Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




AEROSPACE
Building 45 Payloads for Balloon Mission
by Karen C. Fox for NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 30, 2012


Several BARREL payloads are built all at the same time. Credit: Robyn Millan.

Robyn Millan's lab is a little crowded at the moment. It overflows with electronics. And foam. And parachutes and aluminum frames and drills. Based at Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH, Millan and her students are busy building 45 payloads - each destined for a trip on a balloon around Antarctica as part of a NASA mission called BARREL, or the Balloon Array for RBSP Relativistic Electron Losses.

"We've been drilling a lot of holes," says Millan. "My students figured out that we have almost 10,000 holes to drill."

It's all part of a plan to launch a series of instruments that will work hand in hand with NASA's Radiation Belt Space Probes (RBSP) mission, two NASA spacecraft due to launch in August 2012 to study a mysterious part of Earth's magnetic environs called the Van Allen radiation belts. The belts are made up of two regions, each one a gigantic donut of protons and electrons that surround Earth.

"We're both looking at the loss of particles from the radiation belts," says Millan. "RBSP sits in space near the equatorial plane and looks at the particles along magnetic field lines there.

These particles come into our atmosphere - following magnetic field lines to their base at the Poles - and produce X-rays. BARREL measures those X-rays. Together we can combine measurements of the same set of particles."

The charged particles within the radiation belts can damage sensitive electronics on spacecraft like those used for global positioning systems and communications, and can be harmful to humans in space. (The electrons don't make it all the way to Earth, so pose no danger to those of us on the ground.) Experiments like BARREL and RBSP will help us understand the processes and mitigate those risks.

In the meantime, Millan's team drills holes, builds payloads and, most importantly, tests the hardware. They will launch 20 instruments in January 2013 that must be shipped to Antarctica beginning in August.

Many of the components are built elsewhere - University of California in Berkeley, University of California in Santa Cruz and University of Washington in Seattle - and are then shipped to Dartmouth. There, Millan's lab assembles the payloads and tests them both to make sure they work and that they will withstand the rigors of their balloon trip.

"I'm proud of how much work my students did improving the mechanical design to make sure it would be faster to build," says Millan. "Every few minutes count. If some building process takes three minutes, that doesn't sound like much, but multiply that by 45 and little things become significant. Now our process is streamlined. It's almost like Legos - all the pieces just fit together."

BARREL is a balloon-based Mission of Opportunity to augment the measurements of NASA's RBSP spacecraft. BARREL seeks to measure the precipitation of relativistic electrons from the radiation belts during two multi-balloon campaigns, operated in the southern hemispheres.

.


Related Links
Radiation Belt Space Probes Mission
Aerospace News at SpaceMart.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








AEROSPACE
Calif. airship reaches record height
Black Rock Desert, Nev. (UPI) Oct 27, 2011
An unmanned airship created by a California company flew 95,085 feet into the air, higher than any airship in history, the company said. JP Aerospace of Rancho Cordova took the twin-balloon Tandem airship to Nevada's Black Rock Desert Sunday for the launch, KTXL-TV, Sacramento, Calif., reported. Remotely controlled by an operator on the ground, the Tandem's two balloons are separ ... read more


AEROSPACE
One in seven suffer malnourishment: UN food agency

Women warming to white wines in China: experts

Groundwater depletion in semiarid regions of Texas and California threatens US food security

Research pinpoints how plants know when to flower

AEROSPACE
Japan's Renesas ups chip outsourcing to Taiwan giant

New silicon memory chip developed

Return of the vacuum tube

Performance boost for microchips

AEROSPACE
Russia, India to produce transports

Canada replaces Polaris jet servicing firm

Building 45 Payloads for Balloon Mission

EADS head says helicopter cracks not comparable to A380 woes

AEROSPACE
Japan's April auto output soars in year after quake

Ferrari recalls 56 cars in China: state media

Toyota overtakes GM, regains number one spot

Calif. passes 'self-driving' cars bill

AEROSPACE
Japan's NEC buys Australian IT firms

Peru arrests 15 activists protesting Xstrata mine

Clashes over Xstrata mine in Peru leave two dead

New canal links S. Korea capital to Yellow Sea

AEROSPACE
Greenpeace says KFC boxes destroy Indonesia forests

Beetle-infested Pine Trees Contribute to Air Pollution and Haze in Forests

Beetle-infested pine trees contribute more to air pollution and haze in forests

Forest diversity from Canada to the sub-tropics influenced by family proximity

AEROSPACE
S Korea to develop geostationary satellite for environmental monitoring

LiDAR Technology Reveals Faults Near Lake Tahoe

Satellite maps ocean floor

Nea Kameni volcano movement captured by Envisat

AEROSPACE
First direct observation of oriented attachment in nanocrystal growth

Stunning image of smallest possible 5 rings

Sensing the infrared: Researchers improve IR detectors with single-walled carbon nanotubes

Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement