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PongSat
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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PongSats are high-altitude near space missions that hold a probe or other project that can fit inside a ping-pong (table tennis) ball. The launch program is run by a volunteer organization, JP Aerospace (which also provided balloon launch services for the Space Chair.)
JP Aerospace succeeded in its first launch of PongSat missions, with a balloon-launched rocket (AKA a rockoon), at the West Texas Spaceport near Fort Stockton, in October 2002. The launcher reached 100,000 ft (30 km) with 64 hosted PongSats.[1]
Many of the flights have been funded through a KickStarter crowdfunding campaign.[2] Although many PongSats contain things like food items, simply because schoolchildren are curious about the result, other missions include "multiple sensors and complex mini-computers".[3] It's been described by its founder as part of "America's Other Space Program," but also as one that relies "primarily on volunteers and helium."[4] SpaceHub Southeast has organized several PongSat flights from Atlanta.[5]
According to founder John Powell, the PongSat launch program is very global, with payloads delivered to JP Aerospace from "Poland, India, Japan, Slovenia, Germany, Belgium, Turkey, China, Australia, Indonesia."[6]
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