ARCTAS Blogging

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Updates from the Arctic

ARCTAS researchers are keeping the rest of us up-to-date on their progress in a blog hosted by Discovery.com. For previous blogs, click this link. For the new blog, click the link below.

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NASA and IPY

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NASA's International Polar Year Site

Read features and view multimedia related to NASA's role in the International Polar Year.

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ARCTAS at ESPO

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NASA's ARCTAS Project Page

Visit the ARCTAS Web site maintained by NASA's Earth Science Project Office.

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Top Story

    Forest Fire Smoke Plumes Probed

    An instrument from the National Center for Atmospheric Research collects data from a smoke plume generated by a forest fire over Canada on July 1, 2008.An instrument from the National Center for Atmospheric Research collects data from a smoke plume generated by a forest fire over Canada on July 1, 2008. Credit: NASA
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    In a nondescript room on a Canadian Air Force Base, an international team of fire trackers, weather forecasters and various atmospheric scientists puzzle over computer models, satellite tracks and flight charts. Their goal is to find the best fire targets and tailor the flight path of NASA’s airborne laboratories to track and investigate the properties of smoke plumes.

    The researchers are part of the summer deployment of NASA’s Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites, or ARCTAS, mission. The mission is just five days into its summer study of the smoke plumes from northern latitude forest fires, and already the choreographed effort between modelers and experimenters is producing a wealth of new data.

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News and Features

About ARCTAS

     
    Locator map of Cold Lake and Yellowknife in Canada

    ARCTAS: Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites

    The Arctic is undergoing significant environmental changes related to global climate change. Now, NASA is extensively studying the role of air pollution in this climate-sensitive region as part of the ARCTAS field campaign, the largest airborne experiment ever to do so.

     

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