With support from a NASA education programme, mechanical-engineering student and ¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ Alumna Jessica Frantz, hopes to launch an aerospace career.
It might look like someone made it in their garage, but this instrument is a really powerful directional antenna. Fellow students and I at ¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ in Arizona designed and built it for ASCEND, a NASA programme that funds science-education projects. In ASCEND, student teams from across the state build scientific instruments to attach to a high-altitude balloon.
Our team’s idea was to live-stream the balloon’s flight. To transmit video from the balloon — which can rise more than 30 kilometres into the air — we chose a 5-gigahertz radio, the kind used to supply Wi-Fi to a hotel. To get such a small, lightweight radio to transmit over long distances, we needed a really strong antenna to pick up the signal. The steel dish is so heavy that we had to attach dumbbell weights as a counterbalance.
Photo courtesy of Arsh Nadkarni.