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ATIC Videos |
NOTE: The video here is provided in several
different formats: A streaming server provided by RayCom Media, a WMV
file and a MPEG file. You will need Windows Media Player 7 to view the
stream and WMV file. The MPEG should be viewable on almost any viewer
and provides a higher resolution view. We recommend that teachers
right click on the MPEG link and use the "save target as" function to
download the full file prior to class and save it into a directory onto
your classroom computer disk. This way you can avoid having to download
the file during each class period. The MPEG version is high enough
resolution to allow full screen viewing by your entire class.
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Up, Up and Away
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WMV file (2.5 MB),
MPEG file (17.3 MB)
) |
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For the last
month, WAFB Special Correspondent Bill Rodman has been documenting a
Louisiana State University Physics and Astronomy experiment on galactic
cosmic rays…
While the crew of the unmanned high altitude balloon experiment
has had their share of bad weather luck the last two weeks, today the
LSU/ATIC crew’s efforts and patience finally paid off, as Bill Rodman
reports from Williams Field, Antarctica.
(12/28/00)
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Waiting on the Weather (
WMV file (2.1 MB),
MPEG file (15.5 MB)
) |
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When we last heard from Antarctica, the LSU/ATIC experiment on galactic
cosmic rays was about to be launched, by high altitude balloon, on a ten
to twelve day orbit of the South Pole…
With the unmanned experiment fully operational and ready for
flight, the last, and perhaps greatest, hurdle remains the weather, as
Bill Rodman reports from Williams Field, Antarctica. (12/26/00)
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Merry Christmas from Antarctica
(
WMV file (0.5 MB),
MPEG file (3.8 MB)
) |
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The delay continues in the launch of the Louisiana State University/ATIC
(Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter) long duration balloon experiment
on cosmic rays.
The high altitude balloon launch remains on hold due to cloudy
skies and high winds that have stuck around all weekend long in and
around McMurdo Station, Antarctica.
The latest weather briefing shows the next realistic shot at
launch to be sometime Wednesday, December 27.
Members of the LSU Physics and Astronomy team did, however,
celebrate Christmas in style with a holiday meal that included
Louisiana-style fried turkey. Meantime the experiment is fully
constructed, software adjustments are complete and the instrument is
undergoing last minute calibration checks before a balloon ride that
will take it 120,000 feet in the air on a ten to twelve day orbit of the
South Pole.
(12/25/00)
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Countdown to Launch
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WMV file (1.9 MB),
MPEG file (13.4 MB)
) |
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Five years
after it was first conceived, and countless hours of research, design
and set-up later, the LSU/ATIC experiment on galactic cosmic rays is
fully constructed and being checked out for flight.
The launch day and time now rests on a final experiment
compatibility test and, of course, good weather, as Bill Rodman reports
from Williams Field, Antarctica…
(12/20/00)
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Mardi Gras, McMurdo Style (
WMV file (2.1 MB),
MPEG file (15.1 MB)
) |
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The LSU ATIC project team is coming off a very eventful weekend…
With time ticking down to launch day, the experiment itself is
being prepared for the 10 to 12 day, high altitude orbit around the
South Pole…
Though they’re a long way from home, the crew experienced a
little South Louisiana cheer as WAFB Special Correspondent Bill Rodman
explains from Antarctica. (12/18/00)
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| The Men Behind the Scientific Balloon (
WMV file (1.4 MB),
MPEG file (9.8 MB)
) |
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The Palestine,
Texas based National Scientific Balloon Facility crew prepares for
launch day… NSBF crew will oversee the unmanned balloon flight that will
take the ATIC experiment on a ten to twelve day orbit around the South
Pole at an altitude of one-hundred and twenty thousand feet. In today’s video journal from The Ice, Bill Rodman talks with the
NSBF crew chief about scientific ballooning in Antarctica.
(12/15/00)
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| Measuring Cosmic Rays (
WMV file (2.4 MB),
MPEG file (16.8 MB)
) |
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Pending some last minute tweaking of
the experiment’s detector control software, that could take a day or
more to straighten out, LSU ATIC project leader Greg Guzik, Ph.D. says
the experiment is two days from being launch ready at Williams Field,
Antarctica. In today’s Science
on Ice video journal, Bill Rodman attempts to demystify the galactic
cosmic ray detecting experiment with the LSU Research Associate who
helped design and construct it, as well as showing you a nearby Ross
Island historic treasure.
(12/13/00)
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| Pathfinder's Findings (
WMV file (2.3 MB),
MPEG file (16 MB)
) |
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When the LSU
ATIC experiment is fully assembled, tested and ready for launch, that’s
when the skills of the Palestine, Texas based National Scientific
Balloon Facility staff come in.
While the skill of NSBF’s riggers and technicians is so critical
for the success of the helium balloon flight, the weather – particularly
high circumpolar winds – is crucial, as WAFB Special Correspondent Bill
Rodman reports from the frozen last continent. (12/11/00)
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| "Happy Camper" School (
WMV file (1.9 MB),
MPEG file (13 MB)
) |
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For the scientists and contract workers who arrive at McMurdo Station,
Antarctica each year, many are amazed at the comparative comfort of the
base and its facilities… Not to be forgotten, however, is the extreme
Antarctic wilderness that begins right where Mac Town ends.
To help remind and prepare visitors for what awaits them out on
the frozen and barren last continent, a required course called Snow
Craft Survival One, fondly referred to as “Happy Camper,” must be
completed…
WAFB Special Correspondent Bill Rodman has more on his “Happy
Camper” experience. (12/8/00) |
| Meet the ATIC Crew (
WMV file (2.4 MB),
MPEG file (16 MB)
) |
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Meet the LSU ATIC crew who have been tucked away in a
remote Antarctic hanger busily at work assembling the long duration
balloon experiment. (12/7/00) |
| To the Last Continent (
WMV file (1.6
MB),
MPEG file (11 MB)
) |
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Bill Rodman leaves Baton Rouge on a journey that will
take him through New Zealand and on to McMurdo Station in Antarctica.
(12/4/00) |
| Eyes on ATIC (
WMV file (1.3 MB),
MPEG file (8.8 MB)
) |
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The ATIC experiment is on its way to Antarctica. While
LSU scientists make the final preparations for their trip to the
ice-bound continent, students and teachers in Louisiana also prepare to
participate in the mission. (12/1/00) |
| ATIC Introduction (
RayCom Media
Stream,
WMV file (1.6 MB),
MPEG file (11 MB)
) |
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This short segment from a news broadcast of a local
Baton Rouge television station, WAFB, provides some background on the
ATIC experiment and the plans to take the instrument to the CERN
particle accelerator near Geneva, Switzerland during September, 1999. |
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