Huge stratospheric balloons that act as floating cell towers in remote areas can stay in the air for hundreds of days, thanks to an artificially intelligent pilot created by Google and Loon.
Credit: Loon
An artificially intelligent pilot developed by Alphabet's balloon-manufacturing subsidiary Loon can keep huge stratospheric balloons aloft in a fixed position for hundreds of days to operate as floating cell towers for remote regions.
The pilot, trained via deep reinforcement learning, compensates for the harsh winds at those altitudes by releasing air to descend or adding it to ascend, riding currents in the desired direction.
The artificially intelligent controller consults historical wind records, weather forecasting, and current local wind patterns to model various scenarios and determine the optimal course.
Loon earlier this year announced that a balloon using such a controller had achieved a new continuous stratospheric endurance record of 312 days.
From New Scientist
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