Exploring the boundaries of sun-powered transport
French photographers Carlos Ayesta and GuillaumeBression
traveled to Fukushima prefecture to capture the contaminated locations and objects, making images with the local residents themselves.
...
In many ways the danger of Fukushima and the resulting radiation contamination is imperceptible, forcing a society struggling to exist in the wake of massive destruction to build personal boundaries based on their own judgment of risk. In this landscape there is no clear border and everything is a gray area.
SEE ALSO HAUNTING GRAFFITI IN THE HEART OF ABANDONED CHERNOBYL
http://www.worldsolarchallenge.org/page/view_by_id/76
In friendly competition with others attempting the same goals, the teams depart Darwin aiming to be the first to arrive in Adelaide, some 3000km to the south.
It's all about energy management! Based on the original notion that a 1000W car would complete the journey in 50 hours, solar cars are allowed a nominal 5kW hours of stored energy, which is 10% of that theoretical figure. All other energy must come from the sun or be recovered from the kinetic energy of the vehicle
NB
Nella clip del 1° giorno l'Emilia compare subito!
WSC2013 - Darwin/Adelaide
:-)
#worldsolarchallenge2013
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