NASA’s flying laboratory makes final flight over Ames Research Center

For many NASA scientists, flying aboard a decked-out Douglas DC-8 plane provided them some unique glimpses of Earth: the Moai on Easter Island, Central Park in New York and Mount Vesuvius in Italy.

On Wednesday, some of the same scientists who worked on that “flying laboratory” looked on as it made one last flight over Ames Research Center in Mountain View before its retirement.

Reem Hannun, a researcher at Ames Research Center brought her 3-year-old twins Lina and Joud out to wave goodbye to NASA's venerable DC-8 Flying Laboratory making a final flyby at Moffett Field, Wednesday, May 15, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Reem Hannun, a researcher at Ames Research Center brought her 3-year-old twins Lina and Joud out to wave goodbye to NASA’s venerable DC-8 Flying Laboratory making a final flyby at Moffett Field, Wednesday, May 15, 2024. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

Reem Hannun, a research scientist in the atmospheric science branch, attended the flyover with her two children before taking them to school. As the twins played around the trees and commented on the big plane that flew close to the ground for them to see, she recalled how she got her start at NASA doing science and reading field measurements on the plane.

Johny Zavaleta, a project manager at Ames Research Center, watches as NASA's venerable DC-8 Flying Laboratory makes a final flyby at Moffett Field, Wednesday, May 15, 2024, in Mountain View, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Johny Zavaleta, a project manager at Ames Research Center, watches as NASA’s venerable DC-8 Flying Laboratory makes a final flyby at Moffett Field, Wednesday, May 15, 2024, in Mountain View, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

“It’s just cool to see all these different measurements for atmospheric composition, and it’s a great community to be a part of, and you get to travel the world doing science,” Hannun said.

The plane, owned by NASA, was one of seven DC-8 planes still in operation internationally. Thomas Matthews, lead operations engineer for the aircraft and main mission director, said that NASA used the plane for 37 years, but the aging aircraft needed to be replaced as it was getting harder to sustain. A new Boeing-777 will replace the DC-8, which will retire at the aircraft maintenance school at Idaho State University in Pocatello.

Jhony Zavaleta, a project manager with the Earth Science Project Office, said he normally does not need to ride the plane for missions, but that he took every opportunity he could to climb aboard. He recalled one of the many flights the plane had taken over Antarctica between 2011 and 2017, calling it the “most amazing scenery you could see.”

The flight was part of Operation IceBridge, which aimed to continue collecting data on polar ice while NASA was switching satellites. Zavaleta recalled seeing mountain ranges and glaciers as far as the eye could see.

“I’d never seen anything so beautiful as that, (and) at the same time, so inhospitable,” Zavaleta said. “It was pretty nice, it was like being on another planet.”

The plane was originally a passenger aircraft with Alitalia, the former national airline of Italy, changing ownership to Braniff International Airways before it was eventually sold to NASA to be used at Ames Research Center in 1986, Matthews said.

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