Send Your Own Radiosonde 90,000 Feet Into the Sky (Video)
Radiosonde, weather balloon, near-space exploration package... call it what you will, but today's interviewee, Jamel Tayeb, is hanging instrument packages and cameras below balloons and sending them up to 97,000 feet (his highest so far), then recovering them 50 or 60 miles away from their liftoff points with help from a locator beacon -- and not just any locator beacon, mind you, but a special one from a company called High Altitude Science with "unlocked" firmware that allows it to work with GPS satellites from altitudes greater than 60,000 feet, which typical, off-the-shelf GPS units can't do.
Here's a balloon launch video from Instructure, a company that helps create open source education systems. The point of their balloon work (and Jamel's) is not that they get to boast about what they're doing, but so you and people like you say, "I can make a functioning high altitude weather balloon system with instrumentation and a decent camera for only $1000?" This is a lot of money for an individual, but for a high school science program it's not an impossible amount. And who knows? You might break the current high-altitude balloon record of 173,900 feet. Another, perhaps more attainable record is PARIS (Paper Aircraft Released Into Space) which is currently 96,563 feet. Beyond that? Perhaps you'll want to take a crack at beating Felix Baumgartner's high altitude skydiving and free fall records. And once you are comfortable working with near space launches, perhaps you'll move on to outer space work, where you'll join Elon Musk and other space transportation entrepreneurs. (Alternate Video Link)
Here's a balloon launch video from Instructure, a company that helps create open source education systems. The point of their balloon work (and Jamel's) is not that they get to boast about what they're doing, but so you and people like you say, "I can make a functioning high altitude weather balloon system with instrumentation and a decent camera for only $1000?" This is a lot of money for an individual, but for a high school science program it's not an impossible amount. And who knows? You might break the current high-altitude balloon record of 173,900 feet. Another, perhaps more attainable record is PARIS (Paper Aircraft Released Into Space) which is currently 96,563 feet. Beyond that? Perhaps you'll want to take a crack at beating Felix Baumgartner's high altitude skydiving and free fall records. And once you are comfortable working with near space launches, perhaps you'll move on to outer space work, where you'll join Elon Musk and other space transportation entrepreneurs. (Alternate Video Link)
How high is that in libraries of congress?
Ninjas don't carry tic tacs
I've never Elonned Musk before. Does it hurt?
Can a balloon get an object high enough that an electrostatic ion thruster can take it out of orbit?
http://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/14/part-101/subpart-D
This is a lot of money for an individual, but for a high school science program it's not an impossible amount.
When I took engineering class in the early 1980's, our class had enough money to build hot air balloons from tissue paper that flew two blocks away into the surrounding neighborhoods. My balloon was called a "kludge" for flying higher and further than the others after my mother's cat got to it and I patched 300+ pinpoint holes. Kids today have it too easy.
Better hire an expensive lawyer now. Cheap lawyers run away when they hear you've been charged with terrorism, they don't want to be next.
It's a cool balloon launch yeah, but joining Elon in outer space is kind of farfetched.
But who knows, after that you might invent the warp drive and embark on a 5 year mission to explore strange new worlds and boldly go where no man has gone before.
Any chance of an "open all links in this story in new tabs" option on Slashdot some day?
while spending $3,000 to make a YouTube video.
Cameras and GPS are for pussies....
Before getting out orbit, you'd need to get into orbit, which means moving sideways fast enough to compensate for the fact that you're falling. That's around 10,000 MPH, depending on altitude. Balloons don't go 10,000 MPH.
Depending on your definition of orbit, you also need to be high enough that the earth's atmosphere causes negligible drag, so you don't have to keep your engine running to maintain 10,000 MPH. Balloons don't go that high.
So orbit is out of question for two reasons. Can a balloon get you high enough that earth's gravity is minimal and your ion thruster can therefore be used to fly away? That would require being about as high up as the moon (very roughly) so no.
