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GE Aerospace and NASA partner on flight tests to help deepen the understanding of contrails

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GE Aerospace and NASA partner on flight tests to help deepen the understanding of contrails

GE Aerospace and NASA are partnering up on a series of unique flight tests to help further the aviation industry’s understanding of contrails, using new test methods and technologies.

Contrails are clouds made of ice particles, which can be created when airplanes fly through cold, humid air. Persistent contrails are estimated to have a warming climate impact. Flight tests are set to support industry research efforts to better understand contrail science and enable new technology development that can reduce non-CO2 emissions.

Flights for the contrail optical depth experiment (CODEX) will be conducted from the week beginning November 18, 2024, from Virginia. NASA Langley research centre’s G-III aircraft will follow GE Aerospace’s 747 flying test bed in the sky and scan the aircraft wake with light detection and ranging (LiDAR) technology.

This will advance the use of LiDAR by NASA to generate three-dimensional imaging of contrails to better characterize how contrails form and how they behave over time. 

“GE Aerospace is proud to once again team up with NASA to be at the forefront of innovation for the future of more sustainable flight,” said Arjan Hegeman, general manager of future of flight technology for GE Aerospace.

Hegeman added: “Understanding how contrails act in-flight with the latest detection technology is how we move innovation forward. These tests will provide critical insight to advance next generation aircraft engine technologies for a step change in efficiency and emissions.” 

For GE Aerospace, this represents new operating methods for its 747 flying test bed, expanding capabilities ahead of flight tests planned this decade to evaluate performance of new commercial engine technologies. Open fan, advanced combustion designs, and other propulsion systems are being developed through CFM International’s revolutionary innovation for sustainable engines (RISE) program. 

Rich Wahls, manager of NASA’s sustainable flight national partnership added further: “NASA is advancing the scientific understanding of contrails to improve our confidence in future operational contrail management decisions that consider overall climate impact and economic trades. We are thrilled to once again work with our collaborator, GE Aerospace, on this first-of-its-kind flight experiment.”

GE Aerospace and NASA have partnered for more than 50 years to accelerate the introduction of new innovations to the aviation industry.