The Airbus A380 is a double-decker, four-engined airliner manufactured by Airbus S.A.S. It first flew on April 27 2005 from Toulouse, France. Commercial flights should begin in late 2006 after 15 months of testing, with the delivery of the first
aircraft to launch customer Singapore Airlines. During much of its development phase,
the aircraft was known as the Airbus A3XX, and the term Superjumbo has become synonymous with the A380.
The A380 is the largest passenger airliner in the world, topping the Boeing 747, which was
the largest for 35 years. The single Antonov An-225 in service retains the record of
being the world's largest commercial aircraft, although it only takes about 80 passengers.
The A380's first landing on
April 27,
2005
Design
The new Airbus will initially be sold in two versions: the A380-800, carrying 555 passengers in a three-class configuration or up to 800 passengers in a single-class economy configuration. Expected range
for the -800 model is 15,000 km (8,000 nautical miles). The second model, the
A380-800F dedicated freighter, will carry 150 tonnes of cargo 10,400 km (5,600 nautical
miles). The A380-900 is a proposed stretch variant, for which the A380's wing was originally designed.
Cockpit
Mockup of the flight deck.
Airbus made the cockpit layout, procedures and handling characteristics similar to those of other Airbus aircraft to reduce
crew training costs. Accordingly, the A380 features an improved glass cockpit, and
fly-by-wire flight controls linked to side-sticks.
The improved cockpit displays feature eight 15-by-20 cm (6-by-8-inch) liquid crystal displays, all of which are physically identical and interchangeable. These comprise two Primary Flight Displays, two navigation displays, one engine parameter display, one system
display and two Multi-Function Displays. These MFDs are new with the A380, and
provide an easy-to-use interface to the flight management system—replacing
three multifunction control and display units. They include QWERTY keyboards and trackballs,
interfacing with a graphical "point-and-click" display navigation system.
Engines
Either the Rolls-Royce Trent 900 or
Engine Alliance GP7200 turbofans may power the A380. Both are derived from precessors available on the 777. The Trent 900 is the scaled version of the Trent 800 but incorporating sweptback fan and
counter-rotating spools of the stillborn Trent 8107. The GP7200 has GE90 derived core and PW4090 derived fan and low-pressure
turbo-machinery. The Trent 900, the launch engine, initially gained most sales. However, the Engine Alliance GP7201 sales have
grown, and now roughly match those of the Trent 900.
Technological features
When the 747 replaced the Douglas DC-8 as the biggest airliner, the technology used was
essentially similar (similar flight controls, hydraulics, electrics and avionics) but scaled up for the size. The same however
cannot be said about the A380 and the 747-400. As compared to the Boeing 747 the colossal size of the A380 requires novel
approaches to application of technologies, especially for weight saving purposes, in order for it to meet its performance
guarantees. Many of the technologies first used here may later be used by other jetliners as operational experience is
accumulated.
Materials
The new material GLARE (GLAss-REinforced fibre metal laminate) is used in the upper
fuselage and on the stabilizers' leading edges. This aluminium-glass-fibre laminate is lighter and has better corrosion and impact
resistance than conventional aluminium alloys used in aviation. Unlike earlier composite materials, it can be repaired using conventional aluminium repair techniques.
Carbon-fibre reinforced plastics, glass-fibre reinforced plastic and
quartz-fibre reinforced plastic are also used extensively in wings, fuselage sections and on doors. The A380 is the first time
that carbon fibre has been used to make the central wing box of a commercial airliner. Thermoplastics are used in the slats’ leading edges.
Newer weldable aluminium alloys are also used. This enables the widespread use of
laser welding manufacturing techniques - eliminating rows of rivets and resulting in a lighter,
stronger structure. While Airbus intended to use GLARE across its future product line, Boeing's decision to go all-composite with
its 787 has forced Airbus to choose a similar path with new materials on its A350.
Advanced avionics architecture
Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA)
IMA, first used in advanced military aircraft such as F-22 Raptor and Eurofighter Typhoon, is the main avionics architecture. It is
based on commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) design. Many previous dedicated
single-purpose avionics computers are replaced by dedicated software housed in onboard processor modules and servers. This cuts
the number of parts as well as providing increased flexibility without resorting to customised avionics. This reduces costs and
benefits from the cheaply commercially available computing power.
