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LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20061 First Flight of HASP S. Besse, A. Calongne, M. Cherry, A. Dominique, S. B. Ellison, R. Gould, D. Granger,

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Presentation on theme: "LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20061 First Flight of HASP S. Besse, A. Calongne, M. Cherry, A. Dominique, S. B. Ellison, R. Gould, D. Granger,"— Presentation transcript:

1 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20061 First Flight of HASP S. Besse, A. Calongne, M. Cherry, A. Dominique, S. B. Ellison, R. Gould, D. Granger, T.G. Guzik, R. McNeil, F. Mingireanu, D. Olano, D. Smith, M. Stewart and J. P. Wefel Dept. of Physics & Astronomy, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA U.S.A.

2 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20062 The Primary Problem How do we get from … to here … Or I’d even be happy with …

3 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20063 Build Practical Research Skills First need to establish the technical skills –Semi-formal “Student Ballooning Course” guides this process –33 lectures in electronics, programming, design and management –33 hands-on activities illustrate all the basic concepts –Takes place over fall semester Next need to apply these skills –Develop an experiment from “scratch” –Must have real science content no “cockroaches” allowed! –Go through all project phases design, development, fabrication, testing, operation –Series of reviews (written and oral) check progress –Takes place over spring semester –Science results presented after flight Skills apply to all S & E research fields.

4 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20064 Programs in this series Louisiana Aerospace Catalyst Experiences for Students (LaACES) –Entry level uses small payloads (~500 g) with sounding balloon “vehicle” –2006-2007 is the fourth year of operation LSU (10 students, extramural), UNO (5 students, extramural), LaTech (11 students, laboratory course), McNeese (6 students, extramural), SU (4 students, extramural) Physics & Aerospace Catalyst Experiences for Students (PACER) –Focus on establishing LaACES-like programs at HBCU institutions –Bring teams to LSU for 9-week intensive summer workshop –Mentor institutions during academic year –New start next summer, proposal pending at NSF High Altitude Student Platform (HASP) –For advanced undergraduates and graduates –Support student “thesis” projects –Developed here with support from BOR, LaSPACE, Department, and College

5 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20065 Major HASP Features Support & flight test up to 12 student built payloads –Eight small payloads < 1 kg & four large payloads < 10 kg –Fly to an altitude > 36 km for a duration of ~20 hours Provide payloads with serial uplink, serial downlink, discretes, 28 VDC power, & analog downlink –Downlink available in near real time Include CosmoCam for real time video during launch & flight NASA partnership supports three flights –First flight September 4, 2006 –Two more flights, once a year

6 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20066 Fly out of Ft. Sumner NM

7 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20067 On-site Assembly & Testing

8 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20068 Launch Day – Sept 4, 2006

9 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 20069 HASP Launched at 15:51 UTC

10 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 200610 18 hour flight, 15 at float

11 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 200611 Little damage on recovery

12 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 200612 Student Payloads This year HASP flew 8 student payloads from 4 institutions and students are in the early stages of analyzing their results. University of Alabama – Huntsville: –Infrared telescopes to remotely study the thermal characteristics of the balloon envelope (4 small payloads) Texas A & M University: –Video camera system to study remote sensing from high altitude (1 small) University of Louisiana – Lafayette: –Nuclear emulsion stack to investigate high energy cosmic rays (1 large) Louisiana State University (Mechanical Eng.): –Study the flow characteristics of various rocket nozzles as a function of altitude (1 large payload) Louisiana State University (Physics): –Prototype of an accelerometer based inertial navigation system (1 small)

13 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 200613 Very preliminary results

14 LSU 09/29/06Department Report - Oct 3, 200614 Summary The first flight of HASP was very successful –System was assembled, tested and flight ready about one week –~18 hours from launch to landing, ~15 hours at altitudes > 110,000 feet –No glitches in telemetry and commanding throughout the flight –Thermal performance exceeded expectations (e.g. battery temp remained above 10 o C for most of the flight) –Student payload data, HASP housekeeping and position / altitude information was available in real-time on the HASP website –Only very minor damage upon landing Yearly flights will support timely student payload development –Next Ft. Sumner flight expected for September 2007 –CY2007 Call for Payloads was released Sept. 1, 2006, application due Dec. 15, 2006 Further information and updates can be found at the HASP website at http://laspace.lsu.edu/HASP/http://laspace.lsu.edu/HASP/


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