
-----------------------------------
hbgator
Tue 15 Sep, 2009

The $150 Space Camera.The $150 Space Camera.
-----------------------------------
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
http:<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>/<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>/www.wired.com/images_blogs/gadgetlab/2009/09/thumb-660x495.jpg<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$150 Space Camera.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Bespoke is old hat.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Off-the-shelf is in.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Even Google runs the worldâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s biggest and scariest server farms on computers home-made from commodity parts.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> DIY is cheaper and often better,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> as Justin Lee and Oliver Yeh found out when they decided to send a camera into space.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The two students <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>(from MIT,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> of course)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> put together a low-budget rig to fly a camera high enough to photograph the curvature of the Earth.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Instead of rockets,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> boosters and expensive control systems,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> they filled a weather balloon with helium and hung a styrofoam beer cooler underneath to carry a cheap Canon A470 compact camera.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Instant hand warmers kept things from freezing up and made sure the batteries stayed warm enough to work.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Of course,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> all this would be pointless if the guys couldnâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™t find the rig when it landed,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> so they dropped a prepaid GPS-equipped cellphone inside the box for tracking.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Total cost,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> including duct tape?<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$148.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Launch<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Two weeks ago,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> on September 2nd 2009,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> at the leisurely post-breakfast hour of 11:45AM,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the balloon was launched from Sturbridge MA.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Lee and Yeh took a road trip in order to stop prevailing winds from taking the balloon out onto the Atlantic,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and checked in on the University of Wisconsinâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s balloon trajectory website to estimate the landing site.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
Because of spotty cellphone coverage in west Massachusetts,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> it was important to keep the rig in the center of the state so it could be found upon landing.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Light winds meant the guys got lucky and,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> although the cellphoneâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s external antenna was buried upon landing,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the fix they got as the balloon was coming down was close enough.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The Photographs<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The balloon and camera made it up high enough to see the black sky curling around our blue planet.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The Canon was hacked with the CHDK <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>(Canon Hackerâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s Development Kit)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> open-source firmware,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> which adds many features to Canonâ<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>™s cameras.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The intervalometer <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>(interval timer)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> was set to shoot a picture every five seconds,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and the 8GB memory card was enough to hold pictures for the five-hour duration of the flight.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The picture you see above was shot from around 93,000 feet,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> just shy of 18 miles high.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> To give you an idea of how high that is,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> when the balloon burst,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the beer-cooler took forty minutes to come back to Earth.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
What is most astonishing about this launch,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> named Project Icarus,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> is that anyone could do it.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> The budget is so small as to be almost non-existent <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>(the guys slept in their car the night before the launch to save money)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> so that even if everything went wrong,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> a second,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> third or fourth attempt would be easy.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> All it took was a grand idea and an afternoon poking around the hardware store.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
The project website has few details on how the balloon was put together <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>”<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> but the students say they will be selling step-by-step instructions for <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$150 soon.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> That means you will soon be able to launch your own balloon for just <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$300 <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>â<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>€<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>”<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$150 for the instructions and <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>$150 for the parts.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
but it appears the Brits did it better<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
http:<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>/<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>/www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1091896/Out-world-British-teddy-bears-strapped-helium-weather-balloon-reach-edge-space.html<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>

-----------------------------------
Mop
Wed 23 Sep, 2009

Re: The $150 Space Camera.The $150 Space Camera.
-----------------------------------
Excellent work!<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Us Europeans don't need NASA.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>;<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>-<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>)<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