Avionics Full Duplex Switched Ethernet (AFDX)/ ARINC 664
The avionics data communication networks employed is switched-Ethernet based
AFDX following the ARINC 664 specifications. Together with IMA,
the A380 avionics is very highly networked. The data networks are switched full-duplexed star-topology and based on 100baseTX
fast-Ethernet. This reduces wires required as well as eliminating latency. The
standard is based on widely approved and adopted standards like Ethernet (IEEE 802.3) and IP/UDP (Internet Protocols). This
architecture is significantly more advanced than the bus-topology based ARINC 629 used in
Boeing 777.
Network Systems Server (NSS)
The NSS is the heart of A380 paperless cockpit. It eliminates the bulky manuals and charts traditionally carried by the
pilots. The NSS has enough inbuilt robustness to do away with onboard backup paper documents. The A380's network and server
system stores data and offers electronic documentation, providing a required equipment list, navigation charts, performance
calculations, and an aircraft logbook. All will be accessible to the pilot from two additional 27 cm (11 inch) diagonal LCDs.
Each is controlled by its own keyboard and control cursor device mounted in the foldable table in front of each pilot.
Power-by-wire flight controls
Power-by-wire flight controls actuators are used for the first time in civil
service. They function as ultimate flight control backups for the A380. In some conditions they help the primary flight controls
during certain manoeuvres. They have self-contained hydraulic and electrical power supplies. They are used as electro-hydrostatic
actuators (EHA); used in the aileron and elevator and as electrical backup hydrostatic actuators (EBHA) for the rudder and some
spoilers.
350 bar (35 MPa) hydraulic system
This is an improvement over the typical 207 bar (20.7 MPa
or 3,000 psi) system found in other commercial aircraft since the DC4
Skymaster in 1942. First used in military aircraft like V-22 Osprey and F, the use of a higher pressure reduces the size of pipelines, actuators and other components
for overall weight reduction. The 350 bar (35 MPa or 5,080 psi) pressure is generated by 8 de-clutchable hydraulic pumps.
Pipelines are typically made from titanium and the system features both fuel and air-cooled
heat exchangers. The hydraulics system architecture also differs significantly from other airliners. Self-contained
electrically-powered hydraulic power packs, instead of secondary hydraulic system, are the backups for the primary systems. This
saves weight and reduces maintenance.
Electrical generation
The A380 uses four 150 kVA variable-frequency generators eliminating the constant speed drives for better reliability. The
A380 uses aluminium power cables instead of copper for greater weight savings due to the number of cables used for aircraft of
this size and complexity. The electrical power system is fully computerized and many contactors
and breakers have been replaced by solid-state devices for better performance and increased reliability.
LED and High Intensity Discharge (HID) lighting
The A380 features a bulbless illumination system. LEDs are employed in the
cabin, cockpit, cargo and other fuselage areas. The cabin lighting features programmable multi-spectral LEDs capable of
simulating the cabin ambience illumination from daylight to night and various shades in between. HID lighting is used externally giving brighter, whiter and better quality lights. The two
technologies used are far superior to the incandescent light bulb in terms of brightness and service life.
Electrical thrust reversers
Thrust reversers are one of the items that are often faulty in service. The A380 was initially planned to do away with thrust
reversers as it has more than enough braking capacity. The FAA disagreed
and Airbus elected to fit the 2 inboard engines with them. The A380 features electrical actuated thrust reversers. This gives
better reliability than their pneumatic or hydraulic equivalents beside saving considerable weight.
Amenities
Initial publicity stressed the A380's space and comfort, allowing for relaxation areas, bars, duty free shops and the like.
The only A380 customer likely to use this configuration is Virgin Atlantic Airways, which has a bar in Business Class on most of its newer airliners and announced plans to include casinos on their
A380s. Similar items were proposed in the past when large aircraft were announced, but airlines have always opted for more seats
to lower ticket costs. Given the history of the airline industry, the A380 will significantly expand the improvements that the
747 made—more seats and lower seat-distance costs - while providing wider seats and better amenities. With 555 passengers, the
A380 represents a 35% increase over the 747-400 in standard three-class configuration, along with a nearly 50% larger cabin
volume - meaning much more space per passenger.
Some airports have planned terminal reconfigurations to facilitate loading and
unloading from the A380's double-decker design.
