.

Dietrich co-founded the MIT Rocket Team and holds a patent for his
Centrifugal Direct Injection Engine (CDIE), a low-cost, high-performance
rocket propulsion engine. It operates without a turbo-pump pressurization
system, which greatly reduces its complexity and cost.

For his doctoral work, Dietrich is researching inertial electrostatic
confinement fusion for spacecraft power and propulsion. This research grew
out of an efficiency improvement he patented for a desktop-sized Penning
Fusion Reactor. 


A Child's Imagination Takes Off

"In my 30 years as a teacher [at MIT], I cannot recall a clearer exponent
of the Edison mindset," said MIT Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Manuel Martinez-Sanchez, one of Dietrich’s recommenders for the $30,000
Lemelson-MIT Student Prize. "Carl is routinely cycling back and forth
between what is known and what is possible."

Dietrich traces his passion for invention and design back to the dining
room table of his family’s Sausalito, Calif. home where he watched his
father build model planes. He remembers one model in particular, a Red
Baron tri-plane that later hung from his bedroom ceiling and inspired his
desire to fly.

When he was eight years old, Dietrich began saving money to take flight
lessons and earn his pilot’s license, which he did when he turned 17. In
high school, he further developed his interest in aerospace engineering.
During his junior year, he designed a remote-controlled airplane; his
senior project was a full-scale hydrogen-powered airplane.

These days, Dietrich finds inspiration in large-scale challenges that push
the limits of his abilities and imagination. "The things I get inspired by
now tend to be fundamental problems, like increasing personal mobility and
finding better energy sources than hydrocarbon fuels," he said. "These
kinds of grand-scale things I try to adopt as my own personal goals. There
are lots of smart people with lots of resources working on these problems,
certainly. Still, I think there is a role that can be played by us
independent inventor types who are trying to think up other unique ways of
working on them. It never hurts to have a couple more people thinking
about big problems," he said. 


About the $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize

The $30,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prize is awarded annually to an MIT
senior or graduate student who has created or improved a product or
process, applied a technology in a new way, redesigned a system, or
demonstrated remarkable inventiveness in other ways. A distinguished panel
of MIT alumni and associates including scientists, technologists,
engineers and entrepreneurs chooses the winner.


About the Lemelson-MIT Program

The Lemelson-MIT Program aims to enable and inspire young people to pursue
creative lives and careers. It particularly encourages young people to
engage in invention and to pursue sustainable new solutions to real world
problems. It accomplishes this mission through outreach activities and
annual awards, including the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, the largest
single award in the United States for invention.

Jerome H. Lemelson, one of the world’s most prolific inventors, and his
wife Dorothy founded the Lemelson-MIT Program at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 1994. It is funded by The Lemelson Foundation,
a private philanthropy that celebrates and supports inventors and
entrepreneurs in order to strengthen social and economic life. More
information is online at http://web.mit.edu/invent.



 
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