USGS Blimp1.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Uncrewed aerostats can carry instruments and sensors for long durations that are impractical for other aircraft.]]
The term aerostat has two meanings. In the first, broader sense, it includes all lighter than air aircraft.
The term "aerostat" comes from the fact that buoyancy is technically said to provide "aerostatic" lift in that the force upwards arises without movement through the surrounding air mass. This contrasts with aerodynamic lift which requires the movement of at least some part of the aircraft through the surrounding air mass.
The second, narrower and more techical usage refers only to moored balloons. This article focuses on the narrower use of the term. For a discussion of the other types of buoyant aircraft, see balloon (aircraft), airship, and lighter than air.
Thus, in the narrower sense, an aerostat is a tethered or moored balloon often shaped like an airship and usually filled with helium. Aerostats differ from airships and balloons in that airships and balloons are both free flying whereas aerostats are tied to the ground.
Tethered aerostats come in three forms. 1) Traditional sausage shaped blimps(E.g. WW1 British Army "Balloon-Limp")with fins to stabilise them but relying upon helium alone for lift. 2)Simple round balloons relying on helium alone but without stabilisation. 3) Helikites, that utilise both helium and wind if it is available. A Helikite has a kite attached directly to its oblate-spheroid balloon to stabilise it and to create a single aerodynamic structure for wind lift. Helikites can fly in higher winds than other types of aerostat and to greater altitude.
Surveillance aerostats have been used in the 2004 American occupation of Iraq. Utilizing a high-tech optics system to detect and observe enemies from miles away and have been used accompanying foot patrols in Baghdad.
The USGS uses aerostats to carry equipment to places where conventional aircraft cannot go, such as above an erupting volcano. Aerostats are ideal as they can easily remain more or less in one place, are less likely to be damaged by volcanic ash, and are less expensive to operate than a helicopter.
Aerostato | هواایست | Aérostat | Aerostato | ظايروستات | Aerostat | Aeróstato | Аэростат | Aerostat
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"Aerostat".
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