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Nighttime
Clouds Excite Sky Watchers
A NASA project
to study the ionosphere using man-made nighttime clouds excited
sky watchers in the mid-Atlantic and lower northeastern United States
on Sunday night.
Four rockets
were launched Sunday night and Monday morning from the NASA Wallops
Flight Facility in Virginia. Three of the rockets released trimethylaluminum
a substance in space that formed milky-white clouds, allowing scientists
to monitor winds in the ionosphere, a high and poorly accessible
layer of Earth's atmosphere.
Observers in
North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York
and Pennsylvania reported seeing the clouds that remained visible
for up to 20 minutes after forming.
The clouds allow
scientists to monitor the Earth's winds at the edge of space, said
Dr. Gregory Earle from the University of Texas in Dallas, the lead
researcher for the project. "The clouds act as a tracer and
allow researchers to view the winds at various altitudes over a
period of time," he said.
For the complete article on the study of the ionosphere, visit:
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/news-release/releases/2003/03-69.htm
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