I am submitting a proposal to NASA for studying the subsurface density variations effect-caused oscillation patterns of a pendulum bob, a Phantom EPH-V10E High Sensitivity Wireless Vibration Sensor, by recording its velocity and acceleration in airborne gravity surveys. The pendulum's bob's oscillation patterns characterizing the bob's velocity and accelerations along three axes will be calibrated for different known subsurface material variations including plate tectonics, faults, mines, and depleting aquifers. This proposed pendulum vibration data output will be the Time Waveform (TWF) and the Frequency Spectrum or FFT (Fast Fourier Transform) which will characterize the anomalies.
I need to include in the proposal the cost for airborne surveys by NASA aircraft. There will be multiple passes over a fault. Every year, the aircraft will fly over a different kind of fault.
Geologic fault exploration cost by NASA aircraft flights
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Re: Geologic fault exploration cost by NASA aircraft flights
Hello @bhitorbhag_1978,
Thank you for posting on the Earthdata Forum, however your question is off topic from the services and science data we support. The information you're requesting may not be readily accessible to the public. Here are a couple resources to check with:
Airborne Science Program Home Page: https://airbornescience.nasa.gov/
Science Operations Flight Request System (SOFRS): https://airbornescience.nasa.gov/sofrs
- this is the page used to request a NASA aircraft (there’s also a user guide linked on this page) and a user fees section
- there’s a couple of links on the SOFRS page and an email contact you may be able to reach out to
Best Regards
Thank you for posting on the Earthdata Forum, however your question is off topic from the services and science data we support. The information you're requesting may not be readily accessible to the public. Here are a couple resources to check with:
Airborne Science Program Home Page: https://airbornescience.nasa.gov/
Science Operations Flight Request System (SOFRS): https://airbornescience.nasa.gov/sofrs
- this is the page used to request a NASA aircraft (there’s also a user guide linked on this page) and a user fees section
- there’s a couple of links on the SOFRS page and an email contact you may be able to reach out to
Best Regards