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Low-cost Payload Design Considerations Low-Cost Access to Near Space Workshop Southwest Research Institute, Boulder CO, 26 April 2007 Mike Manes, President EOSS w5vsi@eoss.org. Promoting Science and Education through High Altitude Balloons and Amateur Radio www.eoss.org. What Is EOSS?.
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Low-cost Payload Design ConsiderationsLow-Cost Access to Near Space WorkshopSouthwest Research Institute, Boulder CO,26 April 2007Mike Manes, President EOSSw5vsi@eoss.org Promoting Science and Education through High Altitude Balloons and Amateur Radio www.eoss.org
What Is EOSS? • Founded January 1991 as a Colorado scientific & educational non-profit corporation 501(c)(3) • Funded by donations and 60+ volunteer members • 117 flights to date with 100% payload recovery record • Charter: • Promoting Science and Education Through Amateur Radio and High Altitude Balloons • “The Poor Man’s Space Program” • Payloads to Near Space for $200 to $500 • Provide students hands-on experience with science and technology to the edge of of space • Provide near space transport and recovery for scientific experiments
Key economies of high-altitude balloon flight • Lowest cost access to Near Space • Feasible for vertical integration by small organizations • Operational simplicity • Commercial availability of balloons, fill gas and payload materials • Free / low cost forecasting, tracking utilities • Support by peer non-profits • Local launch site and scheduling mitigates travel costs • Launch with short notice of suitable trajectory & weather • Launch site should be selected to avoid risks to the public, but can be little more than a wide spot in the road. • Coordination and cooperation with FAA is important when operating in civil airspace (CFR 14 Part 101) • Most important economic factor: Payload Recovery
Top-level design considerations “Things should be made as light as possible, … • Launch costs vary directly with payload weight • “Payload weight” excludes 2 – 4 kg flight system components necessary for recovery: • 0.7 – 2.0 kg parachute • 0.8 – 1.7 kg GPS telemetry beacon • 0.5 kg DF beacon / cutdown command receiver • Payload weight drives balloon selection
Latex balloon pros: Lowest cost Lightest weight Simple prep and fill process Multiple commercial sources Self destructs & biodegrades Latex balloon cons: Limited to 12 kg max payload +/- 10% apogee uncertainty Loiter valving still developmental Flight duration limited by UV degradation Plastic balloon pros: Required for > 12 kg Required for loiter missions Long duration flights feasible ballast dumps on ZP super-pressure envelope Plastic balloon cons: Costly (base price > US$400) Envelope film is heavy and fragile Complex prep and fill process Single domestic source (Raven) Redundant destruct devices required Used envelope is livestock hazard Balloon type selection
Plastic balloon fill • 54,000 cu ft Raven top fill burster
Latex balloon fill • 3000 gm Totex with 10 kt surface wind
Flight environment considerations “… but not more so.” (Apologies to A. Einstein) • Payload structures and flight string must survive environmental rigors: • Launch jerk: 0 to 5 m/sec in 0.1 sec. • Air temperatures down to -80ºC at tropopause • Barometric pressure < 10 mbar (poor thermal convection) • Strong solar flux, especially UV (IR help thermals) • High initial descent rates > 100 m/sec • Parachute instability (Post-burst chaos) • Parachute drag upon windy landing
Payload line design methodologies • Consider string of small payloads vice single integrated package • GPS telemetry beacons can upset analog, fast digital electronics • Multiple experiments can share a flight w/o integration headaches • Use wireless LAN to link separate payloads in lieu of cable • Use low modulus payload cordage to absorb shock • MIL-C-7515E woven nylon is preferred (50% stretch to yield) • 250# tensile minimum, 500# for > 6 kg strings • Dacron core, Kevlar may transmit shock > tensile strength • Allow plenty of slack on parallel electrical conductors, antennas • Use low-stress “marlinspike seamanship” • Double bowline is strong & unties easily • Figure 8 knot is lower stress than half hitch
Payload package materials & methods • Foamcore board structures with thru-tube support • Low-cost “honeycomb” available from art, big box stores • Easily formed to < 0.5mm tolerances using hand tools, hot-melt glue • 8mm foamcore provides adequate thermal insulation for most payloads • With thin coat of acrylic spray paint, resists UV. moisture & shock • Thru-tube isolates support line tension from enclosure structure • With sound design, expect over 20 flights • Building sheet insulation and closed-cell HDPE • Superior thermal insulation and shock resistance • Low precision dimensions • 3D cavities difficult to form • Off-the-shelf (or dumpster) • Workable, but sizing is inflexible.
Design for Recovery • A significant operational economy • Payload reuse, refurb, modification • On-board data storage eliminates telemetry cost, weight, EMC • On-board data storage • Onset Computing “Hobo” loggers are lightweight, easy to use • Flash memory up to 2 Gbytes is suitable for bulk data, imaging • Sample species in situ & store on board for later analysis • NOAA “Aircore” profiler • CU bacteria sampler • Supply at least 24 hr battery power to beacons • LiSO2 primary cells have excellent energy density, low temp operation • Available at low cost on surplus market • Recovery requires GPS telemetry, RDF, mobile skills • Amateur radio is a useful tool
Command & Telemetry radios • Amateur radio VHF & UHF bands for CMD/TLM and GPS tracking • Only option if gov’t frequencies not provided; Part 15 range is too short • Also useful for coordination amongst launch, recovery teams • Ham license required, but exam by volunteers and no Morse required • FCC Part 97 prohibits commercial use, but support of science, education is OK. • Internet gating to findu.com deemed essential by some FAA offices • GMRS & FRS • Limited frequency selection and range • Possible alternative to ham radio, but not compatible with findu.com
Tracking Operations • Trajectory forecasting and launch site selection • Track and recovery team deployment around forecast landing site before launch • Tracking team coordination via radio net on UHF repeaters
Prime directive:No Trespassing! • Locate land owners, obtain permission to enter property • Most owners are happy to join in
Another successful recovery • …And the students arrive!
Plastic envelope recovery • Separate tracking and recovery from main payload string • Separate GPS & DF beacons required, along with termination devices
Recent & emerging technical developments • Payload electronics • Low power, inexpensive microprocessors • High capacity non-volatile memories • Low cost digital cameras & DVRs • Part 15 wireless LAN amongst payloads, flight system • Lithium battery advances • Tracking technologies • VHF RDF triangulation made way for Loran-C and now GPS • Automated relay of APRS downlink to internet & to FAA controllers • Recovery techniques • Ground & air search for DF beacon replaced by real-time GPS tracking displayed on ground mobile laptops • Computerized trajectory forecasting using sophisticated NOAA models yields visual observation of landing • Steerable / homing descent emerging to replace common parachutes