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Peep No-Show

Alien abduction, accident, or something else?



Ed MyszkaSeptember 8, 1999: NASA scientists at Marshall Space Flight Center, in cooperation with ham radio enthusiasts, have launched weather balloons on three different occasions in an attempt to capture particles in the high atmosphere. The first occurred during the Leonids meteor storm on November 17, 1998. On this first flight, particles of extraterrestrial origin were discovered. An April 11, 1999 launch was intended as a control flight,  flying when meteorite activity was at its lowest. A third flight, on August 13, 1999, coincided with the Perseids meteor shower.

Left: Ed Myszka readies the payload for launch. Inside the payload box were a camera, a GPS receiver, and ham transmitters for the video/audio and telemetry streams. Containers of xerogel were mounted externally to potentially capture meteorite particles, as were the Peeps®. Light and audio beacons, as well as a radar reflector, were suspended below the payload box.

These flights were reported in earlier stories. However, one fascinating and tragic aspect of the story was not announced until now. The April 11 flight included five brave passenger. The passengers never returned. Where they went, and how, remains a mystery.

Right: Peeps® strapped in for the April 11 launch. The peeps capsule was mounted on top of the payload, next to a box containing xerogel capture medium.

The launch was nominal, with no major problems. Strong winds at the launch site were something of a concern, but proved not to be a major hazard. Telemetry from the payload reported the position of the balloon and returned video footage of either the ground below or of the horizon. The first indication of any problem was the loss of GPS telemetry at 22 minutes and 40 seconds into the flight.

To all appearances from the ground, the rest of the flight went flawlessly. The video download showed the sun setting and twilight falling across the Tennessee Valley. The audio downlink presented a mixture of the wind and the payload's audio beacon, with a very clear indication of when the balloon popped (at something over 100,000 feet) and began its plummet toward the ground.

As the payload fell toward Earth, the attached parachute began to work due to the denser atmosphere. Near the surface, the missing telemetry stream reappeared! Not long after, all signals disappeared as the payload drifted out of "sight" behind Lookout Mountain and the hills of northern Georgia.

Left: Leslie Mullen, science writer and notorious burglar, interviews peeps shortly before launch.

The signal was still being broadcast, however. The payload was recovered within about 3 hours by volunteer balloon chasers Ralph Fowler and Eddie Foust about 5 miles west of Adairsville, Georgia on the property of Chet Hale. However, the Peeps® in their capsule, as well as the top-mounted Plexiglas xerogel sample capture device, were missing! Ed Myszka, Payload Integration and Test Administrator (PITA), later met the recovery team to return it to Marshall Space Flight Center.

Continues after sidebar

Motive, Means, and Opportunity: Another Possible Explanation

As any reader of detective novels knows, if a mysterious disappearance occurs one should investigate the motive, means, and opportunity of possible suspects. Though all evidence is purely circumstantial, there is an intriguing possibility for a culprit in the Case of the Missing Peeps®.

The photo on the left shows the mysterious phenomenon known as a Sprite (see story Spirits of Another Sort). Sprites have been known to appear briefly above powerful thunderstorms. Dr. Dave Sentman of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks is one among a small group of researchers who have been studying these mysterious bursts of colored light. Although no one is sure what sprites really are or what causes them, these scientists have learned that sprites contain a great deal of energy.

"Although we're not yet certain, we suspect that the energies from sprites may be sufficient to drive some novel ... reactions," said Sentman. "The region of the atmosphere where sprites appear typically doesn't contain a lot of energy, so the energy introduced from a sprite could do some really interesting things."

So we know that Sprites inhabit the high atmosphere (opportunity), and have the energy necessary (means). But what of motive?

Throughout much of history, humans have worshiped the weather, and the gods of the weather. Jove, Zeus, and Thor were intimately associated with thunder. The Judaeo-Christian God and the Amerindian Great Spirit are both attributed with power over the weather. The North Wind has been represented looking much like the pictured Sprite. But such devotion has fallen out of favor in these days of meteorology.

