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Near-Space High Altitude Balloon Mission
 
Charles Richey - Program Manager Balloon Winds - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
Program Manager
Charles Richey
charlesrichey@michiganaerospace.com

(734) 975-8777 ext 112
BalloonWinds Logo - Michigan Aerospace Corporation

Top Level Goals of the Near-Space BalloonWinds Program

  • Demonstrate Multi-Order Photon Recycled Direct-Detection Fringe Imaging from a high altitude (30 km) balloon to measure wind velocities throughout entire troposphere.
  • Demonstrate technology under as many atmospheric conditions as possible; i.e. high and low clouds, high and low winds, variable boundary layer aerosol conditions, day and nighttime
  • Validate LIDAR models for a high altitude downward looking platform
The BalloonWinds program is a NOAA-funded joint development effort between Michigan Aerospace Corporation and University of New Hampshire (UNH) to develop a space precursor Doppler wind lidar that will be flown on a high altitude balloon. The primary goal of the BalloonWinds near-space initiative is to validate photon recycled 355 nm direct detection Doppler wind LIDAR technology from a platform looking down from the top of the atmosphere. The balloon flight altitude will be ~30 km (100k ft), which is above the troposphere, and each of the 4 planned missions will have at least 8 hours of data collection time at the float altitude. At the 30 km float altitude the atmospheric pressure is ~5 millibar and the temperature -45 c, which required the instrument payload components to be sealed and thermally stabilized from the environment. A design emphasis was placed on rugged and compact packaging of the instrument system components due to the vibe and shock environment encountered during launch and landing of the balloon system. Figure 5 shows the laser (a ruggedized, diode-pumped system from Fibertek) and telescope system components of BalloonWinds. The BalloonWinds interferometer system is shown in Figure 7.



Near Space Balloon Demonstration Team and Responsibilities

University of New Hampshire (UNH)-System/Integration
Thermal Management
Power Distribution and Telemetry System
Gondola Design and Systems Engineering
Michigan Aerospace Corp. (MAC)-Instrument
Instrument Systems Engineering
Interferometer and Environmental Packaging
Laser/Telescope System and Environmental Packaging
Instrument Control System
Control Electronics Packaging
Raytheon- Santa Barbara Remote Sensing (SBRS)
Telescope and Laser Development Oversight
Fibertek
Diode Pumped Laser

BalloonWinds Org Chart - Michigan Aerospace Corporation

Figure 1

Mission Environment and Flight Schedule

Flight # Objective Atmospheric Condition Mission Date
1 Nighttime Concept Demonstration Night- Clear Air June 2006
2 Daytime Concept Demonstration Day- Partly Cloudy June 2006
3 Full System Demonstration Day and Night Partly Cloudy September 2006




Mission and Program Characteristics

Program Sponsor NOAA
Balloon Launch Site Holloman Air Force base in New Mexico
Float Altitude of Balloon >100,000 ft.
Measurement Range

Clear night skies: (float – 2 km) to Ground)
Cloudy night: (float – 2 km) to (cloud top + 1 km)

Wind Measurement Accuracy < 3.0 m/s Line-of-sight during clear night sky
Elevation of Telescope 45˚ ± 1˚ below horizontal
Range Gate Size 1 km above 3 km
LOS Profile Measurement Frequency ≥2 seconds
Active Wind Collection Time at Float >4 hours

 


Near Space Flight Gondola

BalloonWinds Flight Gondola - Michigan Aerospace Corporation

Figure 2

  • Gondola subsystems housed in environmentally sealed chambers, see Figure 2 above.
  • Instrument based on GroundWinds installations in Bartlett, NH and at the NOAA observatory near the summit of Mauna Loa, Hawaii. See Specification Comparison between GroundWinds and BalloonWinds instruments in Table 5.
  • BalloonWinds instrument is a dual channel Fabry-Perot based interferometer. The “Molecular” channel of the instrument has a Fabry-Perot etalon that has been optimized to sense Doppler shifts from backscatter from atmospheric molecules, whereas the “Aerosol” channel has been optimized for aerosol backscatter. See Table 4 for BalloonWinds etalon specifications.
  • Streaking Charge Coupled Devices (CCDs) enable range gating of backscatter to resolve multi-order fringe spectrum. Patented technologies demonstrated and developed through this program, such as Photon-Recycling ( U.S. patent #6,163,380) and the Circle To Line Optic (U.S. Patent #4,893,003), are also incorporated into the BalloonWinds interferometer design.



Laser-Telescope Subsystem

  • Laser Head & Control Electronics

  • Beam Delivery and Beam Steering

  • Independent telemetry data acquisition system for environmental monitoring and power control.

