Show HN: I turned algae into a bio-altimeter and put it on a weather balloon

https://news.ycombinator.com/rss Hits: 14
Summary

Hi! I鈥檓 Andrew. I鈥檓 a teenager in high school, and I鈥檝e been programming for the past six years, and have loved computers since. I historically have only programmed, and my first public website was SparkShell, a web development platform aimed at making coding easier for teens. Last year, I got the chance to turn my passion for electronics into something physical - sending a self-designed payload, StratoSpore, to the edge of space, reaching over 100,000 feet, to study how algae reacts to the stratosphere. I was scrolling Instagram Reels last year when I saw something: Design a PCB, and they鈥檇 get you the funds. This is where I found Hack Club, a community full of incredibly smart teenagers from all over the world making cool stuff. My time in Hack Club has been truly amazing thus far, and I鈥檓 so glad I got involved in it. However, that鈥檚 not what I鈥檓 going to talk about. Apex Earlier this year (March 2025,) a program was announced called Apex. The premise was simple: design a high altitude balloon payload, and they鈥檇 fund your project and fly you out to Boston so you could launch it. This pretty much immediately caught my eye. Hack Club typically runs software development focused programs, and I was excited that I might be able to put to practice the electronics skills I had been practicing. I hadn鈥檛 ever done something like this, so I initially had a hard time coming up with ideas of what sort of project I could make. I knew I wanted to do something biology related. Maybe something about how bacteria reacts in low temperatures? I ended up on another idea. My project (StratoSpore) I was looking around for ideas one day when I stumbled upon a science project most high schools do. It鈥檚 called bloody chlorophyll, where you get to extract the chlorophyll from leaves, and see a cool effect. A really interesting phenomena happens when you shine black/blue light on it: it glows a vibrant red color, from an otherwise green plant slurry. I tried this out. I ground some leaves...

First seen: 2025-11-26 16:30

Last seen: 2025-11-27 05:33