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Balloons
Created at the instigation of the scientific community in the early 1960s, and then taken over and developed by CNES, the Balloon programme consists in designing and operating aerostats to carry scientific instruments or test new technologies.
Capable of remaining at an altitude of 20 to 40 km, higher than aircraft and for longer periods than sounding rockets, the balloon remains a unique vehicle for collecting data in situ in the stratosphere. Balloons are environmentally-friendly in that they use neither an engine nor fuel to reach their final destination.
Why send scientific instruments to altitudes of 10, 20 or 40 km?
Since the late 19th century, scientists have mostly been using balloons to study the atmosphere or for astronomical research.
In the atmosphere, balloon-borne instruments can take in situ measurements of winds, quantities of greenhouse gases, aerosols and radiation. Balloons also enable astronomers to observe the Universe using telescopes weighing several hundred kilos flown above the dense layers of the atmosphere.
Balloons can thus complement satellite observations and ground-based measurements.
A better understanding of our planet
Balloons drift through the atmosphere, enabling scientists to study physical and chemical phenomena and take air samples. They have thus been used to study the ozone layer, to search for greenhouse gases and particles, and to investigate monsoon mechanisms in India and Africa.
Perfect for testing satellite equipment
With the development of space activities, the range of balloon applications has widened to include the testing of new technologies. Instruments and equipment designed to be carried on board satellites, including star trackers, thermal cameras and solar cells, are tested under balloons at very high altitudes.
Astronomers, astrophysicists and biologists all use balloons!
Balloons meet the needs of many scientific communities. Astronomers use balloons flying above the dense layers of the atmosphere to capture some invisible radiation that either does not reach the ground very much, such as infrared or ultraviolet rays, or not at all, such as X-rays and gamma rays. Astrophysicists take advantage of certain flights to validate instrument techniques while collecting important scientific data.
The balloon, a aerostatic crane
Balloons are sometimes sent up to high altitudes to release the mock-up of a body that is to re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere (e.g., the heat shield of a planetary probe, a suborbital aircraft, a space shuttle, Martian decelerator, etc.) whose aerodynamics need to be studied on a more representative scale than in a wind tunnel.
Mission's news feed
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Philae phones home
After 211 days of radio silence, a signal from Philae was received on Earth on Saturday 13 June at 22:28 CET. According to Stephan Ulamec, Philae Project Manager at the German...
June 15, 2015
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Successful launch for Ariane 5 on 27 May 2015 !
A new Ariane 5 ECA model orbited 2 telecommunications satellites on wednesday 27 May 2015 from the Guiana Space Centre: DirectTV-15 and SKY México-1. The launcher lifted off at 18...
May 27, 2015