Since then, there's been many safety improvements with zeppelins, including a key difference: zeppelins no longer employ highly flammable hydrogen as lifting gas. The Eureka uses helium. The Eureka also uses a computerized wire system to steer the ship, and its structure is made of carbonfiber material.
While visually similar, zeppelins are different from the blimps often seen at sporting events. Blimps are much smaller and don't have the rigid structure.
"It's a balance between business and doing things that are really special," said Brian Hall, owner of Airship Ventures. "There are so many cool things we've done before with this platform."
Hall's airship has gone on research flights to examine biota in salt ponds, harmful algal blooms, and to seek out pipeline gas leak evidence.
Hall, who made his fortune in Silicon Valley, purchased his airship in 2006 after flying in a zeppelin during a trip to Germany. Eureka began flying in 2008, after months of negotiating permits to allow a zeppelin to fly again in American air space.
Eureka arrived in a cargo ship from Europe and was flown from Texas to its base in California. Hall said it took three days to cruise above Texas alone.
Hall was aboard for the whale research flight. After a few hours delay due to cloudy weather, the 246-foot-long (75-meters-long) zeppelin took off from an airfield in Everett, Washington, and hovered to the American-Canadian border — an hour's flight away.
Scouting boats had tracked the orca pod, as the zeppelin floated aloft. Known as the southern resident killer whales, this group was designated as endangered in 2005. They live permanently in the Puget Sound, hunting salmon and other fish.
Scientists for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration mounted high definition cameras on the bottom of the zeppelin. A researcher for the Center for Whale Research also took pictures to calculate body measurements.
Whales move at about 3 mph (5 kph), NOAA biologist Brad Hanson said, which made the zeppelin's hovering pace even more useful for observations.
The researchers were able to observe about two dozen whales from the zeppelin. They watched the whales swim in tight groups, roll around each other and "spy hop," moving with their heads above water.
They were able to catch glimpses of the way whales behave and move under water, something they can't observe from boats, Hanson said.
Weather curtailed the observation after an hour, but the scientists were still wowed.
"I get to see whales every day from a boat, and I get to see them closer than most people do," said researcher Erin Heydenreich. "But seeing them from the air is just a completely different picture...watching the way they move together under water is just incredible. That's something you definitely don't see and can't very much capture from a perpendicular photograph." |