NASA to Use Balloon Flotilla to Study Radiation That Affects Earth

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Dec. 5, 2007

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 07-265

NASA TO USE BALLOON FLOTILLA TO STUDY RADIATION THAT AFFECTS EARTH

WASHINGTON - A new NASA project will use more than 40 high altitude 
balloons to return new scientific insights about Earth's Van Allen 
Belts. The type of radiation in the belts can be hazardous to 
astronauts, orbiting satellites and aircraft flying in high altitude 
polar routes. 

NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, has awarded $9.3 
million to Dartmouth College of Hanover, N.H., for the study. 
Research using the balloons can be carried out at a fraction of the 
cost of using an orbiting satellite. 

The new mission is called the Balloon Array for Radiation-belt 
Relativistic Electron Losses, or BARREL. The mission's principal 
investigator is Robyn Millan of Dartmouth. BARREL will fly in 2013 
and 2014, and will provide answers to how and where the Van Allen 
Belts, discovered in 1958, periodically drain into Earth's upper 
atmosphere. BARREL will fly in conjunction with NASA's Radiation Belt 
Storm Probes satellites, due to launch in 2011.

"The study of near-Earth radiation is very important," said John 
Mather, Nobel Prize recipient and chief scientist of NASA's Science 
Mission Directorate. "This research will provide information to 
mitigate problems here on our planet as well as permit better design 
and operations of new technology in space and safer passage for space 
explorers."

The Van Allen Belts are a ring of energetic charged particles that 
encircle Earth and are constrained by Earth's magnetic field. 
Outbursts from the sun can pump additional energy and particles into 
the radiation belts, allowing them to drain again in a matter of days 
or weeks. 

The balloons will be launched from Antarctica. They will expand to 
roughly the size of a large blimp when they reach the near-space 
research altitude. A single balloon of this type will hover at an 
altitude of approximately 21 miles for as long as two weeks. By 
carefully timing the launch of a series of balloons, about one per 
day, Millan and her group of young scientists in training can form a 
ring of balloons encircling the South Pole to study the total influx 
of radiation from the belts into Earth's atmosphere.

"This experiment will be the first of its kind in establishing a web 
of balloon-borne sensors working hand-in-hand with a satellite 
mission," said Dick Fisher, director of NASA's Heliophysics Division, 
Washington. "In addition to the groundbreaking science that BARREL 
will provide, this kind of use of NASA's suborbital program is vital 
for training the next generation of scientists in a wide range of 
areas."

The Radiation Belt Storm Probes satellites are part of NASA's Living 
with a Star Program that is designed to understand how and why the 
sun varies, how planetary systems respond and how human activities 
are affected. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., 
manages the program for the Science Mission Directorate.

For more information on NASA's Living with a Star Program, visit:

http://www.lws.nasa.gov

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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