Topline:
You may see a pair of NASA research aircrafts flying lower than usual and making some special maneuvers as they take to the sky starting on Sunday.
How low? The planes will fly about 1,000 feet above ground. Commercial flights typically fly at between 30,000 to 42,000 feet.
Where will this take place? The planes will take flight across the L.A. Basin, Salton Sea and the Central Valley.
Read on … for what they’re collecting in the air.
If you see planes flying lower than usual over the next week, don’t freak out. Two NASA research planes will be flying across Southern California at lower altitudes than normal.
The flights will begin Sunday and end Wednesday to collect air samples over power plants, landfills and urban areas across the L.A. Basin, Salton Sea and the Central Valley. The planes will also go over some local airports and runway points.
NASA said its P-3 and King Air B200 aircrafts will fly about 1,000 feet above ground. For reference, commercial planes typically fly between 30,000 to 42,000 feet above ground.
Don’t panic! Research planes are flying low over LA starting Sunday
The flights are part of NASA’s student airborne research program, an eight-week internship that gives undergraduate students hands-on experience. The flights will also execute special maneuvers like vertical spirals, which looks like a steep descending turn.
“Our P-3 is being flown and performing maneuvers in some of the most complex and restricted airspace in the country,” Brian Bernth, chief of flight operations at NASA Wallops, said in a statement.
The P-3 aircraft has already conducted flights this month over Baltimore and near Philadelphia, according to NASA.
“Tight coordination and crew resource management is needed to ensure that these flights are executed with precision but also safely,” Bernth said.
As part of the flight, students will help collect the air samples that will be used to study air pollutants and greenhouse gases.