Construction
Airbus operates 16 manufacturing sites across Europe with exception of wing component to be made by Indonesian aircraft
manufacturer, IPTN. The European manufacturer will produce most of parts for the
new A380 airliner.
First, the front and rear sections of the fuselage are loaded on an Airbus RORO ship, Ville
de Bordeaux, in Hamburg, northern Germany, whence they are
shipped to the United Kingdom. There the huge wings, which are manufactured at
Filton in Bristol and Broughton in north Wales, are transported by barge to Mostyn docks, where the ship adds them to its cargo. In Saint-Nazaire, western France, the ship trades the fuselage sections from
Hamburg for larger, assembled sections, some of which include the nose. The ship unloads in Bordeaux. Afterwards, the ship picks up the belly and tail sections in Cadiz,
southern Spain, and delivers them to Bordeaux. Doors were specially made by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited in Bangalore, India.
From there, the A380 parts are transported by barge to Langon, and by road to an assembly hall
in Toulouse. New wider roads, extra canal systems and barges were developed to deliver the
massive A380 parts. After assembly, the aircraft are flown to Hamburg to be furnished and painted. Final assembly began in 2004,
with first aircraft (MSN001) displayed in January 2005.
History
The first completed A380 at the "A380 Reveal" event in Toulouse
Side view of the first completed A380
Before starting the A380 project, both Airbus and Boeing had
focused on cornering the very-large-airliner market. Airbus and Boeing had worked together on a study investigating a 600+ seat
aircraft called the Very Large Commercial Transport. Although both manufacturers issued various
statements, the unspoken consensus was that there was probably room for only one maker to be profitable in the 600 to 800
seat market segment. Both knew the risk of splitting a niche market; the simultaneous debut of the Lockheed L-1011 and the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 had
demonstrated this: either aircraft could technically fill the gap between the Douglas DC-8
and the Boeing 747, but the market could only sustain one of the two and eventually
Lockheed left the civil airliner market. However, Airbus and Boeing decided to
enter the new 600 seat market each in their own ways.
Boeing had the upper hand. The 747, though designed in the 1960s, was popular and larger than Airbus' largest jet, the
A340. For many airlines, the extra size of the 747 made it a "must buy" for their highest
density routes, and the lower costs of a common fleet led carriers to buy additional Boeing aircraft. Boeing was considering a
New Large Aircraft to replace the 747, and acquired McDonnell Douglas and their cancelled MD-12 design.
Boeing also studied the concept of the 747X, a version of the 747 with the forebody "hump"
extended towards the rear for more passenger room before dropping the concept in favour of the 747 Advanced, a similar design to the 747X that was announced as the 747-8 Intercontinental on November 14, 2005 with a
seating capacity of around 450 passengers to compete with the A380.
Development of the "A3XX" began in June 1994. In 2001 it was re-christneed as the "A380," with the announcement of
Singapore Airlines as the launch customer.
Development
After years of research, Airbus decided to proceed with the €8.8 billion A380 project in 1999,
the final budget settling at about € 12 billion. The double-decker layout would provide higher seat capacities, and hence cost
savings, than a traditional design.
The A380's wing has been designed to cope with a Maximum Take-Off Weight
(MTOW) of 590 t, albeit with some strengthening required, allowing for a future stretch. The stronger wing (and structure) is
used on today's freighter version, the A380-800F. This approach sacrifices some fuel efficiency on the initial passenger model but the sheer size of the aircraft coupled with the significant advances in
technology over the years should provide lower operating costs per passenger than all currently produced 747 variants (Boeing
claims the 747-8 has a lower CASM.)[29]
First flights
The first A380 prototype, serial number 001, was unveiled during a ceremony in Toulouse, on
January 18, 2005. It has the French registration F-WWOW. The
maiden flight took place at 8:29 UTC (10:29 a.m. local time),
April 27 2005. The prototype departed runway 32L of
Blagnac International Airport in Toulouse, France with a flight crew of six, carrying 22 short tons (20 metric tons) of flight test instrumentation and water
ballasts.
The crew consisted of French test pilots Jacques Rosay (captain for the take-off and the
initial part of the test flight) and Claude Lelaie (captain for the second part of the test
flight including the landing). Engineers included three flight test engineers (Spanish, French, and German), and one French test
flight engineer. With the recent Franco-German controversy over the leadership of EADS still fresh
in mind, Airbus issued a statement to make it clear that the crew had been chosen based not on nationality but competence.
