Solar plane pops in on ancestors
Solar Impulse 2 - an experimental plane powered only by the Sun - has completed the latest leg of its trip around the world.
The bid by pilots and engineers to fly around the planet without burning a drop of fuel has moved ahead, touching down at the home of the Wright Brothers.
The single-seat solar aircraft landed after a 17-hour trip from Phoenix to Ohio, the project team said on its official Twitter page.
The location is the home base of aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright.
The pilots – Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg - were interviewed upon arriving at the historic site.
This flight is iconic for me: it's been 89 years Lindbergh crossed the Atlantic & I land in the #WrightBrothers city pic.twitter.com/4StL0mP3gF
— André Borschberg (@andreborschberg) May 22, 2016
People told the #WrightBrothers & us what we wanted to achieve was impossible. They were wrong! ✈️☀️ #futureisclean pic.twitter.com/zqvXOnvFlj
— Bertrand PICCARD (@bertrandpiccard) May 22, 2016