  • Liquid to air heat exchangers regulate internal temperature

  • Pressure maintained to 1.0 ATM

  • Telescope and laser coupled through common interface (GLTI)

 
BalloonWinds Laser-Telescope Sub-System - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
Figure 3

 

Figure 4: Diode-Pumped Solid State 4 watt 355nm Laser
BalloonWinds Diode-Pumped Solid State 4 Watt 355nm Laser - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
Figure 5: Integrated Laser-Telescope System
BalloonWinds Integrated Laser-Telescope System - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
 
 

Figure 6: Space-Class 50 cm Telescope
BalloonWinds Space-Class 50 cm Telescope - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
   
 
  • Sealed laser chamber contains laser head, laser electronics, beam delivery optics and thermal control system.
  • Laser-telescope alignment maintained to < 10 micro-radians.



  • Interferometer Subsystem




    BalloonWinds Top down view of dual channel space prototype interferometer - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
     
    Figure 7: Top down view of BalloonWinds dual channel space prototype interferometer prior to shipment. As seen on right and left side of the picture are the tunable Fabry-Perot Etalons.
    Figure 8: Side view of BalloonWinds interferometer integrated equipment plate prior to installation into pressure vessel.
     
    Side view of BalloonWinds Interferometer integrated equipment plate - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
    View of Balloonwinds interferometer System sealed in pressure vessel for flight - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
     
    Figure 9: View of BalloonWinds interferometer system sealed in pressure vessel for flight.
    Figure 10: Side view of interferometer with side down.
      Sie view of interferometer with side down - Michigan Aerospace Corporation


    Etalon Specifications

      Molecular Aerosol
    Plate Spacing 1.60 cm 5.58 cm
    Reflectivity 0.70 0.80
    Number of Orders 6.0 12.5
    Free Spectral Range 0.3125 cm-1 0.089cm-1
    Etalon Clear Aperture 4.2 4.2
    Dynamic Range 1644 m/s/order 473.0 m/s/order
    Etalon Plate Flatness Lambda/150 Lambda/150
    Loss/Plate <0.01 <0.01
    Number of CCD Channels 283 283
    Spacing Type PZT Tunable PZT Tunable
     
    Figure 11: Aerosol Etalon
    BalloonWinds Aerosol Etalon - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
     
       

    Figure 12: Molecular Etalon
    Ballonwinds Molecular Etalon - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
    Figure 13 Etalon Controller
    BalloonWinds Etalon Controller - Michigan Aerospace Corporation
     
     


    Predicted Measurement Performance

    The system efficiency is based on a combination of measured values as well as manufacturer specified values for the various optical components in the system. The plots shown in figure 4 below are the counts detected at the CCD for 12 seconds of integration as well as the aerosol to total scattering ratio at 355 nm for each of the different models used to make performance predictions. The simulations were performed using 5 different models of varying aerosol concentrations; model 9 was a case with no aerosol backscatter contribution. As seen from the plots shown in Figure 6 there is a discontinuity at 3km, which is due to the increased altitude resolution from 1 km to 0.25 km for measurements ≤3km. Evident from the plot of detected counts, the initial return from the instrument does not start for ~2 km in altitude below the instrument, where the laser beam and telescope field of view overlap.

      Figure 14: Detected counts at CCD for 12 seconds of integration (left) and aerosol models (right) used in performance predictions. The aerosol models are plotted as aerosol to total backscatter at 355nm. The various aerosol models used to generate the plots are labeled in the plots, Model 9 does not have any aerosol scattering in it  


    Figure 15 plots the current best estimate performance predictions for the BalloonWinds instrument for the aerosol models shown in Figure 14. The two cases plotted in Figure 15 depict the expected wind errors for the molecular channel without light recycling, whereas the second includes 3 recycles on the molecular channel and 3 on the aerosol channel. Note that in both cases accuracies of less than 3 m/s can be expected for the entire altitude range; the sharp increase at 27.5 km is where the interaction region, hence the initial return, of the instrument begins. From an evaluation of Figure 8 the contribution of photon recycling to the reduction of wind error is clearly seen, and is most prominent in the boundary layer. In all cases the wind accuracy is enhanced by ~30%; in regions of high aerosol content the enhancement may be as high as 70% because of the increased sensitivity of the aerosol channel.

     

     
    Figure 15: Performance prediction without photon recycling (left), and with 3 recycles each on the molecular and aerosol channel (right). Simulations used a 12 second total integration time with 6 seconds of on-chip integration. The errors are reported as line-of –sight projected to the horizontal plane (LOSH).
     

     

     


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