The take-off weight of the aircraft was 421 tonnes (464 short tons), or about 75 % of its maximum take-off weight for
commercial flights. This was the heaviest take-off weight of any passenger airliner ever created.
After take-off, the jet headed west toward the Bay of Biscay, then south over the
northern Pyrenees mountains and concluded with a low altitude fly-by over the town of Toulouse.
The 233 minute flight involved conducting tests on its engines, hydraulics and electronics, while the on-board test equipment
recorded measurements for 150,000 different parameters and sent data back to computers on the ground.
Airbus initially planned about 15 months of flight testing, but shortly after the first flight they acknowledged that the
airplane would not be ready for formal certification and commercial use until near the end of 2006, resulting in delays of 6
months or more for initial contracted deliveries.
On October 18, 2005, the second A380 took to the skies. The
flight, taking off and landing at Toulouse, was to test performance at cruising height and fuel consumption of the Rolls Royce
Trent 900 engines.
In November, 2005 the third A380 took off for the first time in Toulouse.
In mid-November, 2005, the A380 embarked on a tour of South-east Asia and Australia, partly as a promotion, and partly as part
of its long-haul flight testing. The aircraft flew from Singapore to Brisbane on the 12th, then on to Sydney on the 13th, performing a public
flypast over the harbour on its arrival. The plane then flew to Melbourne on the 14th and
returned to Brisbane for Qantas' 85th anniversary celebration on the 15th. John Travolta, who is Qantas' ambassador, was present at the celebration and managed to take the A380 on a
joy ride from Brisbane Airport, flying over the Gold Coast and back. Following
the celebrations, the A380 flew to Kuala Lumpur on the 16th before returning back to France
on the 17th. On these flights, colours of various airlines were applied - Singapore Airlines, Qantas and Malaysia Airlines- in addition to the house colours.
On November 19, 2005 an A380 flew in full Emirates colors at the 2005 Dubai air show, giving 450 VIP passengers a ride as it flew low over the
Dubai waterfront.
The A380 made its first transatlantic flight, to José María Córdova International Airport of Medellín Colombia, on
10 January 2006 to test engine performance at high airport
altitude.
A380 in Singapore Airlines livery
An Airbus A380 arrived in Iqaluit, Nunavut, in the Canadian Arctic, for cold-weather testing, February 6,
2006. This was its first arrival in North America and marked
a major advance for Nunavut as a site for cold-weather aircraft testing. (CBC)
Unfortunately, the weather did not cooperate and testing was not completed. The same Airbus A380 then flew to Singapore in Singapore Airlines livery to participate in the
static and flying displays at the Asian Aerospace 2006 exhibition. It made a short refuelling stop at Airbus headquarters in
Toulouse, France. In February 2006 the 4th aircraft
(registration F-WWSD, joined F-WXXL, F-WWDD and F-WWOW) A380 flew for the first time.
Evacuation certification
On March 26, 2006, the A380 underwent evacuation certification
in Hamburg, Germany. The test, which was done to meet regulatory requirements, involved evacuating 853 passengers and 20 crew
from the aircraft with 8 of the 16 exits blocked within 90 seconds. A spokesman for Airbus described the evacuation test as "a
very great success". One man suffered a broken leg and 30 others received minor injuries, although such injuries are usually
expected during aircraft evacuation tests.[30]
On March 29 2006, the A380 received the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) approval to carry 853 passengers, indicating that
the evacuation trial had met their certification standards.[31]
Orders
Sixteen airlines have ordered the A380 as of June 18, 2005,
including an order from AIG's aircraft leasing unit, ILFC. Currently, A380 orders stand at 159, including 27 freighter versions.
Break-even is estimated to be at 250 to 300 units. Former Airbus CEO Noël Forgeard stated he expects to sell 750 of the aircraft. Official list price stands at US$295 million.
Carriers often receive large discounts for volume or early purchases.
| Airline |
Entry into service |
Type |
Engine |
| A380-800 |
A380-800F |
Options |
EA |
RR |
Air France |
2008 |
10 |
|
4 |
* |
|
China Southern Airlines |
2007 |
5 |
|
|
|
* |
Emirates |
2007[32] |
41 |
2 |
|
* |
|
Etihad Airways |
2008 |
4 |
|
|
|
* |
FedEx |
2008 |
|
10 |
10 |
* |
|
ILFC |
|
5 |
5 |
|
4 |
|
Kingfisher Airlines |
2010 |
5 |
|
|
|
|
Korean Air |
2008 |
5 |
|
3 |
* |
|
Lufthansa |
2008 |
15 |
|
10 |
|
* |
Malaysia Airlines |
2007 |
6 |
|
|
|
* |
Qantas |
2007 |
12 |
|
10 |
|
* |
Qatar Airways |
2009 |
2 |
|
2 |
|
|
Singapore Airlines |
2006 |
10 |
|
15 |
|
* |
Thai Airways International |
|
6 |
|
|
|
|
UPS |
2009 |
|
10 |
10 |
|
|
Virgin Atlantic |
2008 |
6 |
|
6 |
|
* |
| Sub-totals: |
|
132 |
27 |
70 |
58 |
72 |
| Total: |
|
159 |
130 |
Delivery
Airbus has not publicly announced delivery dates, though they notified airlines in June 2005 that delivery would be delayed by
up to six months, which means Singapore Airlines will receive the first A380 in the
fourth quarter of 2006, with Qantas getting its first delivery in April 2007 and Emirates receiving aircraft before 2008.[32] The new plane's entry into service, first with Singapore Airlines, will take place between London Heathrow and Sydney via Singapore from late 2006. Subsequent routes by Singapore Airlines may include the Singapore - San Francisco route via Hong Kong, as well as direct
flights to Paris and Frankfurt. Qantas Airways has also announced it will use the A380 on its Los Angeles to
Sydney to Melbourne route.
Airbus says it eventually will deliver four planes a month.
Criticism
Several technical concerns about the A380 have arisen, fueling criticism of the aircraft and its safety. As type certificate requirements for A380 are laid down by both EASA and FAA, Airbus will
address these concerns as required.
Cabin pressurization
Joseph Mangan, a former employee of TTTech, has claimed the company's contribution to the A380 is severely flawed.[33] TTTech supplies components for the
A380's cabin-pressurization system; Mangan has stated that the combination of TTTech's microprocessor and a new architecture of
valves could cause the A380 to undergo rapid decompression. This sudden drop in
cabin pressure could cause the flight crew to lose consciousness and pose a major hurdle to safe flight.
This allegation has been strongly rejected by both TTTech[34] and EADS. Additionally, Boeing has said they are unaware
of any problems with TTTech's chips.[35] An Austrian court has fined Mr. Mangan for violating the
court's preliminary injunction regarding discussion of his allegation pending court cases.
Ground operations
Early critics claimed that the A380 would damage taxiways and other airport surfaces. However, the pressure exerted by its
wheels was lower than that of a 747 because the A380 has more wheels than the 747 (22 wheels in the A380 compared to 18 wheels in
the 747). Airbus tested this using a special ballasted rig which included as many wheels as the A380 would use, in the same
position as those from the landing gear. The rig, weighing 540,000 kg (540 metric tons), was towed up and down of Airbus'
facilities at Toulouse and after each pass the ground was carefully inspected.
Another criticism is that the A380, with a longer wingspan than a 747, will require the repositioning of taxiways so as to
allow two of these aircraft to maintain safety distances when passing each other on, for example, a runway and an adjacent
taxiway.
Current FAA regulations for Group 6 aircraft (including the A380) require 60 meter (200 foot) wide runways while the large
majority of the airports they are expected to operate from have 45 meter (150 foot) wide runways. Airbus expects that this
requirement will be waived prior to the entry of the A380 into service.
