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Aerostat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  
The word aerostat was originally French and is derived from the greek aer (air) ... An aerostat is a lighter than air object that can stay stationary in the air. ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerostat

Tethered Aerostat Radar System - United States Nuclear Forces

  
The primary aerostat mission is to provide radar data in support of other ... One aerostat, located at Cudjoe Key, Fla., transmits TV Marti, which sends ...
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/airdef/tars.htm

Factsheets : Tethered Aerostat Radar System : Tethered Aerostat Radar ...

  
An aerostat is a lighter-than-air, inflatable, aerodynamic balloon filled with helium and air. ... The current aerostat network consists of two sizes of ...
http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=3507

What is an Aerostat?

  
TCOM, L.P. - The Surveillance Solution. Over the past 30 years, TCOM has been at the forefront of innovative developments in tethered aerostat systems. TCOM has ...
http://www.tcomlp.com/aerostats_what_aero.html

Aircraft Manufacturer | Airship | Blimp | Hybrid Airship | Aerostat ...

  
We are an aircraft manufacturer that offers FAA type certified airships or blimps, tethered aerostats, hybrid heavy lift airship and high altitude airship, please ...
http://www.aerosml.com/

aerostat - Wiktionary

  
aerostat. Definition from Wiktionary, a free dictionary. Jump to: navigation, search ... Croatian: aerostat hr(hr) m. Bulgarian: аеростат m. Italian: aerostato ...
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/aerostat

aerostat: Definition from Answers.com

  
aerostat ( ) n. An aircraft, especially a balloon or dirigible, deriving its lift from the buoyancy of surrounding air rather than from aerodynamic
http://www.answers.com/topic/aerostat

aerostat - Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary

  
Definition of aerostat from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/aerostat

Aerostar International Tethered Blimps and Aerostats

  
... turn-key, easy to use, rapid deployment, tethered aerostat system. This turn-key system consists of a 76' long aerostat with a swivel gantry docking station ...
http://www.aerostar.com/military/TIF-25K_aerostat.htm

Aerostat Solutions

  
SERVICES. PRICING. GALLERY. CONTACT. Aerostat Solutions offers affordable aerial photography. ... Real Estate. Development, Architectural & Engineering ...
http://www.aerostatsolutions.com/index.htm
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Aerostat' Opens New Window.

Q.What do you think about aerostat colonies in the Venusian atmosphere?Related Search:
Astronomy & Space
 Kinda reminiscent of Bespin cloud cities, I read some interesting ideas about feasible colonies floating in the upper atmosphere of Venus around 50 km up (30 miles for those not up on the metric game), and they look to be "safer" than surface establishments on Mars. Your thoughts.
A.VERY interesting! Advantages: comparable temperatures, pressure and gravity to Earth. Disadvantages: huge costs in building and transporting the "city" (on Mars we could use native raw materials), what to build it out of (else it be dissolved by the sulfuric acid atmosphere (maybe ceramics?)), also how to handle the super hurricane force winds (around 350 km/h) at that level of the atmosphere?
  

Q.How much did the Lockheed Martins Tethered Aerostat radar cost?, and were is it located???Related Search:
Engineering
 New technoloy on the board
A.The operations and maintenance cost per site is $3.5 million. Don't know the original project cost. An aerostat is a lighter-than-air, inflatable, aerodynamic balloon filled with helium and air. The Tethered Aerostat Radar System is a low-level surveillance system that uses aerostats as radar platforms. The primary mission is to provide low-level radar surveillance along: - the southwest border of the United States and Mexico, - the Straits of Florida, and - the Caribbean in support of federal agencies involved in the nation's drug interdiction program. The secondary mission is to provide North American Aerospace Defense Command with low-level surveillance coverage for air sovereignty in the Florida Straits. Currently there are two aerostats located at Cudjoe Key, Fla., operated by the State Department and the Air Force. The State Department aerostat transmits TV Marti, which sends American television signals into Cuba for the Office of Cuba Broadcasting. The other aerostat is dedicated to the counter drug and NORAD air sovereignty mission.
  

Q.What has been the highest ground-tethered flight to date - kite or balloon?Related Search:
Other - Science
 A 1909 group of German meteorologists allegedly flew a series of kites up to 31,000ft, and U.S. aerostats on the Mexican border routinely fly at about 20,000 ft, but has anything actually flown higher with a tether?
A.Try Google.............
  
