Aircraft List

The NASA Airborne Science Program provides a unique set of NASA supported aircraft that benefit the earth science community. These manned and unmanned aircraft carry the sensors that provide data to support and augment NASA spaceborne missions.

Reminder: All investigators with approved or pending proposals from the Research Opportunities in Space and Earth Sciences (ROSES) announcements that have a requirement for a NASA Airborne Science platform/instrument, must submit a Flight Request. The Flight Request is also the method to acquire an estimate if your proposal requires a cost estimate for Airborne Science support. However, for investigators proposing to participate on large, multi-aircraft experiments, a single Flight Request will be submitted for each mission by the Project Manager or Project Scientist. The Science Operations Flight Request System (SOFRS) can be reached directly at https://airbornescience.nasa.gov/sofrs.

Non-NASA Aircraft
NASA instrumentation may fly on non-NASA Federal aircraft as well as academic and commercial platforms for which agreements for access by SMD investigators are in place, in process, or have recently been approved by NASA Aviation Management as airworthy and safe to operate. For more information, please review the current ASP Call Letter for further requirements and guidance. Please note that in addition to filing the required Flight Request, investigators are responsible for contacting vendors to determine if the platform meets the requirements of the proposed scientific investigation. It is also the responsibility of the investigator to ensure that before any preliminary test flights or actual data collection flights utilizing NASA personnel, instruments or funds occur, all vendors successfully complete a NASA airworthiness/flight safety review in accordance with NASA Aviation Safety Policy for Non-NASA Aircraft.

Cirrus Design SR22 - LaRC

Current Status:
Open (Next Activity 03/25/24: EPA TEROS WEST)
Owner/Operator: 
NASA Langley Research Center
Type: 
Composite construction, single-engine production general aviation (GA) aircraft
Duration: 
6.1 hours (payload and weather dependent)
Useful Payload: 
932 lbs
Gross Take-off Weight: 
3,400 lbs
Onboard Operators: 
Maximum of two
Max Altitude: 
17,500 ft (limited to 12,500 ft without supplemental oxygen)
Air Speed: 
175 knots
Range: 
970 Nmi
Power: 
1400 W of 115 V AC
Point(s) of Contact: 

Bruce Fisher

Work: (757) 864-3862