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Release Date: March 25, 1994
Media Contact: Media & External Communications, (509) 375-3776

DOE ARM PROGRAM TO USE UNMANNED AEROSPACEVEHICLES -- A FIRST IN CLIMATE RESEARCH

Researchers in the U.S. Department of Energy's Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program will conduct an exciting, first-of-its-kind campaign in early April.

The ARM Program was created in 1989 to study the impacts of clouds on the atmospheric energy balance and to improve the reliability of the large- scale computer models used to predict climate change. Since 1992, the program has been collecting data through the use of ground-based remote sensing instruments.

During the first three weeks of April, ARM Program researchers will use an unmanned aerospace vehicle (UAV) to collect data over the program's Southern Great Plains central research facility in north-central Oklahoma. This is the first time such aircraft has been used in climate research. In fact, the UAV is still considered an emerging technology, and ARM's use of this research platform will push the technology further.

The facts and figures:

-DOE-


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