In December 2019/January 2020, a contingent of the LAMP ground support team and our PI, Sarah Jones, traveled to Fairbanks, AK to deploy and test some ground-based equipment. (Yes, Covid was already coursing through the population, but we had no idea at the time. Later that month, I did a back-to-back trip to Norway as a lecturer for a sounding rocket school and to Bern for an ISSI meeting. Blissfully unaware of the dark days to come.)
We had several goals for the trip: reconnaissance of the domes at the Poker Flat science building (size, structures for cameras, etc.), testing of a riometer system brought from NJIT (simple explanation is it measures ionospheric density), testing of the USAFA's high-framerate imager in the domes, testing of Japanese imagers, running through the optical and other ground-based measurements we'll have for the launch, and just practicing observing pulsating aurora events.
Most of the trip consisted of activities like science discussions in the science center's kitchen:
Real science getting done |
and troubleshooting the equipment we brought:
Don and Geoff deliberating |
While it might not look like much, it was an incredibly beneficial trip. It helped us cement our launch observing plan, and start to refine launch criteria. We had representatives from the Japanese team able to meet in person with Iowa, Goddard, USAFA and NJIT folks. I feel like we got more done in a week than the months of previous telecons. And of course, not to be underestimated: serious team bonding!
This museum is also where I found the dopiest taxidermied bear I've ever seen, almost (but not quite) rivaling Anthony's famous tiger for goofiness.
Can't get enough Super Golden Crisp |
Mostly at my insistence about how much fun we'll have! and how much exercise in the fresh air we'll get!, Hyomin, Geoff, and I rented cross-country skis for the week and went skiing every day before work. Since we worked nights, that meant getting up around 1pm, hustling to ski for a couple hours before the meager daylight faded completely, going out for "lunch" around 6 or 7pm then driving up to the rocket range to work until 3, 4, or 5am. Fairbanks has a community nordic center with lots of different runs including nice hills - man, was the skiing fantastic.
The place is so big we have to consult the map! |
Yeah. Team building. I would also argue that exercising in some way is fundamental to any good scientific research trip, and in the cold, arctic weather this was a pretty good option. (It was literally negative degrees F some days though. Legitimately cold.)
The lucky LAMP banana |
I have multiple pictures of Hans in this same pose, spanning different years and geographic locations. |
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