Engineering News Blog

Engineering News

Latest news of interest to engineers. Sourced from GlobalSpec's Engineering News

Previous in Blog: Airplane Crash Landing Definitely Needed More Foam   Next in Blog: Speakers Made of Porcelain and Cork
Close
Close
Close
Rate Comments: Nested

MIT Students Explain How to Photograph Space for $150

Posted September 15, 2009 1:28 PM

From Gizmodo:

On September 2, Justin Lee and Oliver Yeh successfully took these images of Earth's curvature and the blackness of space using only a weather balloon and off-the-shelf components—without complicated hacks. Total cost: $148. Here's how they did it. First up, their rig used a Canon A470 camera with 8GB SD card that they bought used on Amazon. And instead of the expensive GPS radios commonly used by weather balloons, they used a prepaid Motorola i290 GPS cell phone to receive location text messages. The Earth's stratosphere can get as cold as -67 degrees fahrenheit (-55 Celsius), but they couldn't afford expensive temperature-resistant housing. The solution: a styrofoam beer cooler, and an instant hand warmer. Awesome. Their low-cost balloon-launch platform reached 17.5 miles high, into near-space. Using the GPS phone to track its location, they found the rig 20 miles away from the launch site about 5 hours later. Total weight was 800g (about 28 ounces). Apparently FAA regulations only apply to balloons with payloads over four pounds. If you want all the details—including a full parts list—check our their site below. While groups like EOSS (Edge of Space Sciences) have done things like this in the past, I've never seen it done so cheaply. High school science teachers, please take note!

Read the whole article

Reply

Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.
Guru
Hobbies - RC Aircraft - New Member

Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 901
Good Answers: 9
#1

Re: MIT Students Explain How to Photograph Space for $150

09/16/2009 12:51 PM

We have done this for 20+ years now. And several flights have cost under 50 bucks. This is not rocket science, one flight has even been done for the cost of the gas, 25 bucks.

Joe

Near Space Sciences
http://www.qsl.net/wb9sbd/educators.html

Reply
Reply to Blog Entry

Previous in Blog: Airplane Crash Landing Definitely Needed More Foam   Next in Blog: Speakers Made of Porcelain and Cork
You might be interested in: GPS Instruments and Modules, GPS Chips, GPS Software

Advertisement