Purpose of the flight and payload description

Stratoscope was the first unmanned balloon-borne telescope flown for astronomical research and the first instrument that was remotely operated from the ground. The project was under the direction of Professor Martin Schwarzschild of the Princeton University Observatory, and was sponsored mainly by the United States Office of Naval Research and also by the United States Air Force which aported funds for the development of the pointing control system. The objective of the project was to obtain images of the solar granulation and other sun phenomena with a resolution and detail never experienced before.

A scheme of the system flown in 1959 -an improved of the one flown in 1957- can be seen at left (click to enlarge). The telescope which was designed and constructed by the Perkin-Elmer Corporation, had an eight-foot long tube, at one end of which was a parabolic quartz mirror 12 inches in diameter. At the other end of the tube, a rotating plane mirror used in the first flights was replaced by a tiny fixed stellite mirror as a form to reduce the mechanical vibrations caused by the rotation. This mirror had an area of 2.0 x 2.8 mm and intercepted an area of 2.0 x 2.0 mm from the 23-mm diameter primary image of the sun. In order to prevent the stellite mirror from getting hot, it was mounted in a 2 mm thick copper sheet which extended across the 18-inch diameter of the tube. This sheet was fastened to the main tube in such a way as to make good thermal contact with the tube, thus providing sufficient heat conduction away from the stellite mirror that it did not heat up enough to cause serious optical disturbances. A prism reflected the light gathered by the stellite mirror back along a path above the tube of the telescope into a 35-millimeter motion-picture camera. A lens in the light path enlarged the image presented by the primary mirror to the size of an image that would be produced by a 200-foot telescope. At this magnification, each frame of the 35-millimeter film covered a rectangle about 50,000 by 35,000 miles on the surface of the sun. Exposures were made at a rate of one per second, each lasting a thousandth of a second. Another modification to the design after the 1957 flights was the introduction of a prism type beam's splitter behind the main shutter which divided the incoming image into two beams of equal intensity. One beam went directly through the beam's splitter to form an image on the photographic film, while the other beam was transmitted to a television camera to form an image on a vidicon tube.

But without doubt, the major upgrade made to the instrument was the addition of a television system which was developed specially for the project by the Radio Corporation of America. This system allowed the scientists to operate from the ground the focus of the telescope and also move the telescope in azimuth and elevation to select specific targets in the Sun. The circuits of the air-borne television camera were all transistorized while the television tube used was a one inch vidicon. The television vertical sweep was mechanically synchronized with the main shutter at a rate of one scan per second, but due to the fact that one scan would not completely erase an electrical image on the vidicon, it was necessary to add a second shutter between the beam-splitter and the vidicon. This shutter was synchronized with the main shutter in such a way that only every third image was allowed to fall on the vidicon.

Another modification introduced for the 1959 flight series was a very complex command and telemetry system which was constructed by Data Control Systems Inc.. The command channel enabled an operator in the ground station to increase or decrease the setting of six different controls by activating small DC motors in the telescope. These controls were telescope focus, azimuth position on the sun, elevation position on the sun, television black-level voltage, television target voltage, and one spare which was used to duplicate focus. On the other hand, the telemetry system transmitted sequentially 33 different values, such as temperatures, battery voltages, eye voltages, servo motor torques, elevation angle of the telescope, the relative azimuth angle of the telescope and the flywheel among others.

The guiding mechanism for the telescope was designed and built by the Research Service Laboratories of the University of Colorado. The telescope tube was mounted in a gimbal structure about 12 feet high on axes which permitted motion in elevation and azimuth. Small photosensitive cells searched out the sun and controlled the electric motors that moved the telescope. The instrument was aimed in azimuth by rotating the gimbal structure against the reaction of a 175-pound flywheel, and in elevation by rotating the tube against the reaction of the whole framework. At the top of the figure above can be seen the six four-volt automobile batteries distributed around the circumference which served as the weight for the flywheel and also as power to drive the pointing motors, the electronic controls, and the camera. The only modification made in the pointing system for the 1959 flight series was the replace of the continuously rotating motor at the top of the instrument by an AC servo system constructed also by the Perkin Elmer Corporation thus reducing further the mechanical vibration caused by the continuously rotating parts.