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Aerostat
Part of a series on
Categories of Aircraft
Lighter than air (aerostats)
Unpowered Powered
Balloon Airship
Hybrid Lighter-than-air/Heavier-than-air
Unpowered Powered
Hybrid airship
Heavier than air (aerodynes)
Unpowered Powered
Unpowered flexible-wing Powered flexible-wing
Hang glider
Paraglider
Powered hang glider
Powered paraglider
Unpowered fixed-wing Powered fixed-wing
• Glider • Powered airplane/aeroplane
Powered hybrid fixed/rotary wing
Tiltwing
Tiltrotor
Coleopter
Unpowered rotary-wing Powered rotary-wing
Rotor kite Autogyro
Gyrodyne ("Heliplane")
Helicopter
Powered aircraft using other means of lift
Ornithopter
Flettner airplane
see also
Ground-effect vehicle
Hovercraft
Flying Bedstead
Avrocar

The word aerostat was originally French and is derived from the greek aer (air) + statos (standing). An aerostat is a lighter than air object that can stay stationary in the air. Aerostats include free balloons, airships, moored balloons and tethered Helikites. Such a vehicle consists of a lightweight skin filled with a lifting gas to create buoyancy.

Technically, aerostats are capable of providing "aerostatic" lift in that the force upwards arises without movement through the surrounding air mass. This contrasts with aerodynamic lift which requires the movement of at least some part of the aircraft through the surrounding air mass. However, in reality most aerostats (except spherical balloons) obtain lift from both aerodynamic lift and pure gas lift at some time or other.

Aerostats are generally tethered lighter-than-air objects. Types of tethered aerostat include spherical balloons, blimps and Helikites.

Spherical balloons have the lowest surface-area-to-volume ratio and they lift well in low or nil wind. However, unless they are very large, in most winds they quickly begin to be pushed down to the ground. In light winds very large rounded balloons are used to lift people for recreational flight, as in Bournemouth, England.

Blimp shaped balloons were originally designed as barrage balloons just before the First World War. Thousands of Blimps were used in both world wars. Blimps have change little in design since World War One. The British L.Z. type of World War Two was based upon the French Caquot type of 1915. A British L.Z. barrage was sent to the USA in 1942 where it was copied and became the ZK Type made by Goodyear. Today most blimps are used for advertising in fair weather. Some massive blimps are used for lifting radar or surveillance cameras. Blimps are essentially sausage shaped to reduce frontal area and wind resistance. Blimps have stern fins to keep the blimp pointing into the wind. When they are correctly made they are more stable than spherical balloons, however their large surface area to volume ratio means they need to be large to lift a reasonable payload. Also, as a general rule blimps need to be large to cope with high winds. Blimps long thin shape necessitates a device to equalise pressure in the envelope called a ballonet if they are to go over 1000ft altitude, and to cope with large atmospheric temperature changes.

When set at an angle to the wind, blimps can produce aerodynamic lift especially from their stern fins. When blimps do this it is called "kiting". As the wind increases further this lift causes the stern to rise and the nose to lower. The low nose is further pushed down by the wind leading to an instability called "porpoising". To reduce porpoising the tethers are set to further raise the nose in high winds, however this increases the drag on the blimp causing the blimp to lose height and the tether to lay over to give "quatenary" problems. The handling and cost implications of the blimps large size means they are not commonly used by the general public. However, the military sometimes use large blimps for surveillance and radio relay due to their ability to stay in the air for long periods of time in reasonable weather.

Helikites are a combination of kite and aerostat. They are said to fly to greater altitude and in higher winds than comparably sized blimps. They are a tethered aerostat made of a combination of an oblate spheroid helium balloon and a kite. Helikites were designed, named and patented by Sandy Allsopp in 1993. They are made by Allsopp Helikites Ltd, in Damerham, Hampshire, England. Helikites are lighter than air and so will also fly in no wind to thousands of feet. However, they also utilise aerodynamic lift in a stable manner when wind is available. Due to their rounder shape, Helikites have a better surface-area-to-volume ratio than blimps so have greater aerostatic lift in no wind.

Aerostats are used for lifting military airborne radar equipment, parachute training, for advertising, lifting meterological equipment, raising antennas, gaining line of sight for ad hoc radio relay stations, lifting video equipment and digital cameras, for jungle marker balloon use and birdscaring.

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