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SOFIA's First Open Door Flight
Photo below
December 18, 2009
SOFIA reached a milestone Friday when
doors covering the plane’s telescope were fully opened in flight.
The Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, a modified 747
jet known as SOFIA, flew for one hour and 19 minutes, which included
two minutes with the telescope’s doors fully opened. The goal was to
allow engineers to understand how air flows in and around the
telescope. It was the first time outside air has interacted with the
part of the plane that carries the 98-inch infrared telescope.
“Today we opened the telescope cavity door, the first time we have
fully exposed the telescope and the largest cavity ever flown while in
flight,” said Bob Meyer, SOFIA program manager at NASA’s Dryden Flight
Research Center in Edwards, Calif. “This is a significant step toward
certifying NASA’s next great observatory for future study of the
universe.”
Besides these test flights of the airplane, two flights to operate and
verify the scientific capabilities of the telescope assembly are
planned for spring 2010. Telescope systems such as the vibration
isolation system, the inertial stabilization system and the pointing
control system will be tested during daytime flights.
These flights will prepare the telescope assembly for the first flight
with the telescope operating. That first flight will be the initial
opportunity scientists have to use the telescope and begin the process
of quantifying its performance to prepare for SOFIA’s planned 20-year
science program.

A German-built telescope is exposed during a flight of NASA's Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy 747SP on Dec. 18, 2009. The telescope doors were fully opened, allowing engineers to understand how air flows in and around the telescope. (NASA Photo / Carla Thomas)
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Page Last Updated:
December 19, 2009
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