24/7 Space News  





. DARE for Planetary Exploration

Simulated image of DARE platform at Venus (background image D.P. Anderson, Southern Methodist University)

Altadena - Nov 12, 2002
Balloons outfitted with innovative steering devices and robot probes could be the future of planetary exploration. Dr. Alexey Pankine, a fellow at the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC), presented an analysis of balloon applications for planetary science at the World Space Congress in Houston, Texas last month. His study, entitled Directed Aerial Robot Explorers or DARE, is funded by NIAC.

At the center of the DARE concept are balloons that can float in planetary atmospheres for many days. Balloons have long been recognized as low-cost observational platforms and are routinely used in observations of the Earth's atmosphere.

In 1984, two balloons were successfully deployed in the atmosphere of Venus for a short mission. However, what has restrained the wider use of balloons in planetary exploration was the inability to control their paths in strong atmospheric winds.

Attaching an engine to a balloon would convert it into an airship and make it too heavy, too power dependent and too expensive to send to another planet or high into the atmosphere.

Faced with this problem, Global Aerospace Corporation has proposed to use an innovative device called the StratoSail¿ that allows the user to control the path of a planetary balloon.

The device is essentially a wing that hangs on a long tether (several kilometers) below the balloon. Strong winds and denser atmosphere at the wing altitude create a sideways lifting force that pulls the entire system across the winds.

The DARE concept analyzes the use of the StratoSail¿ device on several planets in our Solar System that have atmosphere -- Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Titan (a satellite of Saturn).

Dr. Pankine reports that a small, light wing will pull the balloon with a velocity of about 1 m/s across the winds on those planets. This may not seem much, but applied constantly (without consuming any power!) for the duration of a long mission (100 days) it would allow for pole-to-pole exploration of the atmospheres of Venus and Titan, and targeted observations of Mars and the vast Great Red Spot of Jupiter.

DARE platforms would carry high-resolution cameras and other instruments to study surfaces and atmospheres of the planets. Dr. Pankine envisions small probes being deployed from DARE platforms over a site of interest.

These robot-probes would, for example, analyze atmosphere during their descent on Venus and Jupiter or crawl around after soft landing on the surfaces of Mars and Titan.

"The ability to alter the flight path in the atmosphere and to deploy the probes would vastly expand the capabilities of planetary balloons and make possible breakthrough observations that are not feasible with any other platform," says Dr. Pankine. The figure illustrates a DARE platform operating at Venus.

Related Links
Global Aerospace Corporation
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express




Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


hello world
XMM-Newton Closes In On Space's Exotic Matter
Paris (ESA) Nov 12, 2002
A fraction of a second after the Big Bang, all the primordial soup of matter in the Universe was 'broken' into its most fundamental constituents. It was thought to have disappeared forever. However scientists strongly suspect that the exotic soup of dissolved matter can still be found in today's Universe, in the core of certain very dense objects called neutron stars.

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  



  • Take A Chance To Write The Future
  • Actel Delivers SX-A FPGAs Qualified to Military Specifications
  • Maxwell Hardens Powerpc Board For Space And Military Applications
  • Boeing-Built NASA Satellite Successfully Reaches Geosynchronous Orbit

  • Hidden Face of Mars Uncovered by Father & Daughter
  • New Institute Aims To Foster Mars Exploration In 21st Century
  • Astrium Develops New High Performance Parachute For Beagle 2
  • Students to Join NASA's Mars Exploration Rover-2003 Team

  • Space Station Facing Uncertain Future As Soyuz Explodes On Liftoff
  • Boeing Delta IV Team Takes Major Step Toward First Launch
  • Texas Spaceports, Mars Colonies On Drawing Board At UH
  • Russia Seeking To Keep Kazakh Space Site Until 2044

  • Envisat demonstrates combined imagery from dual sensors
  • Orbimage Adds Sub-Surface Temps To Fishing Service
  • Shuttle Radar Clears The Air On Central America's Topography
  • International Meeting On Space And World Heritage

  • New Horizons Passes Another Development Milestone
  • The bizarre "Pluto War" is almost over at last, and Pluto is winning.
  • The bizarre "Pluto War" is almost over at last, and Pluto is winning.
  • Pluto Is Undergoing Global Warming

  • Gravity-Wave Search Produces Initial Data
  • In Search Of Cosmic Mayhem
  • Bouncing Cosmic Mysteries Off Kuiper Worlds
  • Gravity Waves Analysis Opens 'Completely New Sense'

  • Memories Of Orange Rock From The Lunar Age
  • Taos Goes Lunar With International Talkfest
  • Moon and Earth Formed out of Identical Material
  • Lunar Soil Yields Evidence About Sun's Dynamic Workings

  • Fastrax GPS Powers Telematics For Fleet Management
  • New Satellite-Based Tracking Service To Revolutionize Global Transportation
  • US Says Human Chip Implants Don't Need Regulation For Some Uses
  • NASA Navigation Work Yields Science, Civil, Commerce Benefits

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement