
Vol. 24: Weather Balloon Space Probes
Sense, signal, and snap photos in the stratosphere.
Illustrations by James Provost
+ Downloads & Extras:
+ PDF of article
11x17 PDF of the weather balloon spread
+Paul Verhage's "Poorman's Space Program" archive at sas.org (Society for Amateur Scientists)
http://www.sas.org/tcs/weeklyIssues_2009/2009-10-02/project2/index.html
Federal Regulations Regarding Near Space Flights (Paul Verhage)
http://www.sas.org/tcs/weeklyIssues_2007/2007-10-05/project1/index.html
Federal Aviation Regulation (FAR) Part 101: Moored Balloons, Kites, Amateur Rockets and Unmanned Free Balloons
http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&sid=3e34f963b1a220cc6b0d89f23d105ffd&rgn=div5&view=text&node=14:2.0.1.3.15&idno=14
Balloon Trajectory Predictors
http://www.habhub.org/predict http://weather.uwyo.edu/polar/balloon_traj.html
Edge of Space Sciences, an ARRL (ham) initiative to send up ham balloons
http://www.eoss.orgLaunch Groups and Launches
Apteryx, Tres Pinos, California
http://apteryx.hibal.org/
Spacebridge, San Francisco, California
https://www.noisebridge.net/wiki/Spacebridge
HALE (High Altitude Lego Extravaganza), Reno, Nevada
Jean-Sébastien Busque, Montreal, Canada
http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2007/07/successful_high_altitude.html
Meteotek, La Bisbal d'Emporda, Catalonia, Spain
http://teslabs.com/meteotek08/
Pacific Star, Los Angeles, California
http://www.pacificstarflight.com
Island Labs, Stony Brook, New York
http://www.islandlabs.org
Icarus Project, Leeds, United Kingdom
http://www.robertharrison.org/icarus/wordpress
Spacebits, Castro Verde, Portugal
http://spacebits.eu
HALO (High ALtitude Object), Lucknow, Ontario, Canada
http://www.natrium42.com/halo/flight2/
Balloon v1.0, Newark, California
http://vpizza.org/~jmeehan/balloon/
AHAB, Seattle, Washington
http://www.hackerbotlabs.com/projects/the-ahab-missions/
SPOC-1, Vulcan, Alberta, Canada
http://www.spaceduino.com/2009/12/spaceduino.html
Project Icarus, Cambridge, Massachusetts
http://space.1337arts.com/
» MAKE: NOISE — Discuss this article
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Showing messages 1 through 5 of 5.
- Near Space Links
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Thanks for referencing some of my near space stuff, it's good to hear that people are interested in the amateur side of the field.
I have addition stuff on my website you mightbe interested in, NearSys.comPosted by NearSys on October 15, 2010 at 13:43:32 Pacific Time
- High school students launching a balloon
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I'm a physics teacher, and my students are currently working on a science payload for a weather balloon. One thing they want to try is to take pictures of the stars during the middle of the day from high altitude. Anyone have any thoughts on how to do this? Specifically, what camera, and how can they hold the camera still long enough?
More info on the project (and the opportunity to donate a few dollars to make it a reality) can be found here:
http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=458390&challengeid=39361
Thanks!Posted by IgnorantWanderer on October 26, 2010 at 17:39:05 Pacific Time
- More Info
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I've done a few high altitude launches and the best prediction site (IMO) is located at http://nearspaceventures.com/w3Baltrak/readyget.pl.
Photos of out launch can be seen at http://thetalon.smugmug.com/Misc/SpacePosted by tstowe on November 06, 2010 at 19:48:35 Pacific Time
- Tethered To Space
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My first thoughts on reading this article is why they use a balloon. A balloon will always expand due to the lower pressures of the upper atmosphere and eventually burst. Apparently many balloon space launches make use of this as a means of having the payload fall back to Earth, via parachute. But I'd suggest using an alternative. If you make a long flexible "tube" of mylar film, say a couple feet in diameter and a hundred feet tall, and fill the upper third with helium you get the necessary lift but as the craft reaches into the high altitudes the helium merely expands into the lower portion of the tube. This means it never pops. The craft can stay aloft for very long periods of time.
The second thought that occurs is, why not make it a tethered flight? That way you can just reel it out into the upper atmosphere, do your science or picture taking, and reel it back in. Now, clearly you need more lifting capability to handle the weight of the tether, but an additional (albeit much smaller) "balloon" added along the tether each thousand feet or so should address that.Posted by RogerInHawaii on November 14, 2010 at 18:03:23 Pacific Time
- Radar Reflector
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In the magazine's diagram, it shows the radar reflector between the balloon and shoot. Should it be between the shoot and payload so that radar can pick it up on the way down as well?Posted by go_junior8 on December 20, 2010 at 21:54:46 Pacific Time
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Showing messages 1 through 5 of 5. |
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