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NCAR recently acquired a new tool for weather research. Gulfstream Aerospace delivered a specially modified Gulfstream GV to NCAR in March 2005. Known as HIAPER (High-performance Instrumented Airborne Platform for Environmental Research), the $81.5 million aircraft will be used for environmental research for the next several decades.
The GV will provide scientists with insights into the atmosphere and Earth's natural systems. The aircraft can fly at an altitude of 51,000 feet, has a range of 7,000 miles, and can carry 5,600 pounds of sensors. It will be available for use by environmental and atmospheric scientists from both public and private research facilities. NCAR will maintain and operate HIAPER at its Research Aviation Facility at the Jefferson County Airport (KBJC) in Broomfield, Colo.
HIAPER will collect data at the tops of storms and lower edge of the stratosphere, altitudes out of reach of most research aircraft. The aircraft's range will enable scientists to survey remote ocean regions in a single flight to learn more about interactions between the oceans and atmosphere. Scientists will use it to follow pollution plumes across continents and oceans to determine where pollutants originate and how they affect the atmosphere. They will also use it to study hurricanes as they emerge and to fly through high-forming cirrus clouds to create vertical portraits of their physical and chemical properties.
Using sensor pods suspended from HIAPER's wings, atmospheric measurements will be gathered and sent directly to onboard scientists using laptop computers. The aircraft has two large, round portholes in the cabin floor and another in the cabin ceiling that can be used as observation posts as well as stations for additional sensor equipment.
Gulfstream built the custom aircraft at its main factory in Savannah, Ga. Lockheed Martin Aircraft and Logistic Centers and Garrett Aviation Consulting Group collaborated on structural and systems modifications and enhancements for its special mission role. Gulfstream was responsible for integrating the modifications and certifying the aircraft.
"The best part of HIAPER is the 'H,' which stands for 'high-performance,' " says Jennifer Francis, an assistant research professor of marine and coastal sciences at Rutgers University. "A research platform like HIAPER makes this an exciting time to be an atmospheric scientist."
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