Stratodynamics, UAVOS to
drop Hidron glider from 118,000ft
02
AY, 2019 - SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL.COM - BY:
GARRETT REIM - cHICAGO
After successfully carrying its Hidron unmanned glider to 82,000ft
using a weather balloon, releasing it and flying it down safely to Earth,
partners Stratodynamics and UAVOS are preparing to drop the aircraft from
118,000ft in September or August as part of a new research project.
The companies’ joint project will fly in service of a Slovak Academy of
Sciences research project to study cosmic rays entering the Earth’s atmosphere.
It will be launched from the Canadian Space Agency’s Timmins stratospheric balloon
base in Ontario, Canada.
Hidron UAV being carried aloft with a
weather balloon
UAVOS
In April 2019, during its 82,000ft drop, the Hidron carried an atmospheric
measurement system onboard to gauge ozone gas and weather data for the
University of Kentucky. It took about 1h for the glider to be lifted to its
final height during that mission, before spending 3h descending.
Glider-balloon hybrid
systems have advantages over pure weather balloon systems for high-altitude
research because they are able to collect high-resolution data on the way up
and the way down, said Gary Pundsack, chief executive officer of
Stratodynamics, on 1 May at the AUVSI Xponential conference.
“It just circles and comes back on a slow, controlled descent,” he
says. “It brings the payload back home, so it can be retrieved and reused.”
In contrast, measurement equipment suspended below weather balloons
often parachute back to the ground after reaching maximum altitude, says
Pundsack. Descending with a parachute is often too rapid for collecting
atmospheric data and risks damaging precious scientific equipment. The Hidron
descends at anywhere between 1,575ft/min (8m/s) to 200ft/min (1m/s), depending
on its altitude, he says.
In the future, Stratodynamics and UAVOS to plan find ways to harness
air thermals or gravity waves in order to keep the aircraft a loft longer. The
companies are also looking at building a second, larger aircraft. The current
aircraft, the Hidron Series A, has a 3.4m (11ft) wingspan and carries 800g
(1.8lb) of payload, but the company is looking at building a Series B variant
with a 5m wingspan that can carry a 5kg payload.
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