WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.133 --> 00:00:01.201 Scientific balloon. 2 00:00:01.201 --> 00:00:03.903 No, we're not decorating for a party, 3 00:00:03.903 --> 00:00:06.206 but scientific balloons can be just as fun. 4 00:00:06.206 --> 00:00:07.607 These balloons are huge. 5 00:00:07.607 --> 00:00:11.111 Some are wider than a football field, and they offer another often cheaper way 6 00:00:11.111 --> 00:00:13.713 besides rockets and planes to carry scientific instruments. 7 00:00:14.614 --> 00:00:17.851 Scientific balloons can fly higher than 100,000 feet, 8 00:00:18.051 --> 00:00:20.653 giving us a clear view of space above Earth's atmosphere, 9 00:00:20.720 --> 00:00:23.390 which allows us to look out into the universe. 10 00:00:23.390 --> 00:00:26.493 Instruments flying on NASA's balloons often study things like cosmic rays 11 00:00:26.493 --> 00:00:29.963 and dark matter. Balloons also provide a way to test scientific instruments 12 00:00:29.963 --> 00:00:32.732 before they go on a larger space missions like space telescopes. 13 00:00:33.266 --> 00:00:35.335 NASA flies a couple of kinds of scientific balloons. 14 00:00:35.402 --> 00:00:37.470 Some are open at the end, like hot air balloons. 15 00:00:37.737 --> 00:00:39.239 Another kind known, as super pressure 16 00:00:39.239 --> 00:00:41.908 balloons, are completely sealed, so no gases can escape. 17 00:00:42.242 --> 00:00:45.745 Super pressure balloons can stay aloft for several weeks and circle the globe. 18 00:00:46.546 --> 00:00:48.948 Wallops manages NASA's scientific balloons program, 19 00:00:49.182 --> 00:00:52.318 launching balloons from around the world to study our universe.