The objective of the flight was to test a new technology capable of converting low frequency sound microphones and a triaxial accelerometer hanging from a balloon into a ''seismometer". Future application of this is long duration surface seismic monitoring of Venus.
Current balloon-borne earthquake sound detectors lacks dof irection-of-arrival information and poorly distinguish signal from local noise. So this development comes to fill the need for a single balloon-borne acoustic sensor that can resolve elevation angle and azimuth of incident waves.
The payload that we can see in the image at left was composed of two 60 x 60 x 60 cm units each weighing <10 kg and drawing 4 W of power. Units were separated vertically by 30 m and contained each one 2 InfraBSU microphones, a triaxial accelerometer (Episensor or Adafruit ADXL), an Inertial Sense uIMU, and two Omnirecs Datacube digitizers.
Balloon launched on: 7/10/2020 at 14:27 utc
Launch site: Lemitar, New Mexico, US
Balloon launched by: Raven Aerostar
Balloon manufacturer/size/composition: Zero Pressure Balloon Aerostar Cyclone
Flight identification number: HBAL0415
End of flight (L for landing time, W for last contact, otherwise termination time): 7/10/2020 at 22:23 utc
Balloon flight duration (F: time at float only, otherwise total flight time in d:days / h:hours or m:minutes - ): 8 h
Landing site: Last known position near St. Johns, Arizona, US
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