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Kon-Tiki adventure in space age style
Assisted by ESA technology, Frenchwoman Raphaëla le Gouvello has completed a remarkable odyssey – a single-handed windsurfer crossing of the Pacific Ocean. It is a successful demonstration of just what can be achieved using renewable energy! Raphaëla le Gouvello used a custom-built windsurfer driven by the wind and generating electricity from the Sun to run its navigation systems, radio and mobile phone. An innovative airbag with space technology from the European launcher Ariane guaranteed Raphaëla’s safety in the event of a capsize. And solar cells derived from technology originally developed for European spacecraft provided electricity during the crossing.
Raphaëla started out on her near 8000 km journey from Peru to Tahiti on 5 August 2003, and after 89 days 7 hours and exactly 4455 nautical miles, she arrived on Sunday 2 November at Tahiti.
But this was not the first time extreme sports adventurer Raphaëla le Gouvello has confronted big challenges. Forty-three years old, Raphaëla is a veteran solo navigator. She is the only woman in the world to have crossed both the Atlantic (in 2000) and the Mediterranean (in 2002) alone on a sailboard.
Luckily, in the end she never encountered any agressive sharks - instead seals and barracudas sometimes escorted her. Using wind and sun instead of fossil energy sources
Raphaëla le Gouvello’s voyage across the Pacific Ocean was completed 100% by use of wind power and solar energy – moving 8000 km without a drop of gasoline.
The Sun loaded her batteries daily thanks to solar cells mounted on the board – energy that was needed to generate drinking water each day, for GPS navigation and for communication via radio and telephone. It was not always easy to tell each morning which particular sail would perform best that day. With the objective to make the crossing in about 80 days, she had to achieve an average 100 km each day, and therefore had to optimise to get the best speed – and some days were with very little or totally without wind.
Day 17 was one of the more difficult days when Raphaëla hit rough weather – for more than 48 hours, she had to navigate in rough open seas with non-stop heavy showers and winds rising to 30-35 knots. On that morning she was forced to rig her sail three times to reduce its size in a sea that gave no respite - at 13:00 she decided to put on the cover and let the surfboard drift.
Another challenge was to navigate with 550 kg under her feet - whenever there is a lift, the surfboard has a delay in its reaction due to its inertia. During this lapse of time, the waves can come over the board, and the body must take the strain to avoid being thrown off. “In addition to this,” Raphaëla added, “I don’t have any windscreens on my glasses, so when it rains I don’t see anything any more!” But maintaining mental focus is the greatest challenge for a solo ocean navigator. The days become very much the same and the only way to confirm the correct route and verify daily progress is by GPS. Short daily contact with the support team via satellite telephone was the only support Raphaëla had – plus some small jokes that her support team had written on the tape that covered the food supply. “I bet I’ll end the trip with the dried fruits,” she laughed over the radio one day after reading one such message. “Bread and biscuits are diminishing seriously. Freeze-dried food is almost finished.” Her greatest worry, she revealed “is losing my concentration: to wake up one night, to go out to pee and to forget, because I'm so sleepy, to attach myself, and fall into the water ... that's the most common risk for solitary sailors.”
Asked what she misses most from home, she responded, “to have a good hot bath and sleep in a comfortable bed… On the other hand it feels good to have left all obligations behind me, they usually eat up too much of our valuable time.”
“My board is unsinkable,” she explained before her departure, “no matter what happens, it'll float like a piece of cork.” In addition, she travelled equipped with other technical innovations.
The board itself is a custom-built windsurfer, 7.80 m long and weighing 550 kg, including a watertight sleeping compartment. But righting such a hefty board in difficult conditions could be very hard to do. Her 2000 crossing of the Mediterranean Sea was almost interrupted when her board capsized, but with great difficulty she managed to right it.
“We developed these pyrotechnics for the Ariane launcher family,” explains Pierre Brisson, Head of ESA's Technology Transfer Programme. “It certainly could be an extremely powerful airbag which should only be used as a last resort, as it could damage the craft.” Such charges are normally used to detach items no longer needed on Ariane launcher, such as exhausted fuel tanks or protective fairings. Raphaëla described her airbag as a very important element of mission safety, one without which she would feel a lot more ‘at risk’. “I did not use it, and I did not wish to use it, but it was tested before and it works just fine,” she told Franco Malerba, Italy's first astronaut, over the phone on 29 September.
She also confirmed that the flexible solar cells worked fine, mounted on the windsurfer to provide up to 12 volts and 120 watts. They charged batteries critical for navigation, communication and production of the daily ration of drinking water, obtained from seawater by a special desalination system. On 12 volts this system can provide five litres an hour. These solar cells have been derived from technology originally developed for European spacecraft.
“In this respect Raphaëla is enduring a much heavier burden, similar to astronauts flying to Mars!,” explained Malerba. She said that indeed the telephone calls with the support team and Radio France was like an injection of good spirits for her: “Just the idea of many people thinking of me, sympathizing with me was like a secret wind pushing me through the waves.”
This sounded familiar to Malerba, as he explained once the phone call ended: “I couldn't help thinking of our friends and relatives in the Houston, during the Atlantis mission, thinking and praying for us.”
Raphaëla le Gouvello graduated in 1983 from the Veterinary School of Nantes which was followed by eighteen month in California (Arcata) which allowed her to achieve her Master of Sciences in Aquatic Sciences and Aquaculture. Since then Raphaëla has divided her time between navigating on sailboards and managing research and development projects in her favourite field, aquaculture, especially in application of principles of sustainable development. Raphaëla initiated windsurfing during 1976 and this has since become her passion, and her achievements include:
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