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G301: The Flying Falcon geological remote sensing experimentGet-Away Special (GAS) G-301, named the Flying Falcon and scheduled for launch on the STS-77 Space Shuttle in April, 1996, is being prepared to perform an experiment designed by the Department of Geology, Bowling Green State University (BGSU). The experiment will employ a new type of infrared imager designed and built by a consortium of Teltron Technologies Inc., Hudson Research Inc., and BGSU that is an uncooled, quantrum ferro-electric, infrared return beam vidicon (IRBV) camera capable of detecting thermal infrared radiation throughout the 2.0-50.0 micron wavelength region, and to which an integral, unable Fabry-Perot filter and a telescopic lens have been added. The primary objectives in the experiment include the mapping of methane plumes from solid waste landfills and wetlands in the midwestern U.S., the mapping of methane plumes offshore in the Gulf of Mexico and in the Middle East, brief monitoring for precursors of volcanoes or earthquakes in the South China sea and the East Pacific Rise (about 300 km west of Easter Island), and the mapping of silica content in exposed outcrops and residual soils of the southwestern U.S. and Middle East.
Document ID
19960003769
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Vincent, Robert K.
(Bowling Green State Univ. OH, United States)
Birnbach, Curtis
(Hudson Research, Inc. New Rochelle, NY., United States)
Mengel, Arthur H.
(Teltron Technologies, Inc. Birdsboro, PA., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
September 1, 1995
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center, The 1995 Shuttle Small Payloads Symposium
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Accession Number
96N13779
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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