As of late 2005 there are concerns that the jet blast from the
A380's engines could be dangerous to ground vehicles and airport terminal buildings, as
more thrust is required to move its substantial bulk. The American FAA
has established a commission[36] to determine if new safety regulations seem necessary, and will make appropriate
recommendations to the ICAO. According to The Wall Street Journal 'The debate is supposed to be entirely about safety, but industry
officials and even some participants acknowledge that, at the very least, an overlay of diplomatic and trade tensions complicates
matters.' The FAA commission has stated they will not enact unilateral safeguards for the
A380, only those imposed by the ICAO.[37]
Wake turbulence
All aircraft produce wingtip vortices during flight, contributing to
wake turbulence, which are strongest during flight envelopes involving high thrust, high
angles of attack, and under-clean configurations, such as departures. Many airliners already in service produce extremely large
and powerful wakes, which are dangerous to lighter following aircraft. Airspeed, weight,
wingspan, and flap and gear deployment all affect the strength of these vortices, which is "proportional to aircraft weight and
inversely to aircraft speed and wing span".[38] Aircraft operating below 10,000 feet are limited to 460 km/h (250 knots), and until
just before landing are in a clean configuration (flaps and gear retracted). Weight and wingspan are therefore the primary
factors affecting vortex strength. The A380, at 560,000 kg, is 36% heavier than the 747-400ER's 412,000 kg[39], but its 79.8 m span is 24% wider
than the 747ER's 64.4 m. At weights equal to the 747, the A380 will therefore produce weaker vortices. However, at Maximum
Take-Off Weight, notwithstanding other aerodynamic improvements (which Airbus claims to have implemented[40]), the turbulence will be
stronger.
Modern aerodynamics can potentially reduce the effect. Research in the 1970s demonstrated that some wingtip vortex control
concepts (winglets, for example), while reducing cruise vortices and drag, did not have a
significant effect on vortex strength during the landing phase. Though it is not clear whether wingtip fences were ever tested,
this research (and more recent studies) did identify several promising alternatives.[41] Flight testing will show how powerful the vortices created by the
A380 really are; if they are larger than existing aircraft vortices (notably by the Boeing 747), it may require greater aircraft
separation on approach, reducing the frequency of aircraft landings, which would
reduce the efficiency of the aircraft.
Orders connected to non-aviation business
Airbus gained an order from Thai Airways International to buy 6 A380s,
reportedly as part of a trade deal in exchange for Thailand avoiding EU fishing tariffs. This was following the tsunami disaster in December 2004. The unconfirmed story
brought outrage and embarrassed the European Trade Commissioner.[42]
Specifications
A size comparison between four of the largest aircraft. Click to enlarge.
General characteristics
(800F Freighter in brown)[43]
- Flight crew: 2
- Capacity: 555 in 3 classes or 850 passengers in 1 class, with up to 66.4 tonnes (146,400 lb) of cargo in 38
LD3s or 13 pallets
- 152.4 tonnes (336,000 lb) of cargo (158 t option)
- Powerplant: 4×311 kN (70,000 lbf) turbofans. Either Rolls-Royce Trent 900 or Engine Alliance GP7200
Dimensions
- Length: 73 m (239 ft 6 in)
- Wingspan: 79.8 m (261 ft 10 in)
- Height: 24.1 m (79 ft 1 in)
- Wing area: 845 m² (9,100 ft²)
Weights and fuel capacity
- Typical Operating Empty Weight: 276,800 kg (610,200 lb)
- Maximum takeoff: 560,000 kg (1,235,000 lb)
- 590,000 kg (1,300,000 lb)
- Maximum fuel: 310,000 litres (81,890 US gal)
- 310,000 l (352,000 l option)
Performance
- Normal cruise speed: 0.85 M (approx 902 km/h, 560 mph or 487 kt)
- Maximum cruise speed: 0.89 M
- Range: 15,000 km (8,000 nautical miles)
- Service ceiling: 13,100 m (43,000 ft)
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- ↑ Martin, Elaine. (1996). Rethinking the Practice of Mizuko
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- ↑ Skousen, Mark. "The troubled economics of Ayn
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- ↑ "What is Animatrix?" feature on The Matrix Revisited DVD.
- ↑ Thomas, Geoffrey (2006).
"The New 747". Airways 13 (122):
16–22.
- ↑ Scherer, James A. (1993). "The Triumph of
Confessionalism in Nineteenth-Century German Lutheran Missions". Missio Apostolica 2: 71–78. This is an
extract from Scherer's 1968 Ph.D. thesis, "Mission and Unity in Lutheranism". Scherer was Professor of World Mission and Church
History at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago until his retirement.
