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How stratospheric balloons work

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What could be simpler than a balloon? It needs no engine or fuel, and the risk of a failure is minimal. Its structure consists of nothing more than some gas inside a plastic bag. It relies exclusively on natural forces: buoyancy for lift, winds for direction and gravity to descend.
CNES/C.BARDOU,1998

CNES/C.BARDOU,1998

The hot-air balloon or Montgolfiere balloon invented in the 18th century by the Montgolfier brothers is the ancestor of today’s lighter-than-air craft. The only difference is that modern balloons no longer need a pilot aboard to steer them and stabilize their altitude.

Today, balloons are a unique tool for scientific research. Only balloons can stay aloft long enough in the stratosphere, a region of the atmosphere too low for orbiting satellites, and traversed too quickly by sounding rockets to obtain meaningful data.



Crédits : CNES/E.GRIMAULT,2000

Crédits : CNES/E.GRIMAULT,2000

So, how and why do balloons fly? What kinds of balloons are used for science? Here’s a surprising fact: some balloons are bigger than a football field and able to lift payloads of 2 tonnes to altitudes of 40 km.

Let’s take a tour through the world of lighter-than-air craft.

Last updated: June 2005

 

 
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