North

Massive balloon examining black hole passes over Nunavut before landing in N.W.T.

XL-Calibur, a research balloon the size of a football stadium, recently passed over Nunavut and the Northwest Territories studying black holes in the galaxy. Parts of it landed near Délı̨nę, N.W.T., on Monday.

NASA says team will collect balloon, parachute and equipment from where they landed

The XL-Calibur telescope and parachute, seen here, landed near Délı̨nę, N.W.T., on Monday, about 20 kilometres away from where the balloon ended up. (SuperTigerLDB/Twitter)

From the ground, it looked like a second moon floating across the sky. 

A research balloon that was the size of a football stadium recently passed over Nunavut and the N.W.T. studying the galaxy, and generating a buzz in some of the communities it travelled over. 

The XL-Calibur — launched from Kiruna, Sweden, last week — was built by a team of 50 scientists from the U.S., Japan and Sweden to measure X-rays from black holes and neutron stars.

The journey lasted six days, seven hours and 45 minutes, and was a collaboration between NASA, Washington University in St. Louis (WUSTL) and KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden.

The balloon, which is the size of a football stadium, photographed at 130,000 feet by Richard Bose, a senior research engineer at Washington University, who helped build the telescope it carried. (Submitted by Richard Bose)

A Twitter account for the XL-Calibur shared photos that were snapped by people in Norway, Iceland, and in Nunavut's Arviat and Iqaluit. The balloon also passed over Yellowknife before Richard Bose, a senior research engineer at WUSTL, said the payload landed 80 kilometres away from Délı̨nę, N.W.T., on Monday.

Bose said NASA decided when to end the flight, a process that involved opening a hole in the balloon so it dropped from an elevation of 130,000 feet to about 50,000 feet. Then, the balloon and the telescope separated — the latter being carried to the ground with a parachute. 

"Just missed some trees and definitely didn't land in a lake, which is our biggest worry," said Bose, who helped build part of the telescope and said that water probably wouldn't have been kind to the rare and expensive mirrors it contains. 

The XL-Calibur was spotted drifting over Iqaluit last Friday. (Karen Pikuyak/CBC)

Jeremy Eggers, a communications official for NASA, told CBC News in an email the polyethylene film balloon landed nearly 20 kilometres away from the payload and that a team was being deployed to pick up all three parts.

Before terminating any flight, Eggers said NASA's scientific balloon team does a survey to keep the public safe, to minimize environmental impacts and to make sure they can recover as much of the gear as possible. 

"NASA considers environment impacts when conducting all of its scientific balloon missions and takes action to mitigate impacts," he wrote, adding the organization worked with Canadian officials to coordinate XL-Calibur's flight and landing spot. 

Bose said XL-Calibur's main focus is a black hole called Cygnus X1 that's special because it's soaking up gases from a nearby star.

The line on this map shows the XL-Calibur's flight path from Sweden, over Norway and Iceland and northern Canada. (Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility)

"Black holes are very mysterious objects out there and of course you can't really tell what's happening in them because light can't escape," he said. But scientists can study things that happen near them, he said, like something "very intense" that's generating X-rays near Cygnus X1. 

"In the spirit of exploration and understanding what's going on in our universe, it's one piece of the fundamental research that we're lucky to be able to fund."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Liny Lamberink

Reporter/Editor

Liny Lamberink is a reporter for CBC North. She moved to Yellowknife in March 2021, after working as a reporter and newscaster in Ontario for five years. She is an alumna of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network. You can reach her at liny.lamberink@cbc.ca

With files from Cindy Alorut and Emily Haws