NASA’s C-20A aircraft completed more than 150 hours of
international science flights from May 20 to July 24 in support of an Earth
science deployment series. The aircraft, owned and operated by NASA’s Armstrong
Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, overcame several challenges
throughout the missions.
NASA/Carla Thomas
Operating internationally over several
countries this summer, NASA’S C-20A aircraft completed more than 150 hours of
science flights across two months in support of Earth science research and
overcame several challenges throughout its missions.
Based at NASA’s Armstrong Flight
Research in Edwards, California, the C-20A research
aircraft has been modified to support the Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle Synthetic
Aperture Radar and SAR-fusion camera. The instruments, built and operated by
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, collect data and
images of Earth’s surface for use in understanding global ecosystems, natural
hazards, and land surface changes.
From May 20 to July 24, the team crossed
the Atlantic and deployed to several locations in Africa, as well as Germany,
for two campaigns. They included the Africa Synthetic Aperture Radar (AfriSAR)
mission, in collaboration with the European Space Agency, and the Germany
Bistatic Experiment, in collaboration with the German Aerospace Center.
For the AfriSAR mission, researchers collected airborne data over African forests, savannas, and wetlands for use in studies of Earth’s ecosystems. Datasets collected over Germany will be used to develop land surface height maps.
NASA team members pose in front of the C-20A aircraft
while in Sao Tome, Africa, May 24, 2024. From left, Kirt Stallings, Joe
Piotrowski Jr., Adam Vaccaro, Carrie Worth, Tim Miller, Otis Allen, Roger
“Todd” Renfro, Edgar Aragon-Torres, Ryan Applegate, and Isac Mata.
NASA
The flight team successfully achieved
its missions despite several challenges, including mechanical and technical
issues with the aircraft. Despite the challenges, the team resolved issues
quickly and worked to minimize impacts to the science schedule and objectives.
“We prepared for the unexpected and we
expected to be unprepared,” said Shawn Kern, NASA Armstrong’s director of
safety and mission assurance and a C-20A pilot. “With that mindset, we were
ready to adapt and change the plans as needed, and met challenges with a lot of
resilience, a lot of innovation, and a lot of improvised solutions to get
things done despite some significant roadblocks.”
The team included aircraft mechanics, avionics technicians, quality assurance representatives, science leads and instrument operators, operation engineers, mission managers, and pilots. They were also supported by project management, safety, logistics, weather, and maintenance personnel at NASA Armstrong.
NASA pilots Kirt “Skirt” Stallings and Carrie Worth
fly the C-20A aircraft over Africa on July 9, 2024.
NASA
“It was really the teamwork,
improvisation, and creativity that resolved these unexpected challenges that
made the mission a success.” Kern added.
Gathering scientific data in unique regions and conditions is necessary to understanding climate on the global scale. Data generated from these two airborne campaigns can be used to support the calibration and validation of data from future satellite-based missions like NISAR (NASA ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar).“Airborne campaigns like these are essential for enabling space-based technology. There are often measurements and science that simply cannot be achieved from satellites alone, and so they require airborne data collection.” said Gerald Bawden, program scientist for studies of Earth’s surface and interior at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “This deployment advanced both of these areas and was enabled by this team.”
By: Elena Aguirre, NASA Armstrong Public Affairs Specialist
Source: NASA Aircraft Gathers 150 Hours of Data to Better Understand Earth - NASA
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