Global Hawk / SHOUT

Описание к видео Global Hawk / SHOUT

This 7-minute, 6-second video shows how NASA’s autonomously flown Global Hawk aircraft flew a series of flights over the Pacific Ocean during February 2016, as part of the NOAA-led mission called Sensing Hazards Operational Unmanned Technology, or SHOUT. This year’s El Nino season offered a unique opportunity for the aircraft to contribute data directly to NOAA’s El Nino Rapid Response field campaign. The campaign is seeking to determine key mechanisms affecting El Niño's impacts on the U.S. and their implications for improving NOAA's observational systems, models, and predictions.

The Global Hawk aircraft offers NASA and NOAA scientists an exclusive vantage point to observe atmospheric conditions with the plane's ability to fly at 65,000 feet for a time period up to 30 hours. These long-endurance and high-altitude observations give NOAA scientists the opportunity to see a larger picture of how atmospheric changes in the tropics are directly impacting weather activity in the Western U.S.

NASA's Global Hawks are operated by Armstrong Flight Research Center, Edwards, CA.

For more information on NASA’s Global Hawk aircraft visit: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong...
For more information on the SHOUT mission visit: http://uas.noaa.gov/shout

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