Google Gravity Balloon ~repack~ May 2026

1. Introduction: The 95% Problem In 2011, Google X (now X Development) proposed a radical solution to a persistent economic reality: while satellites offered global coverage but were expensive and high-latency, and cell towers offered high bandwidth but were geographically limited, nearly 95% of the world’s population lived within range of a cellular signal—yet only half were connected. The problem wasn't coverage; it was economic viability in rural and remote regions.

Loon required —a fully sealed, rigid envelope that maintains internal pressure higher than the external atmosphere at all times. The challenge: as the sun heats the balloon, internal pressure rises, stressing the polyethylene film. google gravity balloon

Mathematically, the pressure differential (\Delta P) is limited by the meridional stress (\sigma) in the lobes: [ \Delta P = \frac{2 \sigma t}{R_{curv}} ] where (t) is film thickness and (R_{curv}) is lobe radius. By keeping (R_{curv}) small (many lobes), Loon could handle (\Delta P) up to 200 Pa without bursting. Unlike airships or drones, Loon had no propulsion. How do you steer a balloon? You change its altitude to catch different wind currents. The stratosphere has multiple layers of wind moving in different directions (e.g., west-to-east at 20 km, east-to-west at 25 km). Loon required —a fully sealed, rigid envelope that