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INSGC: Near-Space Inspiring Students 02/29/08 StratoStar Systems LLC Jason Krueger, President 236 West Reade Ave Upland, IN 46989 765.382.0451 Overview Taylor University H-A Balloon Program StratoStar Systems 2007 HALO Project 2008 HALO II Project
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INSGC: Near-Space Inspiring Students 02/29/08 StratoStar Systems LLC Jason Krueger, President 236 West Reade Ave Upland, IN 46989 765.382.0451
Overview • Taylor University H-A Balloon Program • StratoStar Systems • 2007 HALO Project • 2008 HALO II Project • NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program • Testing Satellite Systems • Taylor University needed to test it’s CubeSat sub-systems • Equipment for lab testing was not available • Dr. Hank Voss & Jeff Dailey decided to launch the CubSat into Near-Space • Dr. Voss & Jeff developed 900 Mhz telemetry system
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program First Launch February 2003
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program First Launch February 2003 • Partially funded by INSGC first Crosscutting Research Grant INSGC has funded the balloon program each year from 2003-2007 (Hopefully 2008?)
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program Students are the focus • Build Scientific & Engineering payloads • Track & Recovery payloads • Coordinating logistics • Working in teams • Managing budgets and schedules • Creative problem solving
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program Balloon Launches for Non-Science Majors • Originally Physics and Engineering • Started launching with Astronomy students and Elementary Education students • Science is taken outside the classroom, lab and atmosphere • Makes Science “Real”
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program Student Quote: • I definitely think the balloon lab should be included in Astronomy...because it's a tangible way to see that this is really still a science, not an outdated sub-genre of physics in which you memorize the planets in our solar system.
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program Taylor Balloon Program History • 100% recovery rate • 72 launches in 5 years • Major contributor to growth of Physics & Engineering Department
Taylor University H-A Balloon Program INSGC Funding Multiplied • INSGC $ to Taylor is in $10,000s • Outside follow-on funding from INSGC funded projects is $400,000+ • All student focused grants to build the STEM Workforce • $250K for NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops
StratoStar Systems Who are we? • Company has been in business for 2 years • Slogan “Gateway to Near-Space” • StratoStar has over 70 years combined R&D experience • 100% payload retrieval to date • Spun out of INSGC funded balloon program
StratoStar Systems StratoSat Complete Flight Package • StratoStar’s main product Command Pod Mobile Tracking Unit Wireless Payload Pods Parachute Battery Charger High-Altitude Balloon
StratoStar Systems What do we do? • Help people conducting launches and operate in near-space --“Gate-way to Near-Space” • Sell equipment to conduct launches • Provide training • Provide launch services
StratoStar Systems This will make it too easy for the Students • We supply the command unit and experiment pods – you do the rest • Taken away the things which discourage students and Institutions (Lost equipment & Data) • Students focus on Science and other all areas of engineering (Not just EE) • Success keeps students coming back for more!
StratoStar Systems Don’t let your boat sink! (Boat = Student Projects)
StratoStar Systems Your future student projects!
StratoStar Systems Who are your customers? • Higher Education – Taylor University, Cedarville University, DePauw University, University of Akron, University of Minnesota and more. • Industry & Government Agencies – SAIC, NOAA, Air Force, Navy and more
StratoStar Systems StratoStar’s New Altitude Control System • Up to 12 hours flight time • Uses normal Latex balloons • Flights without StratoStar’s altitude control system are about 2-3 hours • Opens the door to new scientific opportunities
StratoStar Systems Different ways to Near-Space • StratoStar launches your payloads • StratoStar conducts a high-altitude balloon launch with you at your institution • Purchase equipment and receive training to conduct your own launches
StratoStar Systems Visit our Website at: www.StratoStar.net
2007 HALO Project High-Altitude Launch Opportunity (HALO) Project Funded by: INSGC, StratoStar & Taylor University
2007 HALO Project Purpose • Give students in the Midwest a chance to launch payloads on a high-altitude balloon
2007 HALO Project Purpose • Test StratoStar’s cutting edge constellation mesh network (HALO Network)
2007 HALO Project The HALO Students • Students at each institution recruited a team • Teams built their own payloads
2007 HALO Project The HALO Students • Participated in conference calls with all other teams in the Midwest • Handled all operations related to launching a high-altitude balloon
2007 HALO Project HALO POD • Each institution received one HALO Pod • Each Pod Contained: • APRS Transmitter, GPS, Temp. Sensor, Pres. Sensor, Humidity Sensor, Geiger Counter and StratoStar’s Mesh Networking Radio. Each Institution added their own payloads for the launch
2007 HALO Project Taylor University: Mission Control
2007 HALO Project • DePauw University: Greencastle, IN • All images taken from the same camera
2007 HALO Project • Cedarville University: Cedarville, OH
2007 HALO Project • University of Minnesota: Minneapolis, MN
2007 HALO Project HALO Coverage Area
2007 HALO Project • Successful Project Summary • 5 of 8 balloons connected to the create the mesh network constellation. • Temperature, Pressure, Humidity, and Geiger Counter data was sent through constellation • All payloads were recovered • Furthest link was over 270 miles
2007 HALO Project • Project Summary (People involved) • 70 Students actively involved • 110 People attend the launches • 1000’s Read the News articles on the HALO project • Each Institution received media coverage of some form • More to come – Academic Publications
2008 HALO II Project HALO II Details • Sept. – Oct. 2008 • 20 Institutions • No balloon experience needed • Looking for people to participate • Looking for Science experiments to fly Contact Jason Krueger if you are interested – jkrueger@StratoStar.net
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • Integrate High-Altitude balloon launches into the classroom and curricula of undergraduate science and engineering courses around the country. Purpose
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • Training and equipping undergraduate professors / instructors of all areas (not just Electrical Engineering and Aerospace) to implement balloon launches in a course which they are teaching. Focus
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • Science and engineering experiments for undergraduate courses • Not on building an entire high-altitude balloon system. Focus
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • Training on all aspects of high-altitude ballooning • Design and build science experiment Activities
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops Conduct a night launch of a high-altitude balloon Activities
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • Track and recover the your payloads • Analyze data from your experiment • Network with other professors who have successfully implemented ballooning into the classroom Activities
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • One Free balloon launch at your University with equipment funded by NSF • Follow-up support from Taylor University on implementation of ballooning in your curriculum. Post Workshop Benefits
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops • No cost to attend (limit 5 per institution) • (travel & lodging not included) • Each institution receives $200 stipend • Short two page application • 2 day workshop • Offered Twice May 21-22 or Aug. 4-5 2008 Registration Details
NSF High-Altitude Balloon Workshops Conference Website • www.taylor.edu/cri/balloon. Open for Registration Registration Details
StratoStar Systems 236 West Reade Ave Upland, IN POC: Jason Krueger 765-382-0451 jkrueger@StratoStar.net www.StratoStar.net