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FIRE-ACE ER-2 FLIGHT LOG


Author (Mission Scientist): King, Michael
Date: 1998052420
Submitted at: Wed May 27 2:45:28 UT 1998
Mission 4
Sunday, May 24, 1998
Michael King: Flight Scientist

Objectives: To fly repeatedly over the surface site at Barrow (71°19.37'N, 156°34.9'W) and nearby open water and fast ice of the Chukchi Sea. The ER-2 flew three parallel and repeating ground tracks of 294 km in length that were parallel to the NOAA-14 ground track at 2240 UTC (heading of 320.31° at Barrow). The take-off was delayed one hour to allow the University of Washington to test their engine-overheating indicator. Due to continued malfunction, the University of Washington never ended up coordinating any of the flight legs over Barrow on this flight.

The bulk of the flight tracks over the Chukchi Sea were cloudy, with uniform Arctic stratus present over land and nearby coastal fast ice, with scattered-broken overlying altostratus and cirrus, with single layer cirrus on some occasions. Other coordinations included:

ER-2 Mission:

The ER-2 flew a NW flight line from point 1 (70°22.5'N, 154°44'W) to point 2 (72°25'N, 160°W), then reversed course, overflying the ARM site each time (two passes). The aircraft then flew a parallel track displaced 40 km to the west with two round trip flight legs, followed by another pair of flight legs displaced another 40 km to the west. Each flight leg was 294 km in length. The flight tracks were all parallel and on a heading of 320.31°/140.31°, corresponding to the orbital inclination of NOAA-14 as it overflew the ARM NSA site at 2240 UTC.

The AirMISR was turned on for six acquisitions over the Barrow ARM site and neighboring flight legs west of Barrow, including acquisitions when the sun was in the orbital inclination of NOAA-14, and when the NOAA-14 and F-14 satellites passed over the area. The AirMISR operated at the following times:

The ER-2 pilot reported multilayer stratus clouds over the ice near Barrow, with clear sky over the tundra. The Brooks Range had thin cirrus over it on the way out and thicker stratus with some underlying altostratus on the return to Fairbanks.

Instrument Status

Meteorology:

Winds have decreased to 16 kts easterly, with some snow and drizzle. The coastal stratus broke up in the early afternoon, leaving broken clouds at two levels (500 and 1500 m). Some cirrus clouds were present over Barrow in the morning.

Instruments:


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