OSU banner spacer
skip page navigationOregon State University
 
Oregon NASA Space Grant Consortium Logo
home | contact us | site map | webmail
 
 
  Education Programs  
 
The NASA Vision:
To improve life here,
To extend life to there,
To find life beyond.

search help
Near space image.

LaunchOregon - Balloon Satellite Program


LaunchOregon provides a cost-effective way to expose students and teachers of all ages to hands-on science, engineering, and math activities in a near-space environment. Practical team-building skills are developed as students prepare for the next generation workforce in aerospace, science, engineering, and technology.

NEW!!
Read more about the program in the NASA article,
"Teachers Build Their Own Space Hardware"



LaunchOregon Teams

LaunchOregon in the News!

Image of satellite Image of Firefox balloon satellite launch from OSU Memorial Union Quad Image of Firefox balloon satellite launch from OSU Memorial Union Quad

Program Goals
  • Expose students to the design of space hardware
  • Provide a platform for students to fly their designs in engineering and science
  • Develop teambuilding skills
  • An inexpensive way to get students involved with and excited about NASA
Program Outline
  • Students design and create payloads that carry experiments and data collection tools.
  • Participating universities provide a launch platform to successfully launch the payloads.
  • "Chase teams" follow the path of the balloon, tracked by Global Positioning System (GPS) to recover payloads
  • Students analyze the recovered data.

Return to Top

Why a Balloon?
  • Weather balloons provide an inexpensive method of transportation, carrying payloads to high-altitudes (50~100,000 ft) to provide an experience with a near-space environment
  • Designing and implementing a balloon payload in a team environment can offer a unique educational experience. It is one of the few opportunities where students can become involved in all aspects of a scientific experiment.
  • Relatively short development time allows students to have hands-on experience building the payload, flying it, and analyzing the data that is gathered, while developing team-building skills.
  • Instruments such as GPS and cameras placed on balloons are recovered approximately 90% of the time after the completion of the flight. This means that the same instrument can be used multiple times, lending itself to a cost-effective program.
Bobby WorldWide Approved

This site is in compliance with U. S. Section 508 accessibility standards.

National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
NASA Logo National Space Grant Logo National Space Grant College
and Fellowship Program


Oregon Space Grant Consortium
is funded through a NASA Training Grant

Questions or Comments? Contact Us
Page last updated: January 9, 2007