Fly Over Mars... in a Robotic Balloon 117
Roland Piquepaille writes "A Californian company, Global Aerospace Corporation (GAR), is developing remote-controlled balloons for the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC). BBC News Online reports that their goal is to send these balloons carrying robots and cameras to explore Mars skies. But it's not for a near term future. The robotic StratoSail will have a stabilizing wing suspended several miles below it. It will be able to stay above Mars for months. It will send robotic probes to monitor the surface and minilabs to carry out experiments. This overview contains more details, references and images about the StratoSail."
This'll be great... (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, yes... (Score:1, Redundant)
Let me be the first to say... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Early 90's? Frames didn't get introduced until netscape 2.0 in 1996 [mit.edu].
I feel so old for remembering the web from before frames even existed, and I'm not even 25 yet.
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:1)
CERN didn't release the WWW until '91. And who had the bandwith for all those graphics?
Why, back in my day
New Mars Innovations (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:New Mars Innovations (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:New Mars Innovations (Score:1)
Dependence on atmospheric pressure (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Dependence on atmospheric pressure (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Dependence on atmospheric pressure (Score:5, Informative)
On Mars' Atmosphere, Scientific Data (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dependence on atmospheric pressure (Score:5, Informative)
We know quite a lot.
The Soviet Mars 6 probe recorded atmospheric measurements all the way to the surface, as did the two Viking probes.
And it is routine to use measurements of the strength of signals from orbiters to measure atmospheric density. As the probe slips behind the planet, any atmosphere will interfere with the signal strength. Measure it finely enough and you can plot the varying density with altitude.
This isn't the first proposed balloon on Mars. the Soviet Union and France planned a mission for 1992, which was then slipped to 1994 then to 1996 and finally cancelled. The mission would have comprised of a heavy orbiter which would have acted as a communications relay and survey craft, a number of very small landers and/or penetrators and a pair of balloons.
The balloons would have used a combination of helium and solar heating to gain lift. The helium would provide most of the lift, the warmth of the Sun would give it bouyancy during the day. As it warmed, it would rise and drift along providing an almost constant aerial survey.
In the evening, as it cooled, the balloon would sink back to the surface - the helium would prevent the balloon snagging on the surface and keep the antennae upright. Meanwhile, instruments loaded into a long 'snake' slung below the balloon would be making surface measurements and inspecting the geology.
The balloon was tested on Earth and proved to be highly successful, it's a tragedy that the collapse of the Soviet Union prevented it flying.
Best wishes,
Mike.
YEA- *cough cough choke* (Score:4, Funny)
Violets are blue
On Soviet Mars
Balloons fly you
Re:YEA- *cough cough choke* (Score:1, Offtopic)
and Roses are Red-
On Soviet Slashdot
This Joke Kills YOU dead.
Re:YEA- *cough cough choke* (Score:4, Funny)
I'll be here all week. Try the veal.
We can't land a big air bag on Mars (Score:4, Funny)
Color me skeptical.
Miles of cable... (Score:1)
Re:We can't land a big air bag on Mars (Score:4, Informative)
Re:We can't land a big air bag on Mars (Score:1)
UFOs (Score:1, Funny)
If the machinery fails... (Score:3, Funny)
interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:interesting... (Score:2)
One thing I do not get from this is the structure of the balloon. It looks like a balloon with a glider hanging from it.... sure you can hang a glider from a balloon to "stabilize" it, but how would that be any more advantagous than hanging a counter weight with fins?
Attempted before (Score:5, Funny)
Nah, this is nothing new. My three year old has tried to send every ballon he has got is hands on straight to Mars. We have started tying little loops in the string for his wrists to stop this.
If they can get a ballon that high, I say go for it.
Re:Attempted before (Lawnchair Larry, 1982) (Score:2)
"A man can't just sit around," said Larry, immediately after his flight when asked
red ballons (Score:5, Funny)
99 red ballons floating in the summer sky
Panic bells, it's red alert
There's something here from somewhere else
They war machine springs of life
Opens up one eager eye
Focusing it on the sky
As 99 red ballons go by.
Oh well, no more 80's music...
Re:red ballons (Score:2)
Re:red ballons (Score:2)
Use as a Wi-Fi / Broadcasting Point (Score:4, Interesting)
Tethered balloons have long annoying (and heavy?) tethers for planes to run into, but this seems to stay above that height.
