Two payloads efficiently flew a four-week check aboard a World View high-altitude balloon with help from NASA’s Flight Alternatives program.
Reaching altitudes as much as 81,000 ft, the World View high-altitude balloon carried the House Atmosphere Applied sciences’ Automated Radiation Measurements for Aerospace Security (ARMAS) Twin Monitor know-how in addition to the CubeSounder climate forecasting know-how developed by researchers Arizona State College in Tempe. Information collected throughout this 28-day flight helps advance these applied sciences.
For 4 weeks straight, ARMAS carried out 24/7 radiation monitoring at aviation altitudes for the primary time ever. Designed to reinforce aviation security by monitoring radiation publicity from cosmic rays, photo voltaic particles, and Van Allen Belt particles, ARMAS measured the total column of radiation at varied altitudes throughout the similar time and site utilizing whole ionizing dose and gamma ray devices. ARMAS additionally has help from NASA’s SBIR (Small Enterprise Innovation Analysis) program.
CubeSounder collected information to assist validate its high-altitude efficiency. CubeSounder is a compact 3D imaging sensor that collects atmospheric temperature and humidity information as 3D photographs for climate forecasting in a considerably smaller bundle than present atmospheric sounders.
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