NASA's Unpiloted Global Hawk Completes First Science Flight

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April 8, 2010

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Beth Hagenauer 
Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif. 
661-276-7960 
beth.hagenauer@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 10-080

NASA'S UNPILOTED GLOBAL HAWK COMPLETES FIRST SCIENCE FLIGHT

WASHINGTON -- NASA has successfully completed the first science flight 
of the Global Hawk unpiloted aircraft system over the Pacific Ocean. 
The flight was the first of five scheduled for this month's Global 
Hawk Pacific, or GloPac, mission to study atmospheric science over 
the Pacific and Arctic oceans. 

The Global Hawk is a robotic plane that can fly autonomously to 
altitudes above 60,000 feet -- roughly twice as high as a commercial 
airliner -- and as far as 11,000 nautical miles, which is half the 
circumference of Earth. Operators pre-program a flight path, then the 
plane flies itself for as long as 30 hours, staying in contact 
through satellite and line-of-site communications links to a ground 
control station at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in 
California's Mojave Desert. 

"The Global Hawk is a revolutionary aircraft for science because of 
its enormous range and endurance," said Paul Newman, co-mission 
scientist for GloPac and an atmospheric scientist from NASA's Goddard 
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "No other science platform 
provides the range and time to sample rapidly evolving atmospheric 
phenomena. This mission is our first opportunity to demonstrate the 
unique capabilities of this plane, while gathering atmospheric data 
in a region that is poorly sampled." 

GloPac researchers plan to directly measure and sample greenhouse 
gases, ozone-depleting substances, aerosols, and constituents of air 
quality in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. GloPac's 
measurements will cover longer time periods and greater geographic 
distances than any other science aircraft. 

During Wednesday's flight, the plane flew approximately 4,500 nautical 
miles miles along a flight path that took it to 150.3 degrees West 
longitude, and 54.6 degrees North latitude, just south of Alaska's 
Kodiak Island. The flight lasted just over 14 hours and flew up to 
60,900 feet. The mission is a joint project with the National Oceanic 
and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA. 

The plane carries 11 instruments to sample the chemical composition of 
the troposphere and stratosphere. The instruments profile the 
dynamics and meteorology of both layers and observe the distribution 
of clouds and aerosol particles. Project scientists expect to take 
observations from the equator north to the Arctic Circle and west of 
Hawaii. 

Although the plane is designed to fly on its own, pilots can change 
its course or altitude based on interesting atmospheric phenomena 
ahead. Researchers have the ability via communications links to 
control their instruments from the ground. 

"The Global Hawk is a fantastic platform because it gives us expanded 
access to the atmosphere beyond what we have with piloted aircraft," 
said David Fahey, co-mission scientist and a research physicist at 
NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo. "We can go 
to regions we couldn't reach or go to previously explored regions and 
study them for extended periods that are impossible with conventional 
planes." 

The timing of GloPac flights should allow scientists to observe the 
breakup of the polar vortex. The vortex is a large-scale cyclone in 
the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere that dominates winter 
weather patterns around the Arctic and is particularly important for 
understanding ozone depletion in the Northern Hemisphere. 

Scientists also expect to gather high-altitude data between 45,000 and 
65,000 feet, where many greenhouse gases and ozone-depleting 
substances are destroyed. They will measure dust, smoke and pollution 
that cross the Pacific from Asia and Siberia and affect U.S. air 
quality. 

The Global Hawk will make several flights directly under the path of 
NASA's Aura satellite and other "A-train" Earth-observing satellites, 
"allowing us to calibrate and confirm what we see from space," Newman 
added. GloPac is specifically being conducted in conjunction with 
NASA's Aura Validation Experiment. 

The GloPac mission includes more than 130 researchers and technicians 
from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Dryden Research Center, Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and Ames Research Center 
in Moffet Field, Calif. Also involved are NOAA's Earth System 
Research Laboratory; the University of California, Santa Cruz; 
Droplet Measurement Technologies of Boulder, Colo.; and the 
University of Denver. 

NASA Dryden and the Northrop Grumman Corp. of Rancho Bernardo, Calif., 
signed a Space Act Agreement to re-fit and maintain three Global 
Hawks transferred from the U.S. Air Force for use in high-altitude, 
long-duration Earth science missions. 

For GloPac imagery and other information on the mission, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/global-hawk.html 

	
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