Covering the gas bag with solar cells or the like could mean the thing could stay up there for ages.
Re:Use as a Wi-Fi / Broadcasting Point (Score:1)
We could always use it to play heavy metal music or such to make the Martians go insane and come out of hiding, such as part of psychological operations [allpsych.com].
But will there be pink robots... (Score:3, Funny)
Pie in the sky (Score:5, Interesting)
We're developing our own balloon trajectory control system that hasn't been publicised yet, and it will be what flies on mars and earth, not this pile of garbage from GAC. I beleive the model they showed us was flawed in many ways, so we decided we could design it better in-house. Not really sure why there's an article on this, but you might as well not worry about any advancements on this particular project, as it will never materialize.
Re:Pie in the sky (Score:3, Interesting)
Hrmmmm... I am not sure which is worse:
1. the inferred arrogance of
Re:Pie in the sky (Score:1)
This idea is not new, there has been a lot of research in this area and this idea was ours first.
Yes, we have a monopoly on scientific balloons, in this country. We supply millions of dollars in R&D money to lots of folks to advance balloon science, and if NASA were sending balloons to another planet, they'd certainly want to use the expertise of the 40+ years of experience of the BPO. We've been working on mars
Re:Pie in the sky (Score:1)
Re:Pie in the sky (Score:1)
headline news (Score:5, Funny)
The Martian government continues to deny any knowledge of beings from the Blue planet, and claims the object was just a weather balloon, and nothing to worry about.
What about the pending helium shortage? (Score:2, Interesting)
I seem to remember reading that the worlds reserves (which I believe are mostly if not all in the U.S.) are getting down to almost critical levels with no new reserves being found.
Re:What about the pending helium shortage? (Score:2)
Re:What about the pending helium shortage? (Score:2, Interesting)
And you can't increase the voltage past a few thousand volts, that would simply ionize the air and cause arcing.
Even if you could supply enough voltage, the c
Re:What about the pending helium shortage? (Score:1)
Re:What about the pending helium shortage? (Score:2, Informative)
A quick check in the Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], under the ocurrance section for Helium reassures me a little "Helium is the second most abundant element in the universe"
It's just a matter of patience ;o)
Old bands predict the future (Score:3, Funny)
Would you like to ride in my beautiful balloon
We could float among the stars together, you and I
All they need to do is paint it red and they've got all of the best balloon songs covered.
Re:Old bands predict the future (Score:1)
Catatonia induced by cathode rays from beyond Mars
Infect their minds in the primetime slot, in colour they'll watch their own demise
I watch the skies above alone, at night
Return what's rightfully mine
My Death Saucer will come
Usurp the Earth from human scum, I 've been waiting
In transmission I can see invasion imminent this day, I've been waiting
From every corner of the globe - insects arise with jaws agape, I've been wa
Funny sounding martians? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Excellent idea, but extend it. (Score:3, Insightful)
But you can just stay in orbit. How close to the ground could a satelite orbit the moon? Besides how much is more science on the moon worth? not much in my estimation.
Re:Excellent idea, but extend it. (Score:1)
Unexpected wind hundreds thousand kilometers from Mars cause the ballon to change direction to Planet Jupiter instead.
Good and bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Bad: Mars' atmosphere is about 0.5% of our. In other words, it's 99.5% vacuum. How ginormogantuan must a balloon be to carry any serious weight there?? Gravity is just 1/3, but that hardly begins to compensate.
Re:Good and bad (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good and bad (Score:1, Informative)
The total lifting force is equal to the absolute difference in weight between the gas inside the baloon, and the equivilant volume of gas outside. With a less dense atmosphere, that effect means much less buoyancy. Density matters a lot here.
CO2 is about 10 times as dense as helium at the same temp and pressure, so you could approximate the upward force by the weigh
Re:Good and bad (Score:2)
Er...no. The total buoyancy of a balloon is equal to the difference in weight between the lifting gas that fills its envelope and the atmosphere that it displaces. In lower gravity the weight of a given mass of gas goes down, but so does the weight of a given mass of payload, so
Re:Good and bad (Score:1)
99.5% nothing? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:99.5% nothing? (Score:1)
Nah, they won't float....
Atmoshperic Density (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:1)
As far as the amount of the gas needed, it should be about the same as we would need here on earth. While the atmosphere is less dense, Mars has a significantly lower mass (and diameter, which greatly is the cause of the lower atmospheric density).
