NASA Releases Report About Australia Balloon Mishap

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Oct. 22, 2010

Beth Dickey 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-2087 
beth.dickey-1@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-269

NASA RELEASES REPORT ABOUT AUSTRALIA BALLOON MISHAP

WASHINGTON -- A NASA panel that investigated the unsuccessful April 28 
launch of a scientific balloon from Alice Springs, Australia, has 
released its report. 

NASA was attempting to launch the balloon carrying a gamma-ray 
telescope belonging to the University of California at Berkeley. The 
Nuclear Compton Telescope, which was partially destroyed in the 
accident, was designed to look for distant galaxies from a vantage 
point high in Earth's upper atmosphere. 

The scientific payload inadvertently separated from a mobile crane 
being used for the launch, and it was dragged approximately 150 yards 
by the airborne balloon. Spectators narrowly escaped injury when the 
payload hit an airport fence and a car. 

NASA's Mishap Investigation Board determined weather conditions were 
acceptable for launch, and there were no technical problems with the 
vehicle or the payload. 

The board was led by Michael L. Weiss of NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt, Md. The board's report listed 25 proximate, 
intermediate and root causes related to insufficient risk analysis, 
contingency planning, personnel training, technical knowledge, 
government oversight and public safety accommodations. 

"There is no question in our minds that balloon launches are fragile 
processes," Weiss said. "The mishap board reviewed a large volume of 
information about the accident and conducted numerous interviews with 
eyewitnesses. But in the course of our investigation, we found 
surprisingly few documented procedures for balloon launches. No one 
considered the launch phase to be a potential hazard." 

The purpose of the investigation was to discover what caused the 
mishap and provide recommendations to help prevent similar future 
mishaps. The board listed 44 recommendations regarding the need for 
better communication; more robust range and ground safety plans and 
procedures; and better understanding of potentially unsafe conditions 
that can lead to accidents. 

Immediately after the accident in Australia, launch operations at all 
of NASA's balloon sites were suspended. NASA's Balloon Program Office 
will resume launches once it has implemented and verified new 
procedures to safeguard launch crews and the public. 

"We have learned a lot from this incident, and we'll have a better 
balloon program because of it," said Rob Strain, Goddard Space Flight 
Center director. 

The Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas, conducts 
balloon launches for NASA under contract to the Balloon Program 
Office. The program office is based at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility 
in Virginia, which is managed by Goddard. 

To download the report, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/goddard 


For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov   

	
-end-



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