Space ship enterprise has Rishworth School pupils on edge of their seats

What started as a teacher's idea to get young people to work with computers has stretched the imagination of pupils and staff alike as a Calderdale school sent their own ship up to the edge of space.
Sam Stead, 15, at Rishworth School with the payload a team of pupils sent   into space as part of a science project named Towards Infinity. Picture Tony JohnsonSam Stead, 15, at Rishworth School with the payload a team of pupils sent   into space as part of a science project named Towards Infinity. Picture Tony Johnson
Sam Stead, 15, at Rishworth School with the payload a team of pupils sent into space as part of a science project named Towards Infinity. Picture Tony Johnson

Their module was launched in clear blue skies, from Rishworth School, and carried up more than 100,000ft into the stratosphere by a giant helium balloon.

Within seconds it was out of sight, but through the efforts of a team of 20 pupils of all ages, it was definitely not out of mind.

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The payload had been fitted with computers, camera, sensors and GPS technology which meant it both recorded its journey and could be tracked by the team on the ground as it made its way up and down.

The moduleThe module
The module

It also carried with it the school’s logo and a Lego pilot – which had been chosen through a competition at Rishworth’s junior school, Heathfield.

The project, Towards Infinity, was started by computer teacher Peter Bell who wanted to get pupils interested in science and was looking to involve Raspberry Pi computers. Their journey into space – or very close to it – included both Raspberry Pi computers and a BBC micro:bit.

Mr Bell said the work of the pupils and the result of the project had surpassed his expectations. But now the independent school, in Calderdale, aims to build on the success.

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Headteacher Alistair Gloag said: “I have for a very long time wanted Rishworth School to develop its own space programme and am therefore delighted that students and staff have worked so hard on this project which has led to the launch of the RISHTI probe.

An image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board cameraAn image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board camera
An image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board camera

“In this initial launch the team have already set new records and put the first BBC micro:bit into near space. While this is a fantastic achievement, this is only the beginning. Rishworth intends to stay in space.”

Pupils had applied to be involved and a group of 20 were selected who worked in four teams responsible for engineering, flight, documentary and publicity.

Once it reached a height of 106,916ft or 20.25 miles pressure caused the balloon to burst and the module began its descent before its parachute deployed.

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The tracking device allowed the school to follow it as it came back down to Earth.

The moduleThe module
The module

Mr Bell said: “We were in two cars following the signal and it was very exciting. We heard later from a pilot that air traffic in the Nottingham area was re-routed because something was coming down to earth fast and it was our computer. It is quite a cool story to be able to tell.”

The school had already tested their tracking equipment by hiding the ship on the moors near Rishworth. And they were able to repeat this when they found their module in a farmer’s field, near Melton Mowbray.

However, the excitement has not stopped there. Its camera filmed amazing footage of the school’s logo and Lego pilot with the curvature of the Earth as the backdrop. It also took stunning pictures above the Boothwood Reservoir, where the M62 splits into two around a farm, and of Buxton and the Peak District.

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Year 11 pupil William Pang said: “The project was amazing and we achieved a lot. When we started, I never thought it would be possible to send something three times higher than a jet plane.”

An image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board cameraAn image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board camera
An image of Saddleworth Moor, taken by the on-board camera

And Holly Morgan Clague, from Year Eight, added: “I cannot explain the relief and excitement that flooded through me when we found our module. It felt like all our work had paid off, and this once impossible project was now a big part of all our memories.”

The journey in numbers

Here are some of the numbers recorded during Rishworth School’s trip to the edge of space.

Maximum altitude: 32,588m (106,916ft / 20.25 miles).

Maximum vertical velocity: 80.3m/s (179.63mph), reached 14 seconds into its descent, before the parachute deployed.

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Maximum horizontal velocity: 50.84m/s (113.73mph), reached 19km above the jet stream, where most of the fastest horizontal speeds are recorded.

Minimum temperature recorded by the external sensor outside the module: -47.9°C (at an altitude of 19,934m).

Minimum temperature inside the module: 0.6°C (Because of the heat from the two on-board computers).

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