Mars diameter: 6,794 km
Mars mass: 6.4219e23 kg
Earth diameter:
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:4, Informative)
For hydrogen to explode, it needs to be in the presence of oxygen.
This is much less a concern in the Martian atmosphere, which is 95% corbon dioxide, as opposed to Earth's 80%-20% nitrogen-oxygen mix.
As for storage and transport, hydrogen can either be well contained (rocket fuel rarely explodes prematurely these days), or generated by a chemical reaction upon arrival (anyone remember what you get from adding a metal to acid from middle school chemistry? Though I'd imagine the medium of choice would likely be something like hydrogen peroxide. IANA Chemical Engineer.)
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:2)
So both the helium and the hydrogen designs are inherently flawed because they will have a time to leave on the order of a few weeks at most. It is sim
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:1)
Oh please, that's not even a real concern. A craft going to Mars has to carry a propellant like hydrazine or red fuming nitric acid to power mid-course correction thrusters. Compared to that a hydrogen tank is nothing. Plus, unlike hydrazine, hydrogen needs to be mixed with oxygen to combust, and crazily enough yo
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:1)
Oh! The martianity!!
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:1)
Re:Atmoshperic Density (Score:1)
hydrogen balloon? sure (Score:1)
Adverts... (Score:2, Funny)
I can just see the good old Whitmans and Goodyear blimps floating over the red planet.
They'd have to be bigger of course, so observers could see the blue object floating around Mars from a telescope on Earth.
Global Aerospace Corporation? (Score:3, Funny)
I'm afraid those balloons will end up taking pictures of cacodemons or something...
Serving on the Moon (Score:1)
http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technol
It appears that they have already contracted for 2 more missions beyond this one, and want to place storage space on the Moon - the ultimate in avoiding various nation's stupid laws??
A new conspiracy (Score:5, Funny)
You see, in the future, the question may be asked "what race of beings first made it to Mars?" and the answer? Machines.
You know the way dolphins triain people to feed them fish so they don't have to bother with all that pesky hunting? Well it looks to me suspiciously like the machines may be planning to colonize Mars first by tricking us into financing their operations. They already have made it there in the past, and in fact right now they have two mobile individuals on the surface that are imagining god knows what fate for human kind. On earth, they have managed to get a model T800 Terminator into a strong political position, which could end up making President.
Ultimately, ironically, the epitaph of the human race may be "Hasta la vista, baby."
So basically... (Score:4, Funny)
Another balloon (Score:1)
Imagine the view from this thing (Score:1)
The robotic StratoSail will have a stabilizing wing suspended several miles below it.
Re:Imagine the view from this thing (Score:2)
my university has being working on this for years. (Score:1, Informative)
Fly over now (Score:3, Informative)
Mars exploration jumps the shark (Score:2)
Similar project (Score:1)
Remote controlled? Pah! Autonomous robots are cool.
We weren't allowed to use 'regular' helium (such as the sort you'd get in party balloons) because it has some dangerous impurities. We had to use 99% pure stuff which was much more expensive. Think about
prior art (Score:4, Informative)
Geoffrey Landis has a couple very thought-provoking papers on his website [sff.net], regarding possible further developments of atmospheric flight on both mars and venus, and possibilities for human living in upper atmosphere
This is a big deal? (Score:2, Funny)
WASHINGTON, DC--A NASA poll conducted to gauge support for President Bush's space-exploration initiative revealed that a depressing 57 percent of Americans believe that the U.S. already has a research base on the moon. "We put that international space-station thing up there in the '60s," phone-poll respondent Randy Snow said. "It might be on Mars, but I think it's the moon--wherever they have the golf course that President Kennedy played on. Remember,
It would be more interesting on Venus (Score:1)
We should use ballons to inveastigate there.
Site Design Lifted from Grocklaw (Score:2, Funny)
My Goodness, right below the balloon, its Snoopy! (Score:2)
Space Travel (Score:1)
Re:good link i was reading (Score:5, Interesting)
However, I was under the impression that the less dense Martian atmosphere changed little with altitude. Is there enough variation in Martian winds with altitude for this system to work there?
Re:good link i was reading (Score:1, Informative)
Check this press release describing the shift in winds during Opportunity's landing. Scroll towards the bottom for some nice pictures describing the landing. The shift in winds may be too low in altitude to relate to the parent topic.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/op