An Investigation of Techniques for Launching Large Balloon Systems from Aircraft Or Rockets in Flight

An Investigation of Techniques for Launching Large Balloon Systems from Aircraft Or Rockets in Flight
Author: Andrew S. Carten (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1973
Genre: Balloons
ISBN:

The requirements for placing a military payload (communications relay, electro-optical sensor, etc.) in the sky at short notice are identified. A demonstration aircraft-launched balloon system is proposed and the basic assumptions defined. The balloon size and mass of inflatant to be carried aloft are calculated. Compressed gas and cryogenic storage systems are compared. The weight of storage tank/lift ratio is used to demonstrate the superiority of cryogenic storage. The properties of liquid helium and liquid hydrogen are discussed with respect to safe long term storage. The heat needed to vaporize the cryogens and to warm the resultant inflation gases is calculated. Methods of generating and transferring the required heat at the time of inflation are described. (Modified author abstract).

An Investigation of Techniques for Launching Large Balloon Systems from Aircraft Or Rockets in Flight

An Investigation of Techniques for Launching Large Balloon Systems from Aircraft Or Rockets in Flight
Author: Andrew S. Carten (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1973
Genre: Balloons
ISBN:

The requirements for placing a military payload (communications relay, electro-optical sensor, etc.) in the sky at short notice are identified. A demonstration aircraft-launched balloon system is proposed and the basic assumptions defined. The balloon size and mass of inflatant to be carried aloft are calculated. Compressed gas and cryogenic storage systems are compared. The weight of storage tank/lift ratio is used to demonstrate the superiority of cryogenic storage. The properties of liquid helium and liquid hydrogen are discussed with respect to safe long term storage. The heat needed to vaporize the cryogens and to warm the resultant inflation gases is calculated. Methods of generating and transferring the required heat at the time of inflation are described. (Modified author abstract)

Flight Tests of the Air-Launched Balloon System (ALBS) Prototype Model

Flight Tests of the Air-Launched Balloon System (ALBS) Prototype Model
Author: Andrew S. Carten (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1978
Genre: Balloons
ISBN:

The requirements for the Air Launched Balloon System (ALBS) development program and the highlights of that program, prior to the flight test phase, are presented. The rationale behind an ambitious ALBS parachute subsystem test flight series, using C-130 aircraft, at the National Parachute Test Range is given, along with the initial system configuration chosen for that series. The test-demonstrated inadequacy of the 32-ft drogue chute is documented. The successes achieved subsequently in flights with a 28-ft drogue chute (in combination with the 42-ft main chute) are described, both for tests employing a dummy balloon and for later tests in which a real balloon was used. Attempts at partial balloon inflation at the NPTR are discussed. The unsolved parachute coning problem is also described, along with tests aimed at its solution. Planning and preflight preparations for the January 1978 balloon drop test over the White Sands Missile Range are covered in considerable detail. The abortive launch of that flight is related and an analysis of the reasons for the flight failure is presented. Five (5) appendices are included with supporting calculations.

The "C" - Launch Technique for High-altitude Balloons

The
Author: Francis X. Doherty
Publisher:
Total Pages: 20
Release: 1967
Genre: Balloons, Sounding
ISBN:

During the period from 1961 through 1965, the Air Force Cambridge Research Laboratories developed the technique for launching high altitude plastic balloons directly from the manufacturer's shipping crate. This technique was primarily designed to facilitate the handling, inflation, and launch of large balloons from small ships at sea. The paper describes the new launch procedure and the specialized equipment designed to support it. (Author).

Proceedings, Tenth AFGL Scientific Balloon Symposium, 21 August to 23 August 1978

Proceedings, Tenth AFGL Scientific Balloon Symposium, 21 August to 23 August 1978
Author: Catherine L. Rice
Publisher:
Total Pages: 546
Release: 1979
Genre: Balloons
ISBN:

This publication contains the Keynote Address and twenty-nine papers presented at the Tenth AFGL Scientific Balloon Symposium, 21-23 August 1978, at Portsmouth, NH. The five sessions were entitled: Balloon Technology - Progress and Problems; Manned Flights; Stratospheric Measurements; Airship Design Concepts; and Methods and Models.

Scientific Ballooning

Scientific Ballooning
Author: Nobuyuki Yajima
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2009-04-21
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0387097279

The aim of this book is to introduce scientific ballooning to the many people who are interested in the use of balloons for scientific applications. The book offers a basic understanding of the engineering details and the scientific research giving rise to balloon activities going on today. Above all, the book will serve as a guidebook for young scientists and researchers seeking to become involved in space science and technology by participating in balloon projects. The book deals with three types of balloons: large stratospheric balloons used for scientific purposes, rubber balloons used for aerological observations, and planetary balloons to be used in the atmospheres of other planets. The book provides many figures and photographs, and offers a systematic description of balloon technologies and related matters from historical background to current research topics. The contents include a theoretical discussion of ballon shape design, analysis and synthesis of flight dynamics, actual launching procedure, flight operations, and typical applications of ballooning in various scientific fields. Detailed meteorological descriptions, especially of the Earth's stratosphere and the atmosphere of other planets, are provided for investigating actual flight behavior.