Atmospheric Tidal Measurements at 50 Km from a Constant-Altitude Balloon.

Abstract

A balloon, the second in a series of high-altitide balloon flights, was launched to a record altitide of 50 km from White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico on 22 September 1969. The 870,000 cubic meter, helium-filled, zero-pressure, polyethelene balloon served as a constant-level stable support for an instrument payload consisting of bead thermistor atmospheric and balloon-skin temperature sensors, thermal conductivity pressure gauge, a forward-scattering beta-ray atmospheric density gauge, chemiluminescent ozonesondes, a Geiger tube cosmic ray detector, and an accelerometer for the determination of the vertical component of balloon acceleration. Radar position-time data served to determine the wind velocity. The paper discusses specifically the variations in the observed balloon trajectory, the supporting rocketsonde-determined winds and the balloon-borne temperature sensor values as related to the existence of a diurnal atmospheric tide near 50 km. It also presents the related data obtained from the other instruments comprising the payload. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 1971
Accession Number
AD0739486

Entities

People

  • Bruce. T. Miers
  • Harold N. Ballard
  • John Whitacre
  • Miguel Izquierdo
  • Norman J. Beyers

Organizations

  • Atmospheric Sciences Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Sensors

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Atmospheric Density
  • Conductivity
  • Cosmic Rays
  • Detectors
  • Forward Scattering
  • Gages
  • Measurement
  • New Mexico
  • Pressure Gages
  • Scattering
  • Thermal Conductivity
  • Wind
  • Wind Velocity

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science/Meteorology
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  • Solar Physics