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26,700 datasets
Over 50 stratospheric balloon flights were conducted across four campaigns from 2013 to 2016, launched from Antarctica and Sweden. The dataset provides housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds. It was collected by NASA's BARREL mission to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from Antarctica and Sweden to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. The dataset provides 4-second interval geographic coordinates from onboard GPS and derived magnetic coordinates using the IRBEM library. It was collected by NASA's BARREL mission between 2013 and 2016 to augment the Van Allen Probes mission.
Housekeeping data from the BARREL (Balloon Array for Radiation Belt Relativistic Electron Losses) mission, providing voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds. The NASA mission launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden across campaigns in 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. This data was collected to augment the Van Allen Probes mission and characterize the spatial scale of relativistic electron precipitation.
BARREL 1N Tri-axial Fluxgate Magnetometer data provides three-axis DC magnetic field measurements from over 50 stratospheric balloon flights. The data, collected by NASA's BARREL mission during campaigns in Antarctica (2013-2014) and Sweden (2015-2016), are not gain-corrected or despun. This dataset was designed to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts in coordination with the Van Allen Probes mission.
Housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds by the BARREL balloon mission. The BARREL mission was a NASA Living with a Star investigation that launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data collection was coordinated with the Van Allen Probes mission and other ground and space-based instruments.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons launched between 2013 and 2016 collected housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status every 40 seconds. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star investigation, provided the first balloon measurements of relativistic electron precipitation coordinated with in-situ satellite data. Observations were made from Antarctic and Swedish launch sites at altitudes near 30 km to study electron losses from Earth's radiation belts.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from 2013 to 2016. The BARREL mission collected 4-second interval ephemeris data, including geographic coordinates from onboard GPS and derived magnetic coordinates, to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data was collected by NASA from Antarctic and Arctic launch sites at stratospheric altitudes near 30 km.
BARREL 1S Data Processing Unit housekeeping data provides voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds. The dataset was produced by NASA's BARREL mission, which launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica (2013-2014) and Sweden (2015-2016) to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. The data is Level 2 processed and was last updated on the platform in March 2026.
Tri-axial DC magnetometer data from the BARREL balloon mission, designed to study electron losses from Earth's radiation belts. The data are not gain-corrected or despun, with measurements taken at 0.25-second intervals. Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across campaigns from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016, coordinated with the Van Allen Probes mission.
Four campaigns from 2013 to 2016 collected data from over 50 stratospheric balloons launched from Antarctica and Sweden. The dataset provides geographic and magnetic coordinates, including balloon epoch time, latitude, longitude, and altitude, returned every 4 seconds. It was produced by NASA's BARREL mission to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts.
Preliminary results from a six-week 1979 geological cruise by the West German research vessel RV Sonne, conducted under the Australian-German Science Agreement. The cruise successfully occupied 120 sampling stations across the Exmouth Plateau, Wallaby Plateau, and Cuvier Abyssal Plain, collecting pre-Quaternary rocks, Quaternary cores, and manganese nodules. Data includes findings from 31 single-channel seismic profiles and samples from depths between 100 and 5200 meters.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns to study electron losses from Earth's radiation belts. This dataset contains three-axis DC magnetometer measurements at 0.25-second resolution, collected at about 30 km altitude near the Antarctic and Arctic circles. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, provided the first balloon measurements of relativistic electron precipitation coordinated with in-situ satellite data.
Over 50 stratospheric balloon flights collected geographic and magnetic coordinate data every 4 seconds during campaigns from 2013 to 2016. The BARREL Mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, launched balloons from Antarctica and Sweden to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Geographic coordinates were obtained from onboard GPS, while magnetic coordinates were derived using the IRBEM library.
Over 50 stratospheric balloon flights were launched across four campaigns from 2013 to 2016 in Antarctica and Sweden. The dataset contains three-axis DC magnetometer measurements at 0.25-second resolution, collected by NASA's BARREL mission to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data are provided with nominal conversions applied but are not gain-corrected or despun.
Antarctic and Arctic stratospheric balloon campaigns from 2013 to 2016 collected this housekeeping data. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, launched over 50 small balloons to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data includes analog sensor readings for voltage, temperature, current, and payload status recorded every 40 seconds.
BARREL 2A Tri-axial Fluxgate Magnetometer data provides three-axis DC magnetic field measurements from stratospheric balloons. The data are not gain-corrected or despun and were collected at 0.25-second resolution as part of NASA's BARREL mission, which launched over 50 balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016. The mission was designed to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts in coordination with the Van Allen Probes satellite mission.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from Antarctica and Sweden to measure magnetic field variations. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, provided the first balloon measurements of relativistic electron precipitation alongside in-situ satellite data. Data includes three-axis DC magnetometer readings at 0.25-second resolution, not gain-corrected or despun.
BARREL 2B data provides housekeeping voltage, temperature, current, and payload status values recorded every 40 seconds from a stratospheric balloon payload. The BARREL mission was a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launching over 50 balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. This Level 2 dataset is processed from the nominal analog sensor layout, with notes advising users to contact the BARREL team for clarification on payload-specific sensor discrepancies.
Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from 2013 to 2016, providing tri-axial fluxgate magnetometer measurements. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, collected this data to study electron losses from Earth's radiation belts in coordination with the Van Allen Probes. Observations were made from Antarctic and Arctic circle latitudes at stratospheric altitudes of about 30 km.
Water isotope samples from a lake, a well, and a cave in Mexico's Yucatan state, collected by the British Geological Survey. Surface and groundwater samples were sealed to prevent evaporation, while monthly rainfall was collected following IAEA protocols. The dataset includes precise geographic coordinates for each sampling site.