| After more than ten years of modification work, the former "Clipper Lindbergh" returns to the air with a new mission.
WACO, TX-- International astronomers are a major step closer to unlocking secrets of the cosmos. A modified 747 airliner mounting a huge infrared telescope took to the skies for the first time on April 26, 2007 as a NASA flight crew put the big jet through the first of several shakedown flights since the airplane underwent major modifications at L-3 Communications in Waco, Texas. NASA research pilot and astronaut Gordon Fullerton led the crew making the historic first flight.
To enable the 45,000-pound infrared telescope to scan the skies, the 747 was modified by cutting a
16-foot tall opening in the aft fuselage, and fairing it with a sliding door. By flying at altitudes
above 40,000 feet, this special 747SP will rise above most atmospheric water vapor to give the 98.4-inch diameter infrared telescope clear access to collect infrared images from space. The huge telescope can be positioned anywhere in the skies, unlike ground-based telescopes, and between science missions it can be
serviced and reconfigured as needed to accomplish world class astronomy.
After a few shakedown flights over Texas, SOFIA will fly to NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in
California’s Mojave Desert for flight tests combined with integration of its sophisticated astronomy
hardware. SOFIA project manager Bob Meyer said the integrated approach will enable scientists to begin
making infrared images even before the modified jetliner has completed its flight testing program.
Pilot Gordon Fullerton's NASA crew for the first flight of SOFIA included copilot Bill Brockett, flight
engineer Larry LaRose, and flight test engineer Marty Trout. L-3's flight test analyst Don Stonebrook was
also a crewmember.
SOFIA is a joint international effort by NASA and DLR, the German Aerospace Center. In addition to
Dryden, NASA's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field in California's San Francisco Bay area is deeply
involved in the science of SOFIA. The entire effort is supported by Universities Space Research
Association (USRA), a non-profit group of universities created in 1969 by the National Academy of
Sciences.
Frederick A. Johnsen
NASA Public Affairs
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