India to Acquire NASA’s DC 8 Flying Laboratory
Originally Posted in Aviation Analysis Wing
India is considering to
procure a NASA DC-8 airborne laboratory aircraft to study wind patterns at high
altitude for better prediction of such calamities.
“We are procuring
McDonnell Douglas DC-8 aircraft from NASA and we should hopefully get it by
2015-2016. This aircraft has a laboratory within itself and will be helpful in
studying wind patterns,” Ministry of Earth Science (MoES) Secretary Shailesh
Nayak told PTI.
The modified Douglas DC-8
jetliner is based at NASA's Dryden Aircraft Operations Facility in Palmdale,
California. The DC-8 flies three primary missions - sensor development,
satellite sensor verification, and basic research studies of the Earth's
surface and atmosphere.
The aircraft has a range
of 5,400 nautical miles (6,200 statute miles) and can fly at mission altitudes
from 1,000 to 42,000 feet for up to 12 hours, although most science missions
average 6 to 10 hours. The DC-8 can carry 30,000 pounds of scientific
instruments and equipment.
The aircraft has many
modifications specifically oriented to support scientific research. These
include zenith and nadir instrument ports; modified window ports for instrument
and probe mounting; external antenna mounts; wing pylon instrument mounts;
optical windows of various materials; a dropsonde delivery tube; air and
aerosol sampling probes; standard 19-inch equipment racks (up to 20 racks and
25 instruments typically accommodated); a laser chiller unit; both 400 Hz and
60 Hz power available to experimenter stations; and seating for up to 45
experimenters and flight crew.
The DC-8 also incorporates
a suite of operational aircraft and data systems that can be tailored to
specific missions or science instruments. These include weather radar; global
positioning and inertial navigational systems; a radar altimeter; sensors for
recording total air temperature, ambient pressure, and relative humidity; a
time code generator (NTP and IRIG-B), video, and digital recording systems;
data acquisition, distribution, and recording systems; an Ethernet LAN with
servers; and Web-based displays.
Picture Courtesy Airliners.net
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