ACCENT Fall Deployment Pictures

The Atmospheric Chemistry of Combustion Emissions Near the Tropopause (ACCENT) mission is an interagency mission to study the effects of rockets and aircraft in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. ACCENT is jointly sponsored by the Atmospheric Effects of Arcraft Program (AEAP) and the Rocket Impacts on Stratospheric Ozone (RISO) program (see some RISO highlights). As part of that mission, the NASA GSFC aircraft field missions group has been providing flight planning tools and meteorological support in real time for the mission project scientists.

Following are a few pictures of the September 1999 ACCENT deployment. We are using the WB-57F aircraft for carrying the ACCENT payload (See the USAF Museum page for WB-57F history). We are based at Ellington Field just outside of Houston, TX. Ellington Field is part of the Johnson Space Center. All of the Johnson aircraft are based here.

Where we work

Hangar 990

The WB-57F is based in Hangar 990 here at Ellington Field. Here we see the WB-57F in front of Hangar 990 just prior to the overflight of hurrican Floyd on September 15, 1999.

Building 994

The ACCENT instrument and support people are housed in a small building just next to hangar 990 in Building 994. In the image above, building 994 is the small building between the WB-57F and the large hangar 990 in the background. Our group is from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center . In particular, we work in the Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Branch (Code 916).

Our workspace is a bit constricted in building 994. We have to squeeze 4 people on to these two small tables. Here we see Leslie Lait pounding away on his laptop in preparation for the September 15 flight.

Some of the people here

The all-hands meeting on September 16, 1999 met to discuss the flight proposal for September 17 in the building 994 lab area. Obviously, the facillities are fairly cramped. Here we see the project scientist Randy Friedl (center of the image) discoursing on why Paul Newman deserves the Nobel Prize.

Kathy Wolfe (our project coordinator) smiles for the camera.

The meteorological team argues about the details of a flight plan for Costa Rica. From right to left are Karen Rosenlof, Tom Kucsera, Rennie Selkirk (known as Dr. Boogie), and Leslie Lait.

The WB-57F

The WB-57F is the workhorse aircraft for ACCENT. The WB-57F is modified from the Martin B-57 Canberra light bombers. The WB-57F is capable of carrying a 4000 lb. payload to altitudes over 60,000 ft, and with a range in excess of 2300 nautical miles. Here we see two other images of the WB-57F on September 15, 1999 just prior to takeoff.



The ACCENT fall payload

There are a large number of instruments aboard the WB-57F for the fall ACCENT flight series.

Loading a pallet

Elliot Atlas of NCAR is seen here preparing the Whole Air Sample (WAS) for the flight of September 15, 1999. The WAS instrument (located in the bottom left corner of the image) collects air samples in cans (the cylinders in the rack).

Here we see the rollout of WAS (the cans in the rack on the right side of the pallet), and the NCAR CH4 tunable diode laser (in the box-like enclosure on the left side of the pallet). Elliot Atlas and Jim Hannigan are rolling the pallet out, while Dave Thomson watches in the background.

The instruments bolt up into the bombbays of the WB-57F. Here we see that the pallet has been rolled under the wing, and Elliot Atlas, Jim Hannigan, the WB-57F crew preparing to bolt the pallet into the bombbay. You can see that the other forward pallets have already been bolted on.

The Hurricane Floyd intercept of September 15, 1999

Hurricane Floyd hit the US between September 14 and 16, 1999. We used the WB-57F to sample the stratospheric outflow and thermal structure. The WB-57F took off about 10AM CDT and returned about 3PM CDT. Pictured here we see a cloud image of Floyd taken by Steven Padar in Sarasota, using a multispectral image of 3 (yes three) spectral bands of HRPT. The image is valid at about the same time that the WB-57F was over the hurricane eye.

The aircrew is going through the pre-flight. The pilot for the flight was Scott Reagan (seated in front), while the backseater was Drew Nash.

The WB-57F returns from the Floyd overflight.

The aircraft effluent flight of September 17, 1999

The instrument loading began at 5:30 AM CDT. Here we see a Clive Midwinter loading the CPFM UV-Vis instrument on the tail of plane.

Shelley Hilden sits on the rim of the cockpit while Don Anderson (left) and Adrian Tuck (right) supervise.

Ken Kelly and Zim Sherman check out a pressure leak in the frost point hygrometer on the starboard wing pod.

An early morning loading of the port wing pod. From right to left are Tim VanRekn, Andy Rutter, and Rick Flagan.

Pilot Rick Hull pauses during his pre-flight of the WB-57F.

Readying the WB-57F for the flight.


Other pictures of things at and near Ellington


Go to the available forecast plots? Yes.


Unless otherwise noted, the photographs were made by Dr. Paul A. Newman

Go up to Dr. Newman's website? Yes


Last Updated: 1999-09-17
Author: Dr. Paul A. Newman (NASA/GSFC, Code 916) (newman@notus.gsfc.nasa.gov)

Web Curator: Dr. Leslie R. Lait (Raytheon ITSS) (lrlait@ertel.gsfc.nasa.gov)
Responsible NASA organization/official: Dr. Paul A. Newman, Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Branch