Associated content: 

DCOTSS 07/12/21 Mission Daily Schedule

0800 Hangar 606 access
1000 ER-2 crew show up
1000 Ramp driving orientation
1200 ER-2 Take Off, transit to Salina
~1500 ER-2 Salina landing

DCOTSS 07/11/21 Mission Daily Schedule

ER-2 -- Hard down day.
0800 -- 1600 hangar access
Updates:
We were hard at work preparing the Salina site for this deployment.
Tomorrow, we expect the science equipment track to arrive and we are looking forward to the arrival of more team members.

DCOTSS Portable Optical Particle Spectrometer

Harvard’s DCOTSS Portable Optical Particle Spectrometer (DPOPS) is an in situ instrument capable of measuring particle number density as a function of size throughout the troposphere and lower stratosphere. The core instrument (POPS, Handix Scientific, Boulder, CO), re-packaged by Harvard, uses a 405 nm diode laser to count and size individual particles in the size range 140–3000 nm. 3D printing technology was used in the construction of the instrument to reduce cost, manufacturing complexity, and weight. The DPOPS is an optimized POPS system for DCOTSS flight campaign with autonomous operation in flight that requires minimal support between flights. Three major upgrades are: (1) increasing the sampling flow with external pumps to achieve better counting statistics in light of the low particle number density, (2) achieving isokinetic sampling (the velocity of air entering the inlet is equal to the velocity of the approaching gas stream) with a custom inlet to ensure fidelity of sampling with respect to size, and (3) optimizing the tubing system to reduce the loss of particles in the sampling tubes. DPOPS can fly on pressurized or unpressurized aircraft. 
 

Instrument Type: 
Aircraft: 
ER-2 - AFRC, ER-2 - AFRC
Point(s) of Contact: 

DCOTSS Salina Journal

You may see an unusual plane flying in and out of Salina over the next few weeks after Salina Regional Airport was chosen by NASA as the base for a research project.

The Dynamics and Chemistry of the Summer Stratosphere (DCOTSS) project began flights from Salina Regional Airport about two weeks ago and sees an aircraft travel upwards of 70,000 feet to look at strong thunderstorms in the stratosphere.

The project uses a NASA ER-2, a variant of the Lockheed U-2, equipped with 12 different scientific instruments to collect data in flight.

ABC News DCOTSS Coverage

NASA recently began new research to investigate how extreme summer weather may be affecting the upper layers of earth's atmosphere.

Particle Analysis By Laser Mass Spectrometry- Next Generation

The Purdue PALMS-NG instrument measures single-particle aerosol composition using UV laser ablation to generate ions that are analyzed with a time-of-flight mass spectrometer.  The PALMS size range is approximately 150 to >3000 nm and encompasses most of the accumulation and coarse mode aerosol volume. Individual aerosol particles are classified into compositional classes.  The size-dependent composition data is combined with aerosol counting instruments from Aerosol Microphysical Properties (AMP), the Langley Aerosol Research Group Experiment (LARGE), and other groups to generate quantitative, composition-resolved aerosol concentrations.  Background tropospheric concentrations of climate-relevant aerosol including mineral dust, sea salt, and biomass burning particles are the primary foci for the ATom campaigns.  PALMS also provides a variety of compositional tracers to identify aerosol sources, probe mixing state, track particle aging, and investigate convective transport and cloud processing.

*_Standard data products_**: *

Particle type number fractions: sulfate/organic/nitrate mixtures, biomass burning, EC, sea salt, mineral dust, meteoric, alkali salts, heavy fuel combustion, and other. Sampling times range from 1-5 mins.

*_Advanced data products_**:*

Number, surface area, volume, and mass concentrations of the above particle types. Total sulfate and organic mass concentrations. Relative and absolute abundance of various chemical markers and aerosol sub-components: methanesulfonic acid, sulfate acidity, organic oxidation level, iodine, bromine, organosulfates, pyridine, and other species.

Instrument Type: 
Aircraft: 
ER-2 - AFRC, ER-2 - AFRC, DC-8 - AFRC
Point(s) of Contact: 

NASA Mission Explores Intense Summertime Thunderstorms

NASA and university scientists will be studying the intense summer thunderstorms over the central United States to understand their effects on Earth’s atmosphere and how it contributes to climate change.

DCOTSS 06/19/21 Mission Daily Schedule

Final Packing Day - (contact ESPO if needed and have not already let us know)
 
Shipping: 
Trucks to Salina are planned to depart AFRC July 7 and arrive in Salina July 9. Most of the crew will travel on July 8 to Salina. ER-2 indicates there will be 3 hours of hands-on access July 12, for transit upload.
 
Keep sommer.nicholas@nasa.gov in the loop for shipping and let her know if you will need to ship specific gases from Palmdale to Salina. 
 

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