Sophisticated Balloons Could Help Steer Spacecraft 96
coondoggie writes "Getting spacecraft traveling at hypersonic speeds to slow down and land or achieve a particular orbit on a dime is no easy feat.
But researchers are developing a tool that will let engineers model and ultimately build advanced flight control systems that meld balloon and parachute technologies known as a ballute (BALLoon-parachUTE). Basically a ballute is a large, inflatable device that takes advantage of atmospheric drag to decelerate and capture a spacecraft into orbit around a planet, according to NASA who is funding Global Aerospace to build such a tool."
Caution: Humans at work (Score:2, Funny)
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+1 Internets for humility though!
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Reminds me of 2010... (Score:4, Funny)
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Future News: "The Colbert shuttle docked at Space Station Colbert earlier today after leaving Lunar Colony Colbert 1. After refitting for supplies, it will re-land on Lunar Colony Colbert 2 tomorrow."
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Perhaps they wanted a glimpse into what the public thought, rather than opening it up to ballot stuffers and vote riggers?
Maybe, just maybe, they had the idea that giving people a voice was not quite the same thing as giving people the final say?
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Re:Colbert (Score:5, Funny)
I officially think that the folks at NASA are a bunch of jerks for not respecting the results of their ISS node naming contest. :-(
Indeed.
It kills our best chance of making our first contact with a ship called "Skullfuck Soulshitter".
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I like the idea of humans making contact with aliens and both ships having stupid names due to internet tricksters. That would be a sign that things are going to turn out just fine.
Of course the the alien ship is called something like The Dear Leader, then we've probably got a problem on our hands. Either that or those green bastards on the alien equivalent of 4chan have a sick sense of humour.
Don't call it a baloot.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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I feel better seeing i wasn't the only person to think of this
Old tech? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Also of note, the ballute was ahead of the spacecraft, instead of behind it. It should have been behind the spacecraft, the way it unfolded in front indicated a non rigid structure that should have been pushed back towards the spacecraft by the pressure of the atmosphere.
Re:Old tech? (Score:4, Insightful)
the way it unfolded in front indicated a non rigid structure that should have been pushed back towards the spacecraft by the pressure of the atmosphere.
You neglect the internal pressure of the ballute which would be made greater than that of the outer layer of the atmosphere of Jupiter at that altitude, giving it rigidity.
Someone should try putting a balloon held in a forward position by a solid structure (so it doesn't flutter backwards) against the wind in a wind tunnel to test this, post the video to YouTube, and provide a link here.
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Re:Old tech? (Score:5, Informative)
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It'll work only for named heroes and important villains, all the other astronauts are fucked.
Re:Old tech? (Score:4, Informative)
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The quality of science in Gundam has been a staple of the franchise for quite a while too :P. Some people balk at the idea of giant robots, but try and extrapolate the evolution of military armour for a moment. Right now we have slow tanks on treads. Good for rough terrain, bad if it gets too rough. Replace the tracks with four or six legs, and then it becomes a game of maneuverability, not firepower. People will start making anti-tank tanks to take out the new legged ones. Another cool thing about mo
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I'm a big ran of O'Neill, but I gotta wonder what exactly he was smoking when he suggested that we were capable of building them with 1970s technology. Island Three was to be two counter rotating cylinders, each 3km in radius and 30km long, as well as a 15km radius ring of spheres for farming. That's a hell of a lot of steel. Each cylinder is 566 sq km .. of undeclared thickness.
Re:Old tech? Early 1980's (Score:2)
Look at the cover of Popular Science, October 1983. Note: I used to work with Dr. Dana Andrews, at Boeing, in the early 80's. We were working on such things back then. Dana was the consultant for the movie 2010. We had fun going to see the movie as a group, and making critiques:
"Hey, that's a subsonic wake, that's wrong"
Aerobraking is a subset of hypersonic aerodynamics. Inflatable things like Ballutes are zero lift pure drag devices. You can also control direction if you use a lifting body shape. if
MAGIC BALLOONS (Score:1, Interesting)
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You seem to know an awful lot about this. Are you some sort of Atmospheric drag queen?
Re:MAGIC BALLOONS (Score:4, Informative)
This is being used for aerobraking and aerocapture, not entry/re-entry. The idea is that it flys through the upper reaches of the atmosphere to slow it down and send it into some kind of closed orbit about the target body. Not nearly as much of a heating issue, particularly if you're talking about Mars which has a much less dense atmosphere.
No real reason to use it for re-entry since a Viking-style Mach-2 chute, or one of the new-fangled Mach-3 chutes will do the job already.
SCI-FI been there done that (Score:2)
I seem to remember 2010 Space Odyssey using what they called in the movie a ballute to slow down on arrival at Jupiter.
