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Autonomous Observation Challenge

A NASA TechLeap Challenge

Orion Labs’ Quantum Earth Observatory launches on an Aerostar high-altitude balloon from the company’s facility in Sioux Falls, South Dakota on July 28, 2022. The observatory hardware is housed in the gondola seen carried below the balloon.

The NASA TechLeap Prize’s Autonomous Observation Challenge No. 1 focused on developing SmallSat observation technologies that can autonomously detect, locate, track, and collect data on transient events on Earth and beyond — such as dust plumes on the Moon or other planets or terrestrial phenomena on our home planet. The winning teams used balloon flights in 2022 to gather valuable test data and gain experience with the full process of building a technology payload and bringing it from lab to flight test.

A second high-altitude balloon flight on May 24, 2023 enabled all three research teams to fly, fix issues, and fly again less than a year after their first individual flight tests.

Learn more about NASA’s TechLeap Prize about

Flight Provider

Aerostar International

Flight Test Platform

High-altitude balloon

Flight dates

July 9, July 28, and August 3, 2022
May 24, 2023

Location

Sioux Falls and Hurley, South Dakota

About the Challenge | Winners’ Payloads | Watch a High-Altitude Balloon Launch |
News | Other Challenges

Advancing Observation Capabilities

NASA seeks to improve a variety of Earth and space-based capabilities, including detecting and tracking wildfires, identifying plumes of gas venting into Earth’s atmosphere, and precision tracking of small spacecraft positions in orbit. To support future missions, NASA must advance observation capabilities using adaptive, distributed, heterogeneous networks of spacecraft, suborbital, and ground-based sensors working cooperatively. The solutions proposed through this challenge will help rapidly advance small spacecraft technologies for autonomous observation of events on Earth and beyond, as well as improve communications and computing power in small spacecraft applications. 

The winners of this challenge focused on integrated, compact precision pointing systems for small spacecraft that can be used to autonomously detect, locate, track, and collect data on transient terrestrial events such as aerosol dispersion in the atmosphere or maintain line of sight communication with an object on the lunar surface.

More information is available on the NASA TechLeap website for this challenge. Carrot is the challenge administrator for TechLeap. 

The Winners’ Payloads

Bronco Ember | Quantum Earth Observatory | Satellite for Natural and Artificial Plumes

Watch a High-Altitude Balloon Launch

Orion Labs’ Quantum Earth Observatory launches on an Aerostar high-altitude balloon from the company’s facility in Sioux Falls, South Dakota on July 28, 2022. The observatory hardware is housed in the gondola seen carried below the balloon.