HERMES: A Data and Specimens Transporter from the Stratosphere to the Ground—The First Experimental Flight

Large stratospheric balloons are the easiest access to near space. Large long duration balloons (LDBs) can float in the stratosphere for weeks collecting measurements (e.g., astrophysical or geophysical data) or samples (e.g., contaminants, volcanic ash, micrometeorites). The recovery of data media...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Drones
Main Authors: Romeo, Giovanni, Adobbato, Pasquale, Bacci, Simone, Di Stefano, Giuseppe, Iarocci, Alessandro, Lepore, Amedeo, Mari, Massimo, Masi, Silvia, Pongetti, Francesco, Spinelli, Giuseppe, Vallocchia, Massimiliano
Other Authors: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione Roma1, Roma, Italia, Elettromeccanica Adobbato Pasquale, Dipartimento di Fisica, Sapienza Università di Roma
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2122/17203
https://doi.org/10.3390/drones7050308
Description
Summary:Large stratospheric balloons are the easiest access to near space. Large long duration balloons (LDBs) can float in the stratosphere for weeks collecting measurements (e.g., astrophysical or geophysical data) or samples (e.g., contaminants, volcanic ash, micrometeorites). The recovery of data media and samples is a common problem in this type of experiment because direct radio com-munication becomes useless when the balloon crosses the horizon, and satellite links are too slow and expensive. For this reason, physical recovery of the payload is mandatory to obtain experi-mental results, which is a difficult task, especially in polar regions. The goal of HERMES (HEmera Returning MESsenger) is to allow researchers to obtain experimental data prior to payload recovery. HERMES is a system equipped with an autonomous glider capable of physically transporting data and samples from the stratosphere to a recovery point on the ground. The glider is installed on the balloon payload via a remotely controlled release system and is connected to the main computer to store a copy of the scientific data and to receive the geographic coordinates of the recovery point. This allows scientists to obtain experimental results before recovering the payload. The article de-scribes HERMES and the first experimental flight of the entire system, which was conducted at Esrange Space Center (Kiruna, Sweden) in July 2022. Published 308 JCR Journal