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NASA Gets Owned By Two MIT Students

nasa-gets-owned-by-two-mit-students

I found this hilarious and yet awesome article on Wired, on how two MIT students used a beer budget of about $150 to take picture of the Earth from the upper atmosphere. How they did it is pretty cool.

Here is the article itself from Wired:


The $150 Space Camera.

Bespoke is old hat. Off-the-shelf is in. Even Google runs the world’s biggest and scariest server farms on computers home-made from commodity parts. DIY is cheaper and often better, as Justin Lee and Oliver Yeh found out when they decided to send a camera into space.

The two students (from MIT, of course) put together a low-budget rig to fly a camera high enough to photograph the curvature of the Earth. Instead of rockets, boosters and expensive control systems, they filled a weather balloon with helium and hung a styrofoam beer cooler underneath to carry a cheap Canon A470 compact camera. Instant hand warmers kept things from freezing up and made sure the batteries stayed warm enough to work.

Of course, all this would be pointless if the guys couldn’t find the rig when it landed, so they dropped a prepaid GPS-equipped cellphone inside the box for tracking. Total cost, including duct tape? $148.

Launch

Two weeks ago, on Sept. 2, at the leisurely post-breakfast hour of 11:45 a.m., the balloon was launched from Sturbridge, Massachusetts. Lee and Yeh took a road trip in order to stop prevailing winds from taking the balloon out onto the Atlantic, and checked in on the University of Wisconsin’s balloon trajectory website to estimate the landing site.

Because of spotty cellphone coverage in central Massachusetts, it was important to keep the rig in the center of the state so it could be found upon landing. Light winds meant the guys got lucky and, although the cellphone’s external antenna was buried upon landing, the fix they got as the balloon was coming down was close enough.

The Photographs

The balloon and camera made it up high enough to see the black sky curling around our blue planet. The Canon was hacked with the CHDK (Canon Hacker’s Development Kit) open-source firmware, which adds many features to Canon’s cameras. The intervalometer (interval timer) was set to shoot a picture every five seconds, and the 8-GB memory card was enough to hold pictures for the five-hour duration of the flight.

The picture you see above was shot from around 93,000 feet, just shy of 18 miles high. To give you an idea of how high that is, when the balloon burst, the beer-cooler took 40 minutes to come back to Earth.

What is most astonishing about this launch, named Project Icarus, is that anyone could do it. The budget is so small as to be almost nonexistent (the guys slept in their car the night before the launch to save money), so that even if everything went wrong, a second, third or fourth attempt would be easy. All it took was a grand idea and an afternoon poking around the hardware store.

The project website has few details on how the balloon was put together — but the students say they will be selling step-by-step instructions for $150 soon. That means you will soon be able to launch your own balloon for just $300 — $150 for the instructions and $150 for the parts.

Here is the picture they took, and you be the judge.
NASA owned

The picture they took isn’t half bad, and that sure trumps whatever NASA has done with over billions of dollars from there budget. If these guys could have gone to the moon with $1000…NASA would have some ‘splain’ to do.

Source: Wired

4 Comments

  1. Comments  Naota   |  Thursday, 17 September 2009 at 11:53 AM

    That photo is actually pretty awesome. Do they have all of their photos online?

  2. Comments  Wrathie   |  Thursday, 17 September 2009 at 2:39 PM

    Yeah, if you click on the Wired link, you should find it near the botton of the page, me thinks.

  3. Comments  Blue Star   |  Friday, 18 September 2009 at 4:30 PM

    This is pretty interesting. I like this post! lol Though only fault is that you spend $300 for a single launch, and then you lose it. When it falls back down to Earth, does it come straight down or fly off to somewhere else?? (and if camera gets busted and you lose memory card.. total loss of effort!) Unless you have a lot of money to spend on things … 😀

  4. Comments  Wrathie   |  Friday, 18 September 2009 at 5:35 PM

    They made sure of ever precaution, so they could have done this 3 or 4 times had there been problems. They were able to track it via GPS from a cellphone, so it wasn’t as difficult to find. They got lucky when it came to the wind though, since it is usually can have a huge factor if stuff like that messed it up.

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