In flight the top part of the instrument was attached to a 90 feet long cargo parachute through a bearing located immediately above the flywheel, and the top part of the parachute was in turn attached to the bottom of the balloon. After the film in the camera was exhausted, a preset timer stowed the telescope vertically within the frame and cut down the parachute away from the balloon. In addition to serving as a mounting, the frame protected the telescope when it touched the ground: while a Styrofoam crash pad on the bottom abosrbed the impact of the landing, the flywheel at the top protected the telescope when the frame toppled over on its side.

The addition of the remote control and real time monitoring capabilities necessitated the addition of a mobile ground station. It was mounted in a 15-foot van on a standard truck, which housed the television, telemetry, and command equipment. The mobile station was powered by two 3,5-kilowatt, 115-volt AC generators transported in a 5x8 foot trailer. For receiving and transmitting were used Yagi antennas mounted on tripods 50 feet away from the van. A radio receiver and transmitter was also used by the balloon contractor to maintain communications between the ground station and the launch site, tracking center, or tracking aircraft.

Inside the ground station, four people were required to operate the Stratoscope at altitude. First, the astronomer, who sat facing a television monitor with a set of command controls to point the telescope to the desired portion of the sun's disk and to adjust the focus to the optimum setting. Second, a television operator, who sat facing a duplicate monitor with a duplicate set of command controls whose job was to point the television receiving antenna and to adjust the air-borne television camera and the monitors in the ground station so that the astronomer was presented the best possible picture. A third person monitored the telemetry system and the recorder, and marked on the strip-chart record all commands and operations performed by the astronomer and television operator. Finally, the fourth person, the navigator, computed for the astronomer the telemetry coordinates of selected regions on the sun.

Details of the balloon flight

Balloon launched on: 7/11/1959 at A
Launch site: Lake Elmo Airport, Minnesota, US  
Balloon launched by: General Mills Inc.
Balloon manufacturer/size/composition: Zero Pressure Balloon  
Flight identification number: GMI Nº 2431
End of flight (L for landing time, W for last contact, otherwise termination time): 7/11/1959
Balloon flight duration (F: time at float only, otherwise total flight time in d:days / h:hours or m:minutes - ): ~ 6 h
Payload weight: 1691 lbs

This was the first launch of the 1959 Stratoscope series, dubbed as flight "A". It was launched by dynamic method from Lake Elmo Municipal Airport, Minnesota on July 11.

The vast majority of the 8000 photographs taken during this flight were blurred due to vibrations induced by the servo system. More than a dozen high-definition photographs were obtained, however, which demonstrated that the telescope had been accurately focused by means of the television, telemetry, and command systems. The vibrations in flight A were excessive partly because the vibrations observed during preflight testing were incorrectly attributed to seeing fluctuations. Hence, no particular attempt was made to reduce these vibrations to a minimum, since it was thought that they would disappear at altitude. After flight A proved that the vibrations were produced by the servo system, a major effort went into reducing them. As a result, the vibrations were substantially reduced but were not eliminated.

Three minor difficulties also appeared in this flight. One of these was that the vertical scan of the television camera was only about one-fifth normal, resulting in a television picture that was stretched in the vertical direction. After post-flight examination, was concluded that the vertical scan had inadvertently been changed during the preflight preparations. The second difficulty was that a potentiometer, which measured the azimuth position on the sun's disk, froze up. The result was that it was possible to command in azimuth, but the azimuth position was not transmitted back by the telemetry. For subsequent flights, a piece of black tape was put on the potentiometer, which prevented its freezing up. The third difficulty was that the photographs had a very large number of diffraction images due to dust on the beam-splitter. In subsequent flights the beam-splitter was cleaned very carefully in the preflight preparations.

While flight A was unsuccessful in obtaining much new scientific material, it was extremely useful in revealing what improvements were necessary in order to obtain new material in subsequents flights.

External references

Images of the mission

A detailed view of the General Mills Balloon Seconds before being released can be seen at right the balloon and at left the truck holding the telescope The exact moment on which the payload is released The balloon and its payload ascending  

If you consider that this website is interesting or useful, you can help to keep it running with just the equivalent of the price of a cup of coffee. Click on the button on the right for more information.



1475