Designed with two layers, the aerobot has:
🔹 A rigid inner reservoir filled with helium under high pressure.
🔹 An outer balloon that expands and contracts to control altitude.
How does it change altitude?
🔹 To ascend: Helium vents from the inner reservoir into the outer balloon, increasing buoyancy.
🔹 To descend: Helium is pumped back into the reservoir, shrinking the outer balloon and reducing buoyancy.
✅ Balloons are a faster and cheaper way to explore planets 🌍💰
Because of this, they allow higher-risk, cutting-edge technologies to be tested before use in space.
✅ Why do balloons float? 🎈✨
Helium balloons float due to buoyant forces described in Archimedes’ Principle:
Any object immersed in a fluid experiences an upward force equal to the weight of the fluid it displaces.
Air is heavier (denser) than helium, so the buoyant force pushing up on the balloon is stronger than gravity pulling it down.
✅ NASA uses two types of planetary balloons 🛰️
Zero-pressure balloons – Used for short-duration flights (a few hours to days).
Super-pressure balloons – Used for long-duration missions (up to 100 days!).
Both are made of thin plastic film similar to plastic wrap.
✅ NASA’s Balloon Missions 🚀
In 2014, NASA tested Mars landing technology by lifting the Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator (LDSD) to 119,000 feet!
Balloons help simulate conditions on Mars’ thin atmosphere before actual Mars missions
Complete each of following mission challenges:
✅ Maintain altitude: Find the appropriate amount of mass to place in the cup that will cause the balloon to float and maintain a steady altitude of approximately 3 feet (1 meter) for 30 seconds. (Fb = Fg)
✅ Controlled ascent: Find the appropriate amount of mass to place in the cup that will cause the balloon to ascend at a rate between 10 and 20 inches per second (0.25 to 0.5 meters per second). (Fb > Fg)
✅ Controlled descent and landing: Find the appropriate amount of mass to place in the cup that will cause the balloon to descend at a rate between 10 and 20 inches per second (0.25 to 0.5 meters per second). (Fb < Fg)
STEP 1: Brainstorm and sketch your gondola design. How will it be removable? What materials will keep it steady?
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STEP 2: Design and build your gondola v.1
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STEP 3: Grab a couple of balloons and TEST, RECORD DATA, REDESIGN, RETEST
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STEP 4: Weigh and record your gondola data
How might you improve your balloon’s flight?
1️⃣ Weigh the gondola cup and payload (use a small scale) – Record W
2️⃣ Estimate balloon volume based on size:
Interested in planetary balloons and space exploration? Check out these exciting careers:
Aerospace Engineer – Designs and tests space probes and planetary balloons. 🛰️
Atmospheric Scientist – Studies planetary atmospheres using high-altitude balloons. 🌥️
Astrobiologist – Researches possible life in alien atmospheres. 🧬
Planetary Geologist – Studies the surfaces and climates of planets. 🪨
Robotics Engineer – Designs autonomous drones and probes for planetary exploration. 🤖
🚀 Which of these careers interests you the most? Keep exploring and reach for the stars! 🌟
✅ ASTHROS Telescope & Science 🛰️
Telescope: Features a lightweight 8.4-foot (2.5-meter) antenna to collect far-infrared light.
Technology: Uses a cryocooler powered by solar panels to keep detectors at 4 Kelvin (−452°F).
Scientific Goal: Investigate stellar feedback—the process by which stars affect star formation in galaxies.
Bonus Target: Observe TW Hydrae, a young star with a dust and gas disk where planets may be forming!
Jean Piccard & Stratobowl (1930s)
Echo-1 (1960) – NASA’s First Balloon Satellite