Huge Balloon Lofts New Telescope 85
Science Daily is reporting that a new solar telescope has been launched via an enormous balloon filled with helium. Dubbed project "Sunrise" the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), NASA, Germany's Max Planck Institute for Solar Physics, Spain's Astrophysics Institute of the Canary Islands, and the Swedish Space Corporation all partnered to launch the balloon in order to view never before see features of the Sun. "The project may usher in a new generation of balloon-borne scientific missions that cost less than sending instruments into space. Scientists also can test an instrument on a balloon before making a commitment to launch it on a rocket. The balloon, with its gondola of scientific instruments, was launched successfully on the morning of October 3 from the Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Fort Sumner, New Mexico. It flew for about 10 hours, capturing stable images of the solar surface and additional data from the various instruments of the sophisticated payload. The gondola then separated from the balloon and descended with a parachute, landing safely in a field outside Dalhart, Texas."
so... (Score:2)
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I just looked outside and the sun has gone. GONE I tell you.
Now what the fuck are we gonna do?
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Q) How did they send a balloon to the Sun? (Score:1, Funny)
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Poor Images (Score:1)
Re:Poor Images (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Poor Images (Score:4, Interesting)
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Sure, that's what "they" want you think, man. They only retired them 'cause they had something better. Hell, they've got stuff at Area 51 that'll
HEY! WHERE'D YOU GUYS COM
[NO CARRIER]
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jp aerospace (Score:2)
http://www.jpaerospace.com/ [jpaerospace.com]
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First off, you need a parabolic mirror. The natural shape for inflatables is ellipsoid, not a parabola. That's a problem. The natural shape for a tensioned structure hanging is a catenary curve, also not a paraboloid. However, if its mass is insignificant in comparison to a uniform force applied to it, the natural shape is indeed a parabola. That is, to say, you can make inflatable parabolic mirrors by using a
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Additionally, even if adaptive optics are needed, it would cost far less to install them temporarily on a test system and launch via balloon than actually launch a full-scale test satellite.
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And for your second queestion: because hot air balloons are a WHOLE lot cheaper to fly than an airpl
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airplanes don't fly this high.
If we had one that did (hell, maybe we do) it would be hideously expensive to both A) Purchase and B) operate. Not to mention the fact that to sustain flight at that altitutde you would need some SERIOUS speed.
And about earth's atmosphere....the point of the balloon was to ESCAPE earth's atmosphere. In your o
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120kfeet is above a good deal of the sensible atmosphere - but the idea of sending up that high wasn't to avoid atmospheric distortion, but to avoid atmospheric filtering - I.E. to see the Sun in wavelengths that don't make it to the ground.
Sun variations (Score:2)
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HTH
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I love how you left out...
It should be stressed, the same report cautions that "Apart from solar brightness, more subtle influences on climate from cosmic rays or the Sun's ultraviolet radiation cannot be excluded, say the authors
Who said a bow and arrow was useless? (Score:1)
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A bow and arrow is useless just use a gun
Myself personally if I were to pop that thing I would use a thumb tack. A bow & arrow and a gun take all the fun out of it.
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I've had a balloon flight aborted due to a tear on a balloon. Even with a 4600 pound gondola, the balloon flew for at least 3 additional hours. Balloons this size have low pressure, and are fairly robust. They don't behave the same as the balloons used for birthday parties..
.. safely returned gondola: (Score:3, Funny)
whereupon it was shot to smithereens by a farmer shouting "The Russians are here, The Russians are here!"
B.
field===dalhart (Score:1, Insightful)
redundant.
What else is there to hit outside of Dalhart [google.com]?
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The government is claiming that a UFO, which crashed in Dalhart on October 22, is in fact a balloon from a weather experiment, the same official reason given for the July 1947 crash that triggered the alien invasion culture. UFO supporters are skeptical.
Balloons are not new (Score:4, Informative)
Though this sounds like a very interesting project, the use of balloons (and sounding rockets) for instruments that might later fly in space is not new. Cosmic ray studies have been using balloons for since 1912 [nasa.gov].
What may be new here is using balloons for instruments that need to be aimed precisely. Detectors on previous balloons were usually omni-directional, or could make measurements over large surface angles. Their Sun-tracking technology aiming sounds interesting, and I look forward to reading about their results
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Stratoscope II (Score:2)
Compare to [si.edu]:
Stratoscope II was the largest and most sophisticated balloon-borne astronomical telescope flown in the 1960s and early 1970s. A follow-on project to Stratoscope I, a 12-inch balloon born telescope conceived by Martin Schwarzschild, it was a 36-inch reflector mounted in a 3.5-ton stabilized gondola and studied the infra-red molecular composition of planetary atmospheres, the atmosphere
This was tried in the 1950's (Score:2)
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BLAST Balloon [slashdot.org]
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For those of you actually reading this far down in the thread, follow the link to the slashdot article about the BLAST balloon. It includes several links which may be of interest, including a few photo blogs from the people who are actually involved in these types of balloon launches.
Not a scientific flight -- only a checkout flight (Score:5, Interesting)
Strangely enough, some the components of sunlight at 120,000 feet altitude are not well known. Some interesting ultraviolet lines (the "h" and "k" lines from Magnesium) are thought to be visible there, that are not visible on the ground -- but nobody has yet characterized the ultraviolet absorption spectrum from the very upper layers of the stratosphere and from the mesosphere. Most telescopes that have flown so high were rocketing through on their way to space, rather than floating under a balloon. So this first flight was both to test the pointing (and other flight control) systems, and to double check that some desired wavelengths are present and usable at the target altitude.
Even the test flight of SUNRISE was a real accomplishment: it is far from the ideal of small, cheap, lightweight, quick-and-dirty payloads under scientific balloons, and is run more like a space mission both in terms of payload complexity and in terms of team management. The team is multinational and the payload is subject to rigorous engineering and testing.
The balloon flight environment is in some ways more harsh than the vacuum of space: payloads are subjected to wild temperature swings on climbout, and the thermal environment is not nearly as controllable as it is in empty space. On the other hand, launch and flight are very gentle compared to unmanned space shots.
Balloons aren't New in Astronomy (Score:4, Informative)
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While the scope and precision of this project appears to be admirable and new
And price, one would hope...
much of the initial attempts to view the universe through non-optical, non-radio wavelengths (the ones where our atmosphere is basically opaque)
What he's saying here, folks, is "ultraviolet, x-ray and gamma ray."
:(
Pesky atmosphere. Always getting in the way of the observing and keeping us from getting to the 0.3" limit of our optics!
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What he's saying here, folks, is "ultraviolet, x-ray and gamma ray."
Also infrared and microwave (BOOMERANG was in the latter region of the spectrum).
Well... given enough atmosphere you can get basically opaque in those wavelengths, sure.
But while leading Saturday's summit tour on Mauna Kea, before the Slashdot 10th Anniversary not-quite-a-party [slashdot.org], I intend to show the gathered geeks and tourists things like:
ULBCAM, the 16-megapixel testbed for the sensor technology being used in NIRCAM on JWST
UKIRT, the largest (for now) dedicated infrared telescope in the world (3.8m)
NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) (3.0m)
CalTech Submillimeter Observatory (10.4
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I think we're stridently agreeing.
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=I can't think of a dedicated microwave telescope that isn't atop a fairly inaccessible mountain, ideally somewhere extremely dry (such as Atacoma).
Fairly inaccessible? The summit of Mauna Kea is only 2 hours from the beach - and that's counting 30 minutes of acclimatizing. And we don't even have to have the Unimogs plow the road open in the spring like Mt. Evans. ;)
Areas away from civilization are popular for other reasons, and OVRO and BIMA don't appear to have been built at very high altitudes. Maybe a thousand or so meters? Not sure about the site of the combined CARMA array, though.
Yes ALMA is insanely high. CSO, JCMT and SMA, less so.
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Check out the CSBF [slashdot.org]webpage for more info.
And a shameless plug to a previous slashdot article [slashdot.org] on the most recent launch of BLAST, another balloon-borne telescope.