On the right we see the preflight adoration of the weather balloon that took place that fateful April day. Might not this show of worship to a mere balloon have sparked the jealously of a powerful Sprite? Motive, means, and opportunity, all at hand. An intriguing possibility, though far from an open and shut case. We may never know for sure.

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"The whereabouts of the Peeps® remains a mystery," said Peep® Principle Investigator (PeepPI) Bryan Walls. "Ed Myszka is the kind of guy who would bite the head off a Peep®, but I have to believe him when he said he doesn't like them. Were they abducted by aliens, explaining both their disappearance and the telemetry drop-out? Did the cosmic radiation at high altitude transform them into some sort of fantastic flying creature? Were they ripped off by the parachute, or by branches of the tree the payload landed in? We may never know for sure.

Left: The payload after retrieval from the tree it landed in.

What we do know for sure is that Peeps® are not easily cowed by danger. On the next balloon flight another team of five Peeps® were up to the task of braving the stratosphere. Launched on Friday, August 13, the balloon was release during the Perseid meteor shower.

Somewhat overfull of helium, the balloon rapidly ascended to 65,000 feet, far short of the target 100,000 feet, where it popped. Due to the short flight time and different wind patterns from previous flights, the payload landed just a few miles from the launch site at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The whole payload was quickly recovered, including the fearless Peeps® who had come through the wild ride through rarefied air and temperatures below -40° unscathed save for a few hayseeds sticking to them.

Right: Have you seen these Peeps®? A close-up of the missing Peeponauts shortly before launch.

"Was their safe trip only due to the premature pop," Walls wondered, "or might they have successfully made the full trip this time? We may never know for sure."

Some further light may be shed on the perils of these flights during the next launch in November, during the 1999 Leonids meteor shower. The four remaining Peeponauts from the original 15 (one was eaten by an observer during the April 11 launch) are patiently awaiting their manifested destiny to see if they, too, are made of the Right Marshmallow Stuff.

Web Links

Perseids Live! -site of the live webcast of the 1999 Perseids

Leonids Live! -site of the live webcast of the 1998 Leonids

Related Stories:

Perseids Live! Balloon Flight Planned -- Aug 6, 1999. A NASA weather balloon will ascend to the stratosphere for a live webcast of the 1999 Perseids.

Leonids on the Horizon -- June 22, 1999. What's in store for the 1999 Leonid meteor shower? Experts make their predictions.

Spirits of Another Sort -- June 10, 1999. Dave Sentman seeks to move Sprites from the realm of mystery into scientific knowledge.

Hunting for Halley's Comet -- May 7, 1999. A high flying weather balloon ascends to the stratosphere in hopes of capturing an Eta Aquarid meteoroid

A Wild Ride to the Stratosphere -- Apr. 14, 1999. A weather balloon hits the stratosphere in search of meteoroids

Meteor Balloon set for Launch -- Apr. 8, 1999. This weekend scientists will launch a weather balloon designed to capture meteoroids in the stratosphere.

Leonid Sample Return Update -- Apr. 1, 1999. Scientists will describe initial results from a program to catch meteoroids in flight at the NASA/Ames Leonids Workshop April 12-15, 1999.

Bunches & Bunches of Geminids -- Dec. 15, 1998. The Geminids continued to intensify in 1998

The 1998 Leonids: A bust or a blast? -- Nov. 27, 1998. New images of Leonid fireballs and their smoky remnants.

Leonids Sample Return payload recovered! -- Nov. 23, 1998. Scientists are scanning the "comet catcher" for signs of Leonid meteoroids.

A high-altitude look at the Leonids -- Nov. 18, 1998. NASA science balloon catches video of 8 fireballs.

The Leonid Sample Return Mission -- Nov. 16, 1998. NASA scientists hope to capture a Leonid meteoroid and return it to Earth.

Great Expectations: the 1998 Leonid meteor shower -- Nov. 10, 1998. The basics of what the Leonids are and what might happen on November 17.

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For more information, please contact:
Dr. John M. Horack , Director of Science Communications
Author: Bryan Walls
Curator: Linda Porter
NASA Official: M. Frank Rose