Purpose of the flight and payload description

Stratoscope was the first unmanned balloon-borne telescope flown for astronomical research. The project was under the direction of Professor Martin Schwarzschild of the Princeton University Observatory, and sponsored by the United States Office of Naval Research. The United States Air Force contributed funds for the development of the pointing control system. The objective of the project was to obtain images of the solar granulation with an unprecedent resolution and detail.

A basic scheme of the system 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 were a plane mirror and a prism that reflected the light gathered by the parabolic mirror back along a path above the tube of the telescope into a 35-millimeter motion-picture camera. A lens in the light path enlargeed 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.

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 telescope 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 at left 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.

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.

Aside from the fundamental questions of optical design and guidance, the major problem that the design faced was heating. Starting at a temperature of ~ 60 degrees Fahrenheit on the ground, the telescope was exposed to air at about 70 below zero in the stratosphere while being simultaneously subjected to the full heat of the sun. To minimize distortions the structure of tube of the telescope had thousands of small holes that allowed to disipate the heat concentrated inside the tube and also the quartz primary mirror was heavily insulated at the back and sides so that practically all the heat was absorbed and radiated at the front face. While the arrangement could not prevent changes in the focal length of the mirror, it did enable the mirror to maintain a nearly perfect surface. Since the focus of the mirror would necessarily vary, and by an unknown amount, the focal image could not always be expected to fall sharply on the film. To counteract that, was decided to allow to move the magnifying lens between the mirror and the camera, driving it steadily back and forth over the full range of anticipated variation every 20 seconds. Thus 19 out of every 20 pictures were blurred, but one was sure to be in focus. The flat secondary mirror also presented a heating problem, located as it is at the hot primary image of the sun. To ensure its proper functioning it was mounted on an arm that rotated once a second, placing the mirror in the light beam for only a 30th of a second on each cycle. The shutter of the camera was of course synchronized with the motion of the mirror.

In the improved version of the stratoscope system flown starting in 1959, this was replaced by a remote controlled TV system that allowed to correct from the ground the alignment of the mirror to maintain the focus.

Details of the balloon flight

Balloon launched on: 8/22/1957 at 6:20 cdt
Launch site: University of Minnesota Airport, New Brighton, US  
Balloon launched by: General Mills Inc.
Balloon manufacturer/size/composition: Zero Pressure Balloon General Mills - 1.092.000 ft3
Flight identification number: GMI Nº 2260
End of flight (L for landing time, W for last contact, otherwise termination time): 8/22/1957 at 12:20 cdt
Balloon flight duration (F: time at float only, otherwise total flight time in d:days / h:hours or m:minutes - ): ~ 6 h
Landing site: Near the town of Cosmos, Minnesota 80 miles from the launch site.
Payload weight: 1402 lbs

The balloon was launched by dynamic method from New Brighton, Minnesota at 6:20 a.m. CDT on August 22, 1957. After a nominal ascent at 800 feet per minute, the tropospheric winds blew it some 80 miles to the east and then the stratospheric winds carried it south and west of Minneapolis. It reached a maximum altitude of 83,100 feet and was easily visible from the ground with the naked eye, maintaining more or less the same float altitude during four hours.

At 12:20 an onboard timer was activated and proceeded to detach the balloon from the payload which started to descent in parachute. The chase team was following the descent of the device from a truck following the descent path but a thick cloud mass which moved in from the west obscured their view, so they depended on directions from an airplane which was also following the balloon. After a brief search, the telescope was found near Cosmos, Minnesota, about 80 miles west of Minneaoplis, in a muddy field, lying on its side, and rather wet because the parachute had dragged it through a small pond. The apparatus, however, suffered remarkably little damage; the impact bent some of the framework and the dragging along the ground twisted the flywheel arms. The pieces of the balloon that exploded after the separation were found some ten miles from the landing zone of the telescope.

On this first flight was not flown the real telescope, but a dummy one containing a test camera for assessing the pointing accuracy of the system. About two hours after launching, the scientific team started to receive telemetered signals which indicated that the stratoscope had found the sun, first in azimuth and then in elevation, and was keeping the telescope pointed.

After the mission ended and the film was developed, it showed conclusively that the guiding mechanism was steady enough to photograph the solar granulation.

As a result of the succesful test, the full-fledged instrument was flown form New Brighton on September 25, 1957 and from the Huron Municipal Airport (South Dakota) on October 17, of the same year.

External references

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