This summer between June 17 and July 2, NASA will fly aircraft over Baltimore, Philadelphia, parts of Virginia, and California to collect data on air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions.
The campaign supports the NASA Student
Airborne Research Program for undergraduate interns.
Two NASA aircraft, including the P-3 shown here, will be flying over Baltimore, Philadelphia, Virginia and California between June 17 and July 2, to collect data on air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions. Credit: (NASA/ Zavaleta)
The East Coast flights will take place
from June 17-26. Researchers and students will fly multiple times each week in
Dynamic Aviation’s King Air B200 aircraft at an altitude of 1,000 feet over
Baltimore and Philadelphia as well as Norfolk, Hampton, Hopewell, and Richmond
in Virginia. Meanwhile, a NASA P-3 aircraft based out of NASA’s Wallops Flight
Facility in Virginia will fly over the same East Coast locations to collect
different measurements.
The West Coast flights will occur from
June 29 – July 2. During the period, those same aircraft will conduct similar
operations over Los Angeles, Imperial Valley, and Tulare Basin in California.
The research aircraft will fly at lower
altitudes than most commercial planes and will conduct maneuvers including
vertical spirals from 1,000 to 10,000 feet, circling over power plants,
landfills, and urban areas. They will also occasionally conduct “missed
approaches” at local airports, where the aircraft will perform a low-level
flyby over a runway to collect samples close to the surface.
The aircraft carry instruments that will
collect data on a range of greenhouse gases including carbon dioxide and
methane, as well as air pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide, formaldehyde, and
ozone. One purpose of this campaign is to validate space-based measurements
observed by the TEMPO (Tropospheric
Emissions: Monitoring of Pollution) mission. Launched on a commercial satellite
in April 2023, the TEMPO instrument provides hourly daytime measurements of air
pollutants across the United States, northern Mexico, and southern Canada.
“The goal is that this data we collect
will feed into policy decisions that affect air quality and climate in the
region,” said Glenn Wolfe, a research scientist and the principal investigator
for the campaign at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
The B-200 aircraft is owned by Dynamics
Aviation, an aircraft company contracted by NASA.
For more information about Student
Airborne Research Program, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/earth-science/early-career-opportunities/student-airborne-research-program/
By Tayler Gilmore, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland
Source: NASA-Led Mission to Map Air Pollution Over Both U.S. Coasts - NASA
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