Nasa's super pressure balloon was launched from Wānaka Airport on Saturday afternoon.
Nasa has today launched another stadium-sized super pressure balloon from Wānaka Airport this afternoon, the second of two planned launches for the year.
The first scientific balloon was launched on April 16, following five failed attempts last year.
Airways, New Zealand’s air navigation services provider, works with Nasa to plan the launches of the balloons, which inflate fully in flight to 532,000 cubic meters - about the size of Dunedin’s Forsyth Barr Stadium - and carry a scientific payload of over two tonnes.
The first balloon is now on its fourth circumnavigation of the globe, about 33 kilometres above the southern oceans.
The wind-propelled balloons are filled with helium and will circumnavigate the earth above the Southern Hemisphere for as long as possible, which could be up to 100 days.
They are testing Nasa’s super pressure technology, which is designed to maintain their internal pressure, keeping them at a constant density altitude despite temperature changes between day and night.
The balloon launched today carries a University of Chicago instrument to detect ultra-high-energy cosmic ray particles from beyond our galaxy.
The Princeton University space telescope aboard the first balloon is designed to image large galaxy clusters to map dark matter.
Air traffic controllers gave Nasa the green light to launch the balloon at 12.03pm today after creating a safe launch path through New Zealand-controlled airspace, which rises to 18.3km, Airways New Zealand general manager of air traffic services Katie Wilkinson said.
“We’re excited to see Nasa having such success with its balloon launches this year. Like the first balloon, this second one may be visible to some people in Otago and Canterbury before it crosses the east coast of the South Island early this afternoon. It is shaped like a teardrop on launch, but as it ascends into the less dense atmosphere, it inflates fully into a pumpkin shape.
“Nasa comes to Wānaka to launch these balloons because the weather is generally good and access to the area around the airport can be controlled during the launch. We do a lot of work beforehand to plan a safe airspace around the balloon and minimise disruption to other aircraft – it moves slowly, and the weather conditions tell us where it’s heading,” she said.
Nasa balloon programme office chief Debbie Fairbrother said the super pressure balloons were performing brilliantly.
“The balloons are maintaining a steady altitude at about 107,000 feet, which is the primary goal of this mission for Nasa. We expect a balloon to circumnavigate the Southern Hemisphere once every week to three weeks, and our aim is for them to do it several times as we verify and validate our technology.
“Balloons enable scientific research at the edge of space for a fraction of the cost of launching a rocket. The space telescope on board our first balloon is already returning stunning images of the Tarantula Nebula and the Antennae, Southern Pinwheel and Sombrero galaxies, and will be imaging large galaxy clusters to help map dark matter. Meanwhile, the observatory on board our second balloon will pick up mysterious cosmic rays.”
The balloon launched today is carrying the Extreme Universe Space Observatory 2 (EUSO-2) from the University of Chicago, which will detect ultra-high-energy cosmic ray particles from beyond our galaxy as they penetrate Earth’s atmosphere. The origins of these particles are not well understood, so the data collected will help solve this mystery.
The balloon launched last month is now returning images from Princeton University’s Super Pressure Balloon Imaging Telescope (SuperBIT), which maps dark matter around galaxy clusters by measuring the way these objects warp the space around them – a phenomenon called weak gravitational lensing.
SuperBIT captures images in the visible-to-near-ultraviolet light spectrum, like the Hubble Space Telescope, but with a wider field of view.
Nasa has previously launched three super pressure balloons from Wānaka, one each year between 2015 and 2017. A planned 2020 campaign was cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and the agency’s 2022 campaign ended without a launch due to a ground system anomaly.
Airways New Zealand has enabled more than 50 launches for organisations such as Nasa and Google, and in late 2021, it signed a second five-year contract with New Zealand’s Rocket Lab, including for the management of a special-use airspace around its Electron rockets.