NASA Super Pressure Balloon Launch
NASA is returning in 2025
After four successful balloon launches in 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2023, NASA has confirmed its return to Wānaka Airport in 2025 for its fifth super pressure balloon launch.
Watch this space for regular updates.
In March 2015 Wānaka Airport became the site of New Zealand’s first scientific space balloon launch.
NASA and the Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility (CSBF) launched a helium-filled space balloon as a trial to see whether Wānaka would be a suitable site to become part of its global scientific network. If the trial launch was deemed successful, future balloons would carry a payload of scientific equipment to help NASA’s investigations into the effects of cosmic rays on the atmosphere, the origins of the universe and the hunt for new planets.
The 2015 Wānaka launch was a success and the $1.6 million super pressure balloon flew for 32 days, 5 hours and 51 minutes before being brought down in a remote area of Australia.
Historical Launch Attempts
NASA is back for 2023!
They're planning two super pressure balloon (SPB) launches from Wānaka, primarily to test the agency's SPB technology, but NASA also plans to fly a science payload as a mission of opportunity on each balloon.
NASA has not yet announced the opening of their Super Pressure Balloon launch window. Once the window opens, NASA will announce by 2 p.m. NZST (10 p.m. ET) if the next day’s forecast weather will support a launch attempt.
The launches can be tracked in the following ways:
• A live feed of the launch is available here: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nasa-csbf-downrange-operations
• Track the progress of the flight at the following link, which includes a map showing the balloon’s real-time location, at: http://www.csbf.nasa.gov/newzealand/wanaka.htm
NASA conducts SPB launches from New Zealand in collaboration with the Queenstown Airport Corporation, Queenstown Lakes District Council, New Zealand Space Agency, and Airways New Zealand. Wānaka is NASA’s dedicated launch site for mid-latitude, long-duration balloon missions.
For more information, please see the Super Pressure Balloon Blog.
NASA has once again been based at Wānaka Airport to launch their Super Pressure Balloon.
Unfortunately, their final launch attempt on Friday 27 May had been aborted due to mechanical issues with the balloon equipment.
This launch attempt was the sixth and final attempt of the 2022 Wānaka Balloon Campaign.
NASA launched its third super pressure balloon from Wanaka on Tuesday 25 April 2017 (ANZAC Day) to perform another flight test of its super pressure balloon. In addition, the balloon will this year fly the University of Chicago's Extreme Universe Space Observatory (EUSO-SPB) payload as a mission of opportunity. To commemorate the day, NASA launched the balloon with a poppy attached in a nod to the ANZACs.
EUSO-SPB is a high-energy cosmic ray particle astrophysics payload that will test a fluorescence detector and its supporting technologies under the severe operating conditions of the stratosphere. This suborbital flight is a precursor for a mission being planned to launch the EUSO telescope to and install it on the International Space Station (ISS).
NASA also announced they will build a dedicated 600 metre diameter gravel launch pad for the 2017 launch. This will enable operations to run alongside normal airport operations on launch day and minimise the impact on users and operators. NASA has also confirmed its commitment to Wanaka as a launch site for up to the next ten years.
NASA completed its third mid-latitude Super Pressure Balloon (SPB) flight at 11:24 p.m. EDT, Saturday, May 6, after 12 days, 4 hours and 34 minutes aloft.
Flight controllers at NASA’s Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Palestine, Texas, conducted a controlled flight termination of the balloon, which slowly descended back to Earth impacting in the South Pacific Ocean about 200 miles south of Easter Island.
Wānaka Airport launch, 25 April 2017
The team returned in 2016 to once again launch a SPB from Wanaka. In addition to testing another SPB, the mission flew the University of California, Berkeley’s, Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI) payload. COSI investigated longstanding mysteries of the universe, such as those surrounding the births and deaths of stars, positrons, pulsars and black holes. The SPB was successfully launched from Wanaka on May 17 2016 and flew for 46 days.
Wānaka Airport Launch, 17 May 2016
Wānaka Airport Launch, 27 March 2015
See the first Wānaka Airport launch as it happened!
Read More About NASA at Wānaka Airport

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