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The military as well. They use them to slow bombs dropped at low altitude.
Now one at hypersonic speeds will be challenging.
Re:SCI-FI been there done that (Score:4, Interesting)
"Now one at hypersonic speeds will be challenging."
Depends strongly on the density of the atmosphere and the drogue's size. A ballute might even be designed to grow or shrink as the spacecraft slows and the atmosphere becomes more dense. The necessary scaling might be vastly different between Mars with a thin atmosphere and Venus with a very dense atmosphere. The temperature would also be an issue since the planets vary from cryogenic to hot enough to melt lead.
So many options (Score:5, Funny)
advanced flight control systems that meld balloon and parachute technologies known as a ballute (BALLoon-parachUTE).
I'd have called it Paraloon.
Or possibly Ballachute.
"Ballachute! I choose you!"
Yep. It works.
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I find it somewhat disappointing that whoever wrote the summary felt the need to clarify where ballute came from after having said "meld balloon and parachute" only 4 words beforehand..
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In next weeks news.... (Score:3, Funny)
I've thought long and hard about this... (Score:2)
Yummey Egg Baby Bird (Score:2)
Balut? (Score:1)
I thought that was that NASTY Filipino snack food consisting of a cooked, fertile duck egg with a pinch of salt...
Ballute jokes (Score:4, Funny)
My other car is a ballute.
Oh yeah? well my new cadillac is a ballute de ville.
yo momma's so fat, when she jumps out of an airplane, she has to use a ballute.
I would write more, but my computer's about to crash, so I have to reballute.
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Nope - you must be thinking of someone else. Heinlein was a graduate of the Naval Academy and a dropout from UCLA.
Problems with atmosphere breaking (Score:5, Informative)
Capsules like Soyuz or Apollo have the highest mass per cross-section area and hence have high heating loads and decelerations. The Shuttle has pretty high heating loads as well. If it had been made considerably "fluffier", it wouldn't need the special tiles for its TPS.
Ballutes are cheap ways to greatly increase the cross-sectional area of the vehicle. For a fictional example of a ballute, the film 2010 portrays the Soviet spaceship, Leonov using one as it aerobrakes to slow down enough to orbit around Jupiter. Technically, in this case, it is aerocapture. This is aerobraking with only one pass through atmosphere. The usual process involves many passes through atmosphere, shedding some velocity on each pass.
The innovation in this article is the ability to control a ballute which has some lift. There are two possible uses that I can think of, off the top of my head. First, it can be used to steer the vehicle so that more of its path is in the less dense high atmosphere. In other words, we can steer to some degree the trajectory so that we get better deceleration and heating loads. Second, aerocapture is very hard. The key problem is that any changes in the atmosphere will change the trajectory, possibly enough to make the attempt unsurvivable. Even if the vehicle isn't in danger, small differences in the atmosphere or the vehicle's reentry trajectory mean the vehicle may end up on a different trajectory. If it is landing, it may end up far away from the desired landing spot. Ability to steer reduces the uncertainty of aerocapture and provides some valuable margin of error for a spacecraft.
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I'd like to see a report on this Thermal Protection System you speak of.
Please make sure it includes the mandatory first page.
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I know chicks with large "sophisticated balloons" (Score:5, Funny)
steer my eyes straight to their racks.
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Regardless, even if the ballute were buoyant and durable enough to stay high in the atmosphere for significant periods there is a trivial solution -- open the gas chamber when the ballute is released.
Other news (Score:2)
This article is a real let-down (pun intended) (Score:2)
a balut? (Score:2)
filipinos laugh at the unintended linguistic joke
balut [nbc.com]
althoug, using the word for something that is half-duck half-egg, is a pretty good metaphor for this polymorphous device
Please explain (Score:2)
And question #2, if you're in the planet's atmosphere you're no longer in orbit - right?
There are tons of space nerds on
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Interesting about the exosphere, I never knew there was atmospheric drag during LEO.
ballutes & russian heroines (Score:2)
Our favorite part of ballute aerobraking is when the beautiful Russian heroine comes into your state room & starts making love to you.
Sophisticated balloons (Score:1)
Gah! (Score:1)
Sophisticated Baboons Could Help Steer Spacecraft
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I read it as "...Spear..." ;)
Aero-braking. (Score:1)
The Russians did do this or will do this in 2010. It's called aero-braking. Just don't attempt any landings on Io.
What is the speed of sound in near space? (Score:2)
"... spacecraft traveling at hypersonic speeds..."
I'll bite, what is the speed of sound in the regions in which he ballutes will be used? Doesn't it depend on both pressure and temperature? Are the SiFi movies right and there is sound in space after all?
It's unfortunate (Score:2)
that Ballute is also the asian word for an egg with a dead fetus inside it (yes, to eat).