Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Nova Scotia

This painting created itself while free-falling from space

It took a chainsawand some careful navigation along remote Nova Scotia logging roads, but members of the Annapolis Royal Space Agency retrieved their very special cargo, fresh from space,on Saturday afternoon.

'It's like a big Nebula or something,' says student who was involved in the project

The balloon was toting a Styrofoam box containing a canvas and a smaller balloon filled with paint. When the large weather balloon exploded almost 33 kilometres above the Earth's surface, the whole package began plummeting and sometime during the journey, the small balloon also popped and the paint began to cover the canvas. (Submitted by Derick Smith)

It took a chainsawand some careful navigation along remote Nova Scotia logging roads, but members of the Annapolis Royal Space Agency retrieved their very special cargo, fresh from space,on Saturday afternoon.

A group of students, their teacher and some community members launched a weather balloon into the sky above Annapolis Royal, N.S., early Saturday morning.

The balloon was toting a Styrofoam box containing a canvas and a smaller balloon filled with paint.

When the large weather balloon exploded almost 33 kilometres above the Earth's surface, the whole package began plummeting.

The launch and descent of the weather balloon went off without a hitch, said Derick Smith, the school's physics and art teacher. (Submitted by Derick Smith)

Sometime duringthe journey, the small balloon also popped and the paint began to cover the canvas.

"It's crazy to think that that painting was made in space," said Finn Hafting, a Grade 12 student at Annapolis West Education Centre. "It's crazy that the motion of the balloon was the thing that made that painting. We didn't touch it at all."

The launch and descent went off without a hitch, saidDerick Smith, the school's physics and art teacher.

"That's not something we often get to say with a project like this, but every aspect of it worked really really well."

The group had predicted the balloon's trajectory, considering the winds and the jet stream, and thatprediction almost precisely mirrored the balloon's flight.

After free-falling for a while, the equipment was eventually carried to Earth gently with a parachute, landed in a sapling only about 10 kilometres from where they launched it. (Submitted by Derick Smith)

Sincememberstracked the balloon's location and altitude using GPS, they were able to retrieve it fairly quickly.

After free-falling for a while, the equipment was eventually carried to Earth gently with a parachute, landed in a sapling only about 10 kilometres from where they launched it.

"When we came and approached it we saw all the paint was dripping down on the leaves,so we knew that the balloon had burst, which was a relief," said Hafting.

The balloon's predicted path, left, was very similar to its actual path. (Annapolis Royal Space Agency/Facebook and Google Maps APRS)

Since the tree was too small to climb, the groupused a chainsaw to cut it down and retrieve their gear.

Hafting described the painting as "kind of wavy" with "a lot of streaky lines."

"It kind of looks like space, actually like a big Nebula or something."