ME Undergrad Neelanjan Lahiri in Berkeley ENGINEER Feature on Berkeley Hyperloop

Learning to Levitate

Originally Published on 5/1/2016 in Berkeley ENGINEER

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Before shooting their futuristic vehicle down a test track at high speeds for a design competition this summer, 40 Berkeley students must first make their Hyperloop pod levitate.

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The world’s Hyperloop fascination started back in 2012, when SpaceX founder Elon Musk let loose the futuristic vision of a mass transit system in which people board pressurized capsules to zing through reduced-pressure tubes on rails of air.

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Last year, SpaceX hosted a competition for university students, and in January, the Berkeley team was invited to build a working prototype of their design. The team is working toward launching a pod on a test track in Hawthorne, California this August.

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Berkeley Hyperloop&nbspbLoop team members have set up shop at the Richmond Field Station to build a pod that is not quite full size, but still substantial enough to carry a 100-pound test dummy. Third-year mechanical engineering student&nbspNeelanjan Lahiri&nbspsays that their design puts safety first. “The higher you levitate, the more air you need, and you need to make sure that the braking is good,” he says.