Traffic & Transit
Very Low-Flying NASA Planes To Hover Over Philly Area This Week
The planes will execute specialized maneuvers, such as vertical spirals.

Pennsylvanians should not be alarmed if they spot very low-flying airplanes above urban areas this month, NASA officials warned, as the agency readies to launch the planes as part of a research project.
Going through Wednesday, July 2, NASA planes will fly as low as 1,000 feet above power plants, landfills and urban areas in the Philadelphia area and some other Mid-Atlantic cities.
The planes will execute specialized maneuvers, such as vertical spirals, circle specific areas, and conduct low-altitude flybys along airport runways, NASA announced.
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The low-altitude atmospheric research flights are planned near Philadelphia as well as Baltimore, and some Virginia cities.
The flights are being conducted as part of NASA’s Student Airborne Research Program, an eight-week summer internship that provides undergraduate students with hands-on experience in every aspect of a scientific campaign.
Find out what's happening in Philadelphiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In these instances, students will assists in the operation of the instruments on board the plants to collect atmospheric data that will offer information about air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions, NASA said.
“Despite SARP being a learning experience for both the students and mentors alike, our P-3 is being flown and performing maneuvers in some of most complex and restricted airspace in the country,” Brian Bernth, chief of flight operations at NASA Wallops. “Tight coordination and crew resource management is needed to ensure that these flights are executed with precision but also safely.”
The planes are a P-3 Orion and a King Air B200.
More information about SARP is available on NASA's website.
With reporting by Chris Lindahl of Patch.
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