- ↑ Strabo 11.11.1 Full text
- ↑ "Indo-Greek, Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian coins in the Smithsonian
institution", Smithsonian Institution, Bopearachchi, p19, quoting the analysis of N.G. Majumdar, D.C. Sicar, S.Konow
- ↑ Chapter XXIX of the Mahavamsa: Text
- ↑ Regarding the coinage of Menander II: "All numismatist, with the exception
of Lahiri and A.D.H. Bivar, have attributed these emissions to Menander Soter (Menander I "the Saviour"), and dated them to the
end of his reign. A.Cunningham and W.W.Tarn claim that the royal profile is that of an older man, and attribute this coinage in
Eastern Punjab worshops." (Bopearachchi, "Monnaies Gréco-Bactriennes et Indo-Grecques",
p108, translated from the French original)
- ↑ A single mint mark is known which is common to Menander I and
Agathokleia/Strato I: the "P" with "A" on its side. It only appears in very few instances on the coins of Agathokleia and Strato
I.
- ↑ All the coins of Agathokleia as Queen-Mother, where, middle-aged, she is
alone on her coins with the bow and arrow quiver on the reverse, have mint marks (two of them, Bopearachchi mint marks 227
(thought to represent Charsada) and 244 (thought to represent Taxila)) similar to those of Menander II: See Agathokleia coins
- ↑ Altogether ten coins types (Bopearachchi 22A/B 26A 28A 28B (for two mint
marks -Bopearachchi mint marks 227 and 244-, the same as those shared by Agathokleia) are shared by Strato I with Menander II,
especially two coin types in which Strato I is very young, almost adolescent, and still uses Athena peacefully holding
Nike on her forward arm (22A/B).
- ↑ Bopearachchi mintmark 244,
present on coins of Menander II, is considered by most numismats as characteristic of Taxila.
- ↑ A hoard of 96 coins of Strato I was
found in Mathura, together with coins of Menander (S.P. Noe, A bibliography of Greek coin-hoards, Numismatic Notes and
Monographs, 1925, p126., quoted by W.W. Tarn, p. 228)
- ↑ "Indo-Greek, Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian coins in the Smithsonian
institution", Smithsonian Institution, Bopearachchi, p33
- ↑ A passage in the "Mahā-parinibbâna sutta" of the "Dighanikaya" relates the dispute of Indian kings over the ashes of the Buddha, which they finally shared
between themselves and enshrined in a series of stupas.
- ↑ Plutarch "Political precepts", p147-148 Full text
- ↑ The mint-mark in common is Bopearachchi mint-mark 244.
- ↑ National Bridge Inventory
- ↑ "Russian Aircraft Industry Seeks Revival Through Merger." The New York Times. February 22, 2006.
- ↑ Supplemental.
Flight International. June 14,
2005-June 20, 2005.
- ↑ "Panicky scramble to evacuate A380 'a great success'." Clark, A. and Gow, D.
The Guardian. March 27, 2006
- ↑ "Pictures: Airbus A380 clears European and US certification hurdles for evacuation
trial." Flight International. March 29, 2006
- ↑ a b "Late landing for Emirates' A380 jets." Al Deen, M. E. Gulf News. April 5, 2006.
- ↑ "A380 jet flawed, fired worker alleges." Pae, P. The Seattle Times.
October 2, 2005.
- ↑ "TTTech
defends against false allegations. These allegations were made by a dismissed former employee one year ago and have been proved
to be wrong." Official TTTech press release. October 6, 2005.
- ↑ "A
Skeptic Under Pressure." Pae, P. The Los Angeles Times. September 27, 2005.
- ↑ "Airbus A380 faces
dispute with US aviation officials - report." Kjetland, R. Forbes. October 5, 2005.
- ↑ "FAA: Wake Turbulence Rules May Have To Be Rewritten." Aero-News.net. October 7,
2005.
- ↑ "Proceedings of the
11th Conference on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, Hyannis, MA 2004." Cole, R. E. and Winkler, S. MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
- ↑ 747 specifications."
Boeing Commercial Airplanes.
- ↑ "Wake Vortices of the Airbus A380 and
its effect on buildings in Neuenfelde and the vicinity of the Hamburg-Finkenwerder factory airfield." Die
Arp-Schnitger-Orgel.
- ↑ "Concept to Reality:
Wake-Vortex Hazard." Langevin, G. S. National Aeronautics & Space Administration.
October 17, 2003.
- ↑ "Tsunami-hit Thais told: Buy
six planes or face EU tariffs." Nelson, F. The Scotsman. January 19, 2005.
- ↑ A380
specifications. Airbus.
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