
NASA
and the National Science Foundation have successfully launched and demonstrated
a newly-designed super pressure balloon prototype that may enable a new era of
high-altitude scientific research. The super-pressure balloon ultimately will
carry large scientific experiments to the brink of space for 100 days or more.
The
seven-million-cubic-foot super-pressure balloon is the largest single-cell,
super-pressure, fully-sealed balloon ever flown. When development ends, NASA
will have a 22 million-cubic-foot balloon that can carry a one-ton instrument
to an altitude over three times higher than passenger planes fly.
"This flight
test is a very important step forward in building a new capability for
scientific ballooning based on sound engineering and operational
development," said W. Vernon Jones, senior scientist for suborbital
research at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "The team has further work to
do to enable the super pressure balloon to lift a one-ton instrument to a float
altitude of 110,000 feet, but the team has demonstrated they are on the right
path."
Ultra-long
duration missions using the super pressure balloon cost considerably less than
a satellite and the scientific instruments flown can be retrieved and launched
again, making them ideal very-high altitude research platforms.
The test flight
was launched December 28, 2008, from McMurdo Station, which is the National
Science Foundation's logistics hub in Antarctica. The balloon reached a float
altitude of more than 111,000 feet, and at this writing continues to maintain
it in its 12th day of flight. The flight tested the durability and
functionality of the scientific balloon's unique pumpkin-shaped design and
novel material. The material is a special lightweight polyethylene film, about
the thickness of ordinary plastic food wrap.
"Our balloon
development team is very proud of the tremendous success of the test flight and
is focused on continued development of this new capability to fly balloons for
months at a time in support of scientific investigations," said David
Pierce, chief of the Balloon Program Office at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility
at Wallops Island, VA. "The test flight has demonstrated that 100 day
flights of large, heavy payloads is a realistic goal."
In addition to
the super pressure test flight, two additional long-duration balloons have been
launched from McMurdo during the 2008-2009 campaign. The University of Hawaii
Manoa's Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna launched December 21, 2008, and
is still aloft. Its radio telescope is searching for indirect evidence of
extremely high-energy neutrino particles possibly coming from outside our Milky
Way galaxy.
The University of
Maryland's Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass, or CREAM IV, experiment launched
December 19, 2008, and landed January 6, 2009. The CREAM investigation was used
to directly measure high energy cosmic-ray particles arriving at Earth after originating
from distant supernova explosions elsewhere in the Milky Way galaxy.
The
super-pressure balloon (shown below, with the team) was highlighted in the
National Research Council's decadal survey "Astronomy and Astrophysics in
the New Millennium," and will play an important role in providing
inexpensive access to the near-space environment for science and technology.
NASA and the
National Science Foundation conduct an annual scientific balloon campaign
during the Antarctic summer. The National Science Foundation manages the US
Antarctic Program and provides logistic support for all U.S. scientific
operations in Antarctica.
The Wallops
Flight Facility is a division of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, MD. Wallops manages NASA's scientific balloon program for the
Science Mission Directorate. Launch operations are conducted by the Columbia
Scientific Balloon Facility of Palestine, TX which is managed for NASA by the
Physical Science Laboratory of New Mexico State University in Las Cruces.