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Lets hope Bruce was wrong (Score:1)
-mcgrew
That's no balloon (Score:2)
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Dick,
Bob,
Dong,
How many balloons? Two? OK, but if THREE, then call ET.. (the Extra TESTical)...
Sorry...
(Captcha: wormed)
Related News from NASA Insider: STS-121 Mission (Score:1, Funny)
Day 1: Launch
Day 2: Inspect shuttle thermal protection system for damage.
Day 3: Inspect shuttle thermal protection system for damage.
Day 4: Repair thermal protection system.
Day 5: Repair thermal protection system.
Day 6: Repair thermal protection system.
Day 7: Re-inspect shuttle thermal protection system for damage.
Day 8: Mission conclusion, return to Earth.
-Ponga
Where the hell is the balloon going? (Score:2)
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Two words: Sadie's and Fred's...
Balloon people know what I'm talking about...
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helium - the only use-once element (Score:4, Interesting)
There are renewable resources (trees, etc.) and non-renewable resources (oil, etc.). But at least the raw elements of these resources stay around on Earth, and can conceivably be used again in the future for something else. In essense, the elemental composition of the earth has remained mostly constant for the past few billion years; it's only the molecules that the elements are bound up in and where that changes over time. Put it this way, if humans die off tomorrow, there'll be plenty of new oil for the insect overlords that evolve in a billion years, because the raw material for the oil is still churning around in the Earth's biological and geological systems.
But helium... well, helium is special. It has two interesting properties. Firstly, it is a very light element. Hydrogen and helium are so light that as individual atoms they freely escape the Earth's gravitational system and leak out into space. That means forever. Secondly, it is completely inert. It does not and cannot bind to any other molecule to weigh it down. This is in contrast to hydrogen, which is almost always bound up in a molecule of some sort. Thus, helium is the ONLY element that, when released into the atmosphere, will eventually leak out into space and be lost to the Earth forever. The only reason we have helium on Earth now is because a bunch of it is trapped in sand particles (that's where we mine it from). But once we mine it and use it, it's gone. And I mean gone gone. Deep space gone. Helium is the second-most abundant element in the universe (and the sun has a lot of it), but unless it's available on Earth, that fact is completely useless to us. We can't make new helium, other than through nuclear fusion of two hydrogen atoms. And that's not a manufacturing process we (or the future insect overlords) are ever going to undertake.
And this is all a great shame, too, since helium, being the lightest inert gas, is incredibly useful. I can't help but think that in a few hundred years (yes, I realize that it's probably that far away) humans will be kicking themselves for having blown helium in such great quantities in complete disregard for the fact that it could never, for the rest of humanity and beyond, be used again.
Think about that the next time you order a dozen helium balloons for your kid's next birthday party!
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I thought helium came up with Texas oil. Not all oil, but US oil was particularly rich in it. In the 1930's the US did not like exporting the stuff as you could fill zeppelins with it. That's why the British filled the R101, and the Germans filled the Hindenberg with hydrogen. In the UK, we used to collect all the helium we could from low-termperature experiments, stuff it into cylinders, and send it back for re-liquefaction. In the US, they just let it boil away at the time.
At the time, I was told that
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I'm curious as to what you suggest we use instead. Hydrogen? That'd go over well.
A small village in Germany was evacuated today after being set afire by the latest in a string of a dozen weather-balloon accidents.
Also, get your facts straight. Helium is extracted from natural gas, not sand. Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
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Nearly all helium on Earth is a result of radioactive decay. The decay product is primarily found in minerals of uranium and thorium, including cleveites, pitchblende, carnotite, monazite and beryl, because they emit alpha particles, which consist of helium nuclei (He2+) to which electrons readily combine. In this way an estimated 3.4 litres of helium per year are generated per cubic kilometer of the Earth's crust.
Let me get this straight... (Score:2, Funny)
BALLoons? (Score:1)
It was just you... (Score:1)
I'm not gonna go into that what was going on with our telescopes.
First of all Congratulations! (Score:2)
Sounds like someone is a little excited about their balloon flight. First of all, congratu
Recycle It (Score:2)