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Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. -- NASA will launch five sounding rockets in about five minutes to allow scientists to study winds at the edge of space, about 60 miles above Earth, in a mission called the Anomalous Transport Rocket Experiment that will be visible from Delaware.
The ATREX rockets' trails should be visible from South Carolina to New England, within a 200-250 mile radius of Wallops.
It will be the first time so many rockets have been launched at once from Wallops since the early 1970s, when an eclipse was studied using a similar tactic, Wallops Flight Facility's ATREX manager Jack Vieira said.
The rockets will release a chemical tracer, trimethyl aluminum, which will look milky white and assume a corkscrew shape.
The trails should last between 10 and 30 minutes, and there will be seven in all because two rockets will release two each.
Scientists will take photographs of the tracer trails from three locations -- Wallops, New Jersey and North Carolina -- to study the winds in the region high above Earth which some scientists liken to a "surf zone" in the sky -- equating it to the area of the ocean where waves break.
Other scientists say evidence such as the way exhaust from the space shuttle moves points more to a model similar to the jet stream.
The region, where winds have been measured at much higher speeds than theories would suggest, "is arguably the most interesting part of the atmosphere ... It's a very dynamic region," said ATREX's principal investigator, Miguel Larsen of Clemson University.
Winds there reach speeds of 200-300 miles per hour --roughly three times that of the jet stream. Scientists want to know what is responsible for producing those high winds.
"We really don't understand why there are such large winds at those heights," Larsen said.
This mission should help scientists better understand how the winds affect satellite communications as well as helping them gain a better understanding of planetary atmosphere's behavior, according to Larsen.
NASA's cost for the mission is $4 million.
The NASA Visitor Center at Wallops will be open at least one hour before the opening of the daily launch window for viewing the mission by the public.
Call (757) 824-1344 to confirm the opening time. The mission will be webcast beginning two hours before the opening of the launch window. To view the webcast, visit http://sites.wff.nasa.gov/webcast.
http://www.delawareonline.com/articl...nclick_check=1
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Re: Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
Hmmmmmmm........ why do I feel suspicious?
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Re: Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
what? chem trails of trimethyl aluminum?
nah...nothing to see here.
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Re: Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
Dark skies at 1:06 PM? Ya lost me and I guess I missed it.
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Re: Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
NASA delays rocket launch to study jet stream
NASA has delayed its planned launch of five rockets aimed at learning more about the jet stream's current at the edge of space.
NASA initially said it would send up five rockets in five minutes from coastal Virginia early Thursday. But it subsequently announced Wednesday the launch was scrubbed due to a payload problem. The next attempt will be no earlier than Friday night.
The rockets are to release a chemical trail to track winds circling Earth at up to 300 mph, about 65 miles above the surface.
Officials had said long, milky white clouds could be visible for about 20 minutes from Myrtle Beach, S.C., to southern New Hampshire, and as far west as Morgantown, W.Va. — weather permitting. That area includes Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston.
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Re: Five rockets to illuminate dark skies, be seen from Delaware
Now I'm even MORE suspicious. Damn...
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