Earth Expedition: Spiraling Above Canada to Measure Carbon

From Wikivideos

Video source record: https://images.nasa.gov/details-GSFC_20170810_Carbon_m12683_Canada

Earth Expedition: Spiraling Above Canada to Measure Carbon
0:00 / --:--

Player mode uses your custom Wikivideos controls.

Summary

Description High above Alaska and Canada, researchers from NASA’s Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) are studying carbon emissions from a DC-8 plane. The plane carries new lidar instruments to measure concentrations of carbon dioxide and methane in the air, far below the aircraft. The plane also carries instruments that can measure carbon concentrations with extreme accuracy, but only from up-close. To check the accuracy of the lidar measurements, the team needs to fly the plane down to the lower altitudes the lidar is studying. Taking measurements at every altitude is no easy feat. The plane flies in looping spirals down to just about 100 feet above the ground, and then spirals back up to about 30,000 feet, taking measurements the whole time.
Date 2017-08-10
Source images.nasa.gov

Licensing

Public Domain (US Government Work)

View original file record