High-Altitude Astrophotography and Investigating the Ionosphere: 2020 WSGC ELIJAH High-Altitude Balloon Payload
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.17307/wsc.v1i1.343Mots-clés :
high altitude balloon, nasa internship, atmosphere, atmospheric composition, astrophotography, solar eclipse, totality, luminance, solar radiation, magnetic fields, deep space objects, COVID-19, arduino,Résumé
The objective of the 2020 WSGC Elijah High-Altitude Balloon Payload Team was to design a payload intended to collect data during the total solar eclipse taking place in April 2024. The COVID-19 pandemic posed unique challenges to the research team, primarily restricting their correspondence to remote meetings and preventing them from fabricating a payload to launch for flight testing. Ground-based experimentation was conducted to analyze the viability of each of the payload modules to be constructed and launched in a future research term. Two of the four designed experiments are elaborated on in this document: an astrophotography and luminance tracking system to image celestial objects and determine the visibility of deep-space objects, and a surveillance system to identify and measure variation in magnetic fields and solar radiation in the ionosphere.Références
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Hamblen, J. (2015, September 15). Using a photocell or Phototransistor to determine lighting levels. Free open source IoT OS and development tools from Arm | Mbed. Retrieved August 25, 2020, from https://os.mbed.com/users/4180_1/notebook/using-a-photocell-to-determine-light-levels/
Pettengill, R. (2017, September 8). How much reduction in sunlight occurs during a total solar eclipse? Quora. Retrieved August 25, 2020, from
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University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture. (n.d.). Sunlight. https://ag.tennessee.edu/solar/Pages/What%20Is%20Solar%20Energy/Sunlight.aspx
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