ACTIVATE: Media
News & Features
- Peeking Into the Invisible World of the Atmosphere
- Students Learn From NASA Mission In Bermuda
- Nasa scientists love to get their heads in Bermuda’s clouds
- NASA Airborne Science Mission Engages with Students in Bermuda
- A BIOS Treasure: The Tudor Hill Marine Atmospheric Observatory
- Submarine tracker base now looks to the skies to monitor air
- The Wild Idea to End Droughts by Triggering Artificial Rain
- UA Professor Researching Cloud Seeding To Make It Rain
- Episode 283: Arizona wildfires help researchers study the evolution of clouds; (Arizona Public Media, June 2021).
- Taking Flight to Study Clouds and Climate; EOS Science News by AGU, 19 May 2021.
- The Earth Observer March/April 2021; Volume 33, Issue 2 [PDF]
- 2020 Airborne Sciences Program Report (page 10-13) [PDF]
- Herbold Fellow Kira Zeider Utilizes Machine Learning to Model Aerosol Behavior
- ACTIVATE Begins Year Two of Marine Cloud Study
- KXCI Thesis Thursday Podcast featuring Kira Zeider (November 9, 2022)
- KXCI Thesis Thursday Podcast featuring Kira Zeider (December 15, 2020)
- NASA JPL Podcast: On A Mission – Season 3, Episode 6: Air and Shield
- NASA Take Five: Episode 19 ACTIVATE Feature
- ACTIVATE Makes a Careful Return to Flight
- Probing the Hazy Mysteries of Marine Clouds
- NASA Embarks on Five U.S. Expeditions Targeting Air, Land and Sea
- NASA Awards $30M Five-Year Grant to Armin Sorooshian and Xubin Zeng
- Probing the Hazy Mysteries of Marine Clouds
- NASA Langley to launch $30 million airborne campaign to study clouds, aerosols to improve climate models
- NASA flight mission to investigate aerosols’ role in sea cloud formation
- WVEC Media Day Package
- WAVY Media Day Package
- Richmond Times Dispatch
Videos
On January 7, 2020 NASA held a live media event at the Armstrong Flight Research Center to introduce the five Earth Venture Suborbital-3 investigations.View the ACTIVATE segment here which features principal investigator Armin Sorooshian and instrument scientists Luke Ziemba and Dave Harper. AVAPS (Airborne Vertical Atmospheric Profiler System) was first tested aboard the NASA Langley King Air UC-12 on 12/16/2019. The intrepid operator (Taylor Shingler, NASA LaRC) first initializes the mini-sonde by selecting a clean transmission frequency and connects the sonde to a transceiver on the aircraft to verify proper communications and sensor operation. A cover is then removed from the sonde to expose measurement sensors and the operator communicates to pilots that the sonde is ready to be dropped. The sonde is then loaded into a launcher tube and the system is “armed”. At the pilots command, a switch opens a gate valve at the bottom of the launcher and the sonde is ejected by positive aircraft cabin pressure. Once the parachute opens, the sonde will fall at approximately 15 m/s from flight altitude to the sea-surface, transmitting temperature, pressure, relative humidity, and wind-speed data back to the aircraft along the way.Banner, Logos & PowerPoint Templates
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