Having been involved with two high-altitude (90,000 ft+) balloon launches, getting off the ground is the easy part. Getting the payload back is more difficult. One landed in Lake Michigan and was recovered, the other landed in a marsh and after 6 hours of searching, we still haven't recovered it. (Very difficult terrain to get through).
Getting into near space can be done for less than $1,000 pretty easily. It's a great educational experience, and loads of fun. Hopefully our next launch will land in a open grassy field.
... if that's your best, your best won't do... - Twisted Sister
So, these videos are cool but:
they launched the balloon from a commercial building. How do they know where this thing will land? What if it hits someone on the head, breaks a car window, etc?
What if a plane sucks in the balloon?
If by law all commercial GPS units have the 60,000ft limit why don't they get busted for selling units without this limit?
...for the rest of us who can only afford a 200$ project to hear the beeping sounds from all that craft above 30.000 feet!
http://satnogs.org/
...near-space exploration package... call it what you will... Jamel Tayeb, is hanging instrument packages...and sending them up...
We're talking about sex stuff, right?
If you blow a grand on flying just a camera and tracker, you're doing something amazingly wrong. I worked on a university project that didn't cost that much, and we flew two expensive radios, a SPOT tracker, APRS tracker, Arduino Due flight computer, HD video camera, two GPS receivers, an active thermal control system, and a Kerbal, and we went into it not really knowing what the hell we were doing.
With one flight's worth of experience under my belt, I could put together a decent tracked payload with sensors and a camera for under $200, using off-the-shelf components. Less if I want to spend time making a circuit board. I'm not sure what helium costs these days, but that and a small envelope sure as hell aren't going to add $800 to the bill.
Bugrit! Millenium hand and shrimp!
http://projecthorus.org/
Been done in Australia for many years now.
Send Your Own Radiosonde 90,000 Feet Into the Sky
You heard the headline. Get cracking!
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
pack a phone in foam to
1. prevent the phone from freezing
2. slow the descent enough, and take some of the hit so that the phone wont break
3. float it if it drops to a lake
4. take video during flight (plain video recorder app)
5. broadcast gps for recovery (some spy app etc.)
I'm just thinking to reduce materials to foam, phone, balloon and helium. (thinking to use some 5€/20l construction foam that can be shaped freely)
What shape should the foam be to reduce spinning? Where can I buy the balloon and helium?
Would it work?
If you want to spend money on student research, why not invest in an actual NASA-sponsored project? Check out spaceweather.com (toward the bottom):
HEY, THANKS! The students wish to thank Sander Geophysics Ltd (SGL) for sponsoring this flight. Note their logo in the upper right corner of the payload. SGL's generous contribution of $500 paid for the helium and other supplies necessary to get this research off the ground. Readers, if you would like to sponsor an upcoming flight and see your logo at the edge of space, please contact Dr. Tony Phillips to make arrangements.
Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
Leo Bodnar launched a small balloon with a 11 gram payload. The payload is solar powered and has telemetry. Balloon hobbyists have been watching the flight since July 12th 2014. It is still flying. It has circled the earth (not at equator) about 5 times now I believe.
B-64/M0XER-4 Flight Web Page
APRS Position
Simply amazing. The longest flight I can recall prior to this was one that was launched in California and made it to somewhere near the Mediterranean sea a few days later.
The only Kickstarter I've backed that has ever failed to deliver was one for a group that was supposed to launch a weather balloon with some higher-end equipment than is normally used. They posted 2-3 updates and showed some grainy photos of equipment sitting on a bench then said they were having trouble getting stuff to work and stopped posting updates. I no longer back science based Kickstarters as a result, they've lost my trust.
By "unlocked" do they just mean that it uses a 32bit unsigned long int for the altitude instead of a 16bit inherently capped at 65535?
Bah humbug. I used to send balloons (and radiosondes) to 30km+ high twice a day for work. A normal commercial weather balloon will regularly reach up to 35km high (~10hPa).