Gorgeous Amateur Footage Of HD Camera's Ascent To Near-Space

Earnest Cavalli

New member
Jun 19, 2008
5,352
0
0
Gorgeous Amateur Footage Of HD Camera's Ascent To Near-Space


Come for the gorgeous footage of space, stay to watch a camera survive a 100,000 foot fall.

Before you watch the most entertaining 10 minutes of Youtube footage you'll see this week, you need a bit of backstory. Impressed by a group of MIT students who attached a digital camera to a balloon [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/94734-MIT-Students-Take-Photographs-of-Earth-for-Under-150] and scored some gorgeous images of space for under $150, a group of Canadian radio enthusiasts thought they could do one better.

Constructing their own rig of a Canon Vixio HD camcorder, foam padding and a hydrogen balloon, the group set it aloft above Edmonton. After nearly three hours of flight (the attached ten minute clip is a highlights reel) and over 100,000 feet of altitude, the camera returned to Earth. More specifically, it plummeted into a tree and miraculously survived.

Even if you have no interest in the stunning footage from the very edge of our atmosphere -- it's very serene up there -- be sure to watch every from 6:25 on. That's the point where the balloon bursts and viewers get to experience 107,145 feet of free fall.

Sadly, the camera never collides with anything substantial, ruining all hope of seeing one of those smarmy Canada Geese incinerated in a burst of feathers and molten beak.

(Via Geek [http://www.geek.com/articles/news/amateurs-film-near-space-journey-in-hd-20090924/])

Permalink
 

Baby Tea

Just Ask Frankie
Sep 18, 2008
4,687
0
0
That's crazy awesome.
And that's a pretty god camera for surviving! I know what camera I'm buying next!

EDIT: And I totally saw the curvature of the Earth! Take that flat-world theorists!
 

Caimekaze

New member
Feb 2, 2008
857
0
0
So, who would pay to watch the full footage in HD?

I know I certainly would. That was beautiful.
 

Bungalow

New member
Apr 15, 2009
64
0
0
Pretty mental stuff.

My only question is how did they know where it'd land And what sort of control did they have so that it didnt land on a school playground or something?
 

obex

Gone Gonzo ..... no ..... wait..
Jun 18, 2009
343
0
0
Bungalow said:
Pretty mental stuff.

My only question is how did they know where it'd land And what sort of control did they have so that it didnt land on a school playground or something?
They probably had a gps on it and as you can see they realised it at the edge of town an quick check of the the predicted wind patterns would mean you could get it to go away from the city to the rural area it landed in.
 

FistsOfTinsel

New member
Jun 23, 2008
83
0
0
Bungalow said:
Pretty mental stuff.

My only question is how did they know where it'd land And what sort of control did they have so that it didnt land on a school playground or something?
The payload included a phone with a GPS on it - they used some software to track the phone. As for the landing, I think they used this site: http://weather.uwyo.edu/polar/balloon_traj.html to predict about where it would end up.
 

LuckyWanderBoy

New member
Aug 8, 2009
4
0
0
That was really great to watch.

It didn't look like free-fall to me though. I think it was on a parachute.
Nevertheless beautiful footage
 

Svenparty

New member
Jan 13, 2009
1,346
0
0
I can see the headlines now: "Old Lady killed in Copycat Near Space Camera Launch"

Makes you worry about getting hit on the head by one of these things when your outside.
 

GamerLuck

Questionably Opinionated
Jul 13, 2009
306
0
0
The Fall was the most beuatiful part... the shear splendor of a constant 9.8 m/s^2 (assuming there wasnt a parachute... if there was that totally ruins the awesome).... still took a long ass time to fall.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
Legacy
Jul 18, 2009
20,154
4,920
118
This would be great for IMAX.

To bad that they couldn't keep the camera stable during the fall.