Flying high: U of S students successfully launch high altitude balloon into near space

A group of students from the University of Saskatchewan were given three weeks to plan and conduct the launch of a high altitude balloon into near space.
“It was an awesome experience,” Pouya Pourkarim told CTV News. “I've been talking about it with all my friends and families.”
The team was part of a special space technology program that the University of Saskatchewan participants in called the NSERC CREATE International Space Mission Training Program.
Its goal is to boost Canada’s space efforts to develop the “next-generation of space technology and personnel,” according to the program’s website.
Pourkarim said the balloon reached altitudes of 33 kilometres and was in the air for about four hours.
Erik Stacey, who was also part of the team, said things didn’t go exactly to plan.
“The flight time was about an hour longer than we expected, but it landed relatively close to where we expected it to,” he said, adding it landed in a field near a lake.
The experience helped both Pourkarim and Stacey expand their skills in different ways.
“I didn't have too much experience with the engineering side of things,” Pourkarim explained. “You need a lot of engineering in these in these type of missions. And I got to see especially what the software engineering part is doing and how significantly important and also (how) difficult it is to get this done.”
Stacey said his studies are mostly independent and it was a good experience working on a team.
“The focus of the CREATE program is really on learning how to collaborate in a professional environment. I had a personal project that I've been working on that I was immediately able to apply that experience to,” he said.
“There's immediate tangible benefits of what I learned.”
Correction
The story has been updated to reflect the balloon reached 33 kilometres in altitude. The original story said it reached 22 kilometres.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
FBI seized 'top secret' documents from Trump home
The FBI recovered documents that were labelled 'top secret' from former U.S. President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, according to court papers released Friday after a federal judge unsealed the warrant that authorized the unprecedented search this week.

BREAKING | Anne Heche legally dead, remains on life support for donor evaluation
Anne Heche remains on life support and under evaluation for organ donation after a car crash that led to her brain death, a representative for the actor said Friday.
Author Salman Rushdie attacked on lecture stage in New York
Salman Rushdie, the author whose writing led to death threats from Iran in the 1980s, was attacked and apparently stabbed in the neck Friday by a man who rushed the stage as he was about to give a lecture in western New York.
Passengers tackle Canadian man after he became violent, tried to open plane doors mid-flight
A plane bound for Toronto has been forced to divert to Iceland after a Canadian man allegedly became violent and tried to open the aircraft door mid-air.
No plans to declare monkeypox a national public health emergency: officials
Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam says there are no plans at the moment to declare monkeypox a public health emergency.
Last month was 6th hottest July on record in 143 years
Last month was the Earth’s sixth-warmest July on record in 143 years, according to the U.S. federal agency that studies oceans, the atmosphere, and coastal areas.
Iqaluit declares state of emergency due to water shortage
The City of Iqaluit has declared a state of emergency due to a water shortage.
300,000 Canadians at 'severe' or 'moderate' risk of gambling problems
While problem gambling affects a minority of the Canadian population, more than 300,000 are at “severe” or “moderate risk” for gambling-related problems, according to a Statistics Canada study of gambling behaviour.
EXCLUSIVE | Woman who was stalked by police officer ex-boyfriend says justice system failed her
Despite a police misconduct probe that found a high-ranking B.C. officer had stalked and harassed his ex-girlfriend for years, a criminal investigation into the case did not result in charges.