On the
ground meanwhile the equipment was packed by the Ground crew and they made their way to Malmsheim
the airport for the tank stop and than further to Mainz-Finthen.
The
Zeppelin travelled past the svabian alp passing smaller cities as Sigmaringen,
Tübingen and the castle Hohenzollern… flying mostly over rural regions covered
with forest and some smaller villages heading towards Stuttgart. The measured concentrations
of the Nitrogen oxide, a pollutand
mainly from traffic , showed the expected variations and to our surprise even
showed the plume from Stuttgart at the forecasted location but a bit more extended.
At 11:15
the Zeppelin reached Malmsheim, which is close to Stuttgart, to make a quick refueling stop.
Having spent 30 min on the ground we continued our way to Mainz-Finthen, flying
over the highway A8 towards Karlsruhe passing Pforzheim.
Karlsruhe was reached at 12:30. The Rhine harbor, a region with
a lot of industries especially refineries, was an excellent opportunity to
observe the effects of these emissions on air quality. The Zeppelin cycled
therefore at two heights over this region. The model forecast predicted low
ozone in this aerea, the observation based on the quick look data confirmed. To
see this kind of agreement of forecast and reality in realtime is really great.
Having
spent 20 min cycling over Karlsruhe the Zeppelin
continued its way towards Mannheim passing an
agricultural region and the Rhine
valley, different chemical conditions to be analzed.
Due to
perfect weather conditions the Zeppelin reached Mainz-Finthen at 14:00, way
before schedule. So additional measurements were possible above Mainz and the downstream Rhine
valley.
At 16:45
the ground crew had prepared the mast, though they had some delay by traffic, so that the Zeppelin
could land. We were welcomed very warmly
in Mainz Finthen by a lot of people waiting to see the Zeppelin NT and our
experiments.
As we could
see in our quick look data, all instruments had worked well. So we secured our data,
performed calibrations in the field, which is very different to the Zeppelin
hangar and switched off our instruments for the night.
No comments:
Post a Comment