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Fri, Jun 07, 2019

World View Completes Milestone 16 Day Stratollite Mission

Company Says The Moves It One Step Closer To Scaled Commercial Operations

Stratospheric exploration company World View has successfully executed a record-setting 16-day Stratollite mission, a key step towards the productization of persistent and navigational stratospheric flight for remote sensing and communications applications.

Prior to the completion of this mission, the longest duration Stratollite flight stood at just five days. This mission moves World View one step closer to scaled commercial operations and productization of the Stratollite and the unique data sets it provides. The Stratollite enables persistent, near-real time, very-high resolution remote sensing over large specified areas of interest for commercial and government customers around the world.

“This is a great accomplishment for our team and a key step on the path towards productizing the Stratollite and the unique data sets it will provide for our customers,” said Ryan Hartman, World View president and CEO. “Affordable, real-time, persistent intelligence from a high-altitude platform does not exist today. We are continually inspired by the positive impact such a capability could have on the world, and today marks a big step towards that vision.”

World View’s Stratollite is a long-endurance stratospheric flight vehicle capable of station-keeping over areas of interest for remote sensing and communications. World View’s proprietary altitude-control technology allows it to harness stratospheric winds to steer the Stratollite to and from desired locations and loiter above them for long durations. Stratollites can carry a wide variety of commercial payloads (sensors, telescopes, communications arrays, etc.), launch rapidly on demand and safely return payloads back to Earth after mission completion. Among its wide variety of uses, the Stratollite will help researchers greatly advance knowledge of planet Earth, improve our ability to identify and track severe weather, and assist first responders during natural disasters.

On Monday, June 3rd, 2019, following the successful 16-day mission, World View personnel identified and navigated the system above a safe landing zone in a remote part of Nevada. The team then concluded the mission and executed a safe and controlled descent and landing, followed by recovery of all flight components, many of which will be prepared for refurbishment and re-use in subsequent missions.

Key results from the mission include:

  • More than 8 days of cumulative station-keeping achieved (within a 120km [75 mile] diameter area)
  • Multiple demonstrations of 24+ hours straight of station-keeping within a 100km (62 mile) diameter area
  • One demonstration of 55 hours of continuous station-keeping within a 100km (62 mile) diameter area
  • One demonstration of 6.5 hours of continuous station-keeping within a 9km (5.5 mile) area
  • Over 3,000 miles traveled during the mission, covering Arizona, Nevada, Utah and Oregon
  • Complete navigational control during the mission from remote Mission Control in Tucson, AZ
  • Precision descent system achieved safe & controlled landing within 400ft of targeted waypoint

(Images provided with World View news release and from file)

FMI: www.worldview.space

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