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One-of-a-kind view

An image captured from the weather balloon at approximately 115,000 feet above the surface of Earth. — Submitted photo

An image captured from the weather balloon at approximately 115,000 feet above the surface of Earth. — Submitted photo

Published on October 16, 2012
Published on October 16, 2012
Andrew Robinson  RSS Feed
The Telegram

Amateurs launch balloon into space equipped with cameras

Topics :
MUN laboratory , Toronto , Ontario , Newfoundland

John Hennessey was intrigued when news broke earlier this year that a pair of teenagers in Toronto managed to send a Lego man into space on a weather balloon.

“When I saw that, I basically thought to myself, if two teenagers in Ontario, in high school no less, can do this and succeed, we should be able to do it and succeed,” said Hennessey.

From there, the seed was planted for a project that would see the Mem­orial University master of science in medicine candidate and his friend, Amarnath Mukhopadhyay, a research assistant at a MUN laboratory, send a weather balloon into space.

The pair launched a weather balloon made of totex (an ultra-elastic form of latex) Sept. 29 equipped with two cameras — one for video and the other to take pictures.

According to Hennessey, this is the first time near-space photography has been taken over Newfoundland. An edited video of the journey has been posted on YouTube.

Initially believing a helium-filled balloon would be the best route for reaching the lower stratosphere, Hennessey soon became aware of the global helium shortage. They were forced to change their plans and instead use hydrogen — a gas that’s highly explosive when mixed with oxygen.

“We had to be super-careful when we handled it,” said Hennessey.

Hennessey said Pasadena was chosen as the launch site, given it would reduce the likelihood that the payload containing the cameras would land in water.

After reaching a height of more than 30 kilometres above the Earth’s surface one hour and 15 minutes after it was launched at 11 a.m., the balloon popped. By that point, Hennessey and Mukhopadhyay had made their way to Deer Lake to grab a coffee.

The GPS unit the pair used to track the balloon was no longer responding, given the height it had reached. Once they regained a signal, they waited for it to land. The payload landed unharmed with the aid of a parachute in a Millertown Junction wetland area two hours and seven minutes after the launch, 96 kilometres east of the launch site.

Thinking it would be easy to find, Hennessey and Mukhopadhyay were instead forced to camp beside a dirt road that night before finding it the next day during a search that took several hours.

Given the success of the first launch, Hennessey said, they are now curious about sending another balloon to space in the winter to capture pictures of a snow-covered Newfoundland.

arobinson@thetelegram.com

 

To view the video, CLICK HERE.

Comments

  • Username
    Laura miller
    - October 16, 2012 at 12:20:50

    You GUYS are GREAT!!! Carry on and stay CALM

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    Tiffany
    - October 16, 2012 at 11:41:50

    What a great story! Looking forward to reading about your next launch.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    gb
    - October 16, 2012 at 10:10:58

    This is so cool..congratulations on your successful launch and subsequent retrieval.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    Cathy
    - October 16, 2012 at 09:40:09

    Congratulations to both for succeeding. Brilliant minds for a bright future. Good luck in your next adventure.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    BobBYNL
    - October 16, 2012 at 09:13:52

    Great work guys!!! Keep up the good work and can't wait to see more pictures from the next launch!

    Submit a comment

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