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Canada-France Collaborate on Balloon Launches

PRESS Release
Date Released:
Friday, June 15, 2012

Source: Canadian Space Agency

The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) announced today that it is partnering with the French space agency (Centre national d’etudes spatiales, CNES) to launch space science balloons in Canada. The initiative will provide Canadian scientists and engineers with a new platform to test technologies and advance space science. The CSA and CNES have selected the City of Timmins, Ontario, to host a new mid-latitude base where the high-altitude balloons will be launched. The CSA is investing an estimated $10 million over the next ten years in the launch base and flight campaigns.

“The balloon launch initiative is a coup for Canada’s space community,” notes Steve MacLean, President of the Canadian Space Agency. “Balloon missions are cost-effective and can be prepared more quickly and more frequently, making them ideal for training university students. Offering hands-on learning opportunities helps Canada retain the next generation of space scientists and engineers, and keeps our country innovative and competitive.”

The selection of a Canadian balloon launch site marks the first joint endeavour under a newly signed agreement between the CSA and CNES and will foster scientific collaboration between the two countries. “This collaboration is a very fortunate one for the French space agency,” notes Yannick d’Escatha, President of CNES. “CNES has been searching for a mid-latitude launch site for science missions using large stratospheric balloons, especially for the PILOT mission. The selection of Timmins, Ontario, is excellent news. Moreover, our various collaborations with our friends at the Canadian Space Agency have always been very fruitful,” adds d’Escatha.

In return for hosting the new launch site, Canadian academia and industry will have access to CNES’s worldwide network of regular and frequent stratospheric balloon flight opportunities. Canada will also benefit from the vast experience France has developed in the field, with more than 3,500 balloon launches in over 40 years.

Timmins has been identified as the best location in Canada based on rigorous selection criteria. The latitude, wind and weather conditions, the low population density in key areas surrounding the city and optimal on-site infrastructure meet the stringent national and international security regulations governing balloon launch and recovery systems. Timmins also has the advantage of offering ideal launch conditions year-round. “I’m excited at the news of this development. To have the Canadian Space Agency and the Centre national d’etudes spatiales operate from Timmins will help diversify our local economy, create employment, and provide youth with new career opportunities,” says Tom Laughren, Mayor of Timmins. CNES will conduct the first test launch from Timmins in 2013. In the coming months, the CSA will invite the Canadian space community to fly experiments on the annual CSA-CNES flight campaigns beginning in 2014.

High-altitude balloons can be as tall as the Eiffel Tower (324 metres) and are able to carry up to 1.5 tons of equipment into the stratosphere (about 42 km in altitude-well above the flight paths of aircraft, yet much lower than satellites). They can be used to collect a wide variety of critical data on the Earth’s environment and atmosphere, or look outwards into the Universe for astronomy research. Balloons rely on winds and buoyancy to take flight, require no engine or fuel, and are fully recovered after each flight, making them an environmentally responsible tool for scientific research and technology development.

As the host country, the CSA will operate the launch base in Timmins and coordinate launch campaigns in Canada with CNES. The City of Timmins will build, operate and maintain the infrastructure of the launch base, supporting at least one launch every two years. The balloon initiative also involves NAV CANADA, the private sector civil air navigation services provider, and collaboration between several Government of Canada departments. Transport Canada is responsible for flight authorizations and Industry Canada will manage the telecommunications frequencies required for each balloon flight. Environment Canada performed the climatological studies to select the launch site. Public Works and Government Services Canada negotiated the lease agreement between the CSA and Timmins and performed the required environmental audit.

Contact:

Canadian Space Agency
Media Relations Office
450-926-4370
media@asc-csa.gc.ca
www.asc-csa.gc.ca



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3 comments to Canada-France Collaborate on Balloon Launches

  • I was about 8 years old looking out a New Jersey window that gave me a million dollar view of Manhatten NYC from high ground (Clifton NJ). The sun was setting causing the windows of the skyscrapers to reflect a beautiful orange-gold.
    A small “twinkle” occured in the still blue sky (pre-smog days back then) and suddenly and enormous “ball” also orange-gold developed growing as if some huge spacecraft was approaching me quickly and then it simply faded away!!!
    I went inside to change my underwear ;) , hid under the covers for a while thinking of “Martians” landing stuff, and told family about it at dinner getting only funny looks.
    The next day’s newspaper reported that a weather baloon launched from Maryland was “self destucted” (the twinkle I saw) before it got to close to Manhatten structures. The gas released was just slightly refractive enough at that moment to cause the “vision”.

  • What a great story – the basis for a Martian Invasion conspiracy!

  • It was a one of a kind phenomena. If the sun had been higher in the sky, it’s light would have just passed through against the blue sky instead of being reflected. Not an explosion but a very rapid diffusion. No idea what the gas was exactly though. Helium probably.

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