Slika:Global Hawk, NASA's New Remote-Controlled Plane - October 2009.jpg

Vsebina strani ni podprta v drugih jezikih.
Iz Wikipedije, proste enciklopedije

Izvorna datoteka(3.000 × 2.400 točk, velikost datoteke: 479 KB, MIME-vrsta: image/jpeg)


Povzetek

Opis

NASA image acquired October 23, 2009.

At NASA’s Dryden Research Center in California, a group of engineers, scientists, and aviation technicians have set up camp in a noisy, chilly hangar on Edwards Air Force base. For the past two weeks, they have been working to mount equipment—from HD video cameras to ozone sensors—onto NASA’s Global Hawk, a remote-controlled airplane that can fly for up to 30 hours at altitudes up to 65,000 feet.

The team is gearing up for the Global Hawk Pacific campaign, a series of four or five scientific research flights that will take the Global Hawk over the Pacific Ocean and Arctic regions. The 44-foot-long aircraft, with its comically large nose and 116-foot wingspan is pictured in the photograph above, banking for landing over Rogers Dry Lake in California at the end of a test flight on October 23, 2009. The long wings carry the plane’s fuel, and the bulbous nose is one of the payload bays, which house the science instruments.

For the Global Hawk Pacific campaign, the robotic aircraft will carry ten science instruments that will sample the chemical composition of air in the troposphere (the atmospheric layer closest to Earth) and the stratosphere (the layer above the troposphere). The mission will also observe clouds and aerosol particles in the troposphere. The primary purpose of the mission is to collect observations that can be used to check the accuracy of simultaneous observations collected by NASA’s Aura satellite.

Co-lead scientist Paul Newman from Goddard Space Flight Center is writing about the ground-breaking mission for the Earth Observatory’s Notes from the Field blog.

NASA Photograph by Carla Thomas.

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center is home to the nation's largest organization of combined scientists, engineers and technologists that build spacecraft, instruments and new technology to study the Earth, the sun, our solar system, and the universe.

To learn more about this image go to:

earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id#43291
Datum
Vir Global Hawk, NASA's New Remote-Controlled Plane
Avtor NASA Photograph by Carla Thomas.
Druge različice
File:NASA’s Global Hawk 2009-10-23.jpg

Licenca

Public domain Ta datoteka je v javni domeni, ker jo je izdelala izključno NASA. Avtorskopravna politika NASE pravi, da »Gradivo NASE ni zaščiteno z avtorskimi pravicami, razen če je rečeno drugače.« (glej Template:PD-USGov, stran z avtorskopravno politiko NASE ali Politiko uporabe slik JPL.)
Opozorila:

Napisi

Dodajte enovrstični opis, kaj ta datoteka predstavlja

Predmeti, prikazani v tej datoteki

motiv

23. oktober 2009

Zgodovina datoteke

Kliknite datum in čas za ogled datoteke, ki je bila takrat naložena.

Datum in časSličicaVelikostUporabnikKomentar
trenutno11:16, 18. marec 2011Sličica za različico z datumom 11:16, 18. marec 20113.000 × 2.400 (479 KB)Sp33dyphilEnhanced colours.
11:02, 18. marec 2011Sličica za različico z datumom 11:02, 18. marec 20113.000 × 2.400 (427 KB)Sp33dyphil{{Information |Description=NASA image acquired October 23, 2009. At NASA’s Dryden Research Center in California, a group of engineers, scientists, and aviation technicians have set up camp in a noisy, chilly hangar on Edwards Air Force base. For the pa

Datoteka je del naslednje 1 strani slovenske Wikipedije (strani drugih projektov niso navedene):

Globalna uporaba datoteke

To datoteko uporabljajo tudi naslednji vikiji:

Metapodatki