Get a list of InstrumentPlaformPair objects. InstrumentPlaformPairs are used within Acquisitions which
enable linking between Instruments, Platforms and Observations (though may be via CompositeProcesses).

GET /api/v3/ipps/?format=api&offset=8000
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, POST, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "count": 14115,
    "next": "https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/ipps/?format=api&limit=100&offset=8100",
    "previous": "https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/ipps/?format=api&limit=100&offset=7900",
    "results": [
        {
            "ob_id": 8317,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17458,
                "uuid": "2ce77c4dd287407480cf42d5e9723ef7",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B803 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B803 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8318,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 11730,
                "uuid": "ca3c48564db10ffbdfe37264a4ff16fd",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser",
                "abstract": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser. FAAM non-core instrument first used in BORTAS project."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17458,
                "uuid": "2ce77c4dd287407480cf42d5e9723ef7",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B803 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B803 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8319,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8320,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8321,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15409,
                "uuid": "137f63ed163c469fbc09ab78cdb64339",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: metoffice-aimms",
                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument metoffice-aimms"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8322,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15410,
                "uuid": "b1853545dadc47958920477ccb085b9a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester: Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS)",
                "abstract": "Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS) model QC-TILDAS-CS is a laser spectrometer producing measurements of Ethane dry mole fraction at 1 Hz.\r\n\r\nThe QC-TILDAS-CS is manufactured by Aerodyne Research Inc. (USA). It measures ethane dry mole fraction in ambient air. Sample air is pumped through a cell into which the single laser beam is directed. The laser beam passes many times across the cell before exiting onto a photodetector. The laser frequency is tuned across an ethane absorption line - the depth of this lines is used to determine the ethane mole fraction."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8323,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8324,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 11730,
                "uuid": "ca3c48564db10ffbdfe37264a4ff16fd",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser",
                "abstract": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser. FAAM non-core instrument first used in BORTAS project."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17462,
                "uuid": "83bb42f5fb5948a69dd03b619e70001d",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B800 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8325,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8326,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8327,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15409,
                "uuid": "137f63ed163c469fbc09ab78cdb64339",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: metoffice-aimms",
                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument metoffice-aimms"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8328,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15410,
                "uuid": "b1853545dadc47958920477ccb085b9a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester: Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS)",
                "abstract": "Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS) model QC-TILDAS-CS is a laser spectrometer producing measurements of Ethane dry mole fraction at 1 Hz.\r\n\r\nThe QC-TILDAS-CS is manufactured by Aerodyne Research Inc. (USA). It measures ethane dry mole fraction in ambient air. Sample air is pumped through a cell into which the single laser beam is directed. The laser beam passes many times across the cell before exiting onto a photodetector. The laser frequency is tuned across an ethane absorption line - the depth of this lines is used to determine the ethane mole fraction."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8329,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8330,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 11730,
                "uuid": "ca3c48564db10ffbdfe37264a4ff16fd",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser",
                "abstract": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser. FAAM non-core instrument first used in BORTAS project."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17466,
                "uuid": "20e2be649e9e4a1a9c782d45452b2dd6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B801 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8331,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17470,
                "uuid": "656565ba7d9c4174ba3d3380bd8529c6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B806 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B806 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8332,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
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                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8350,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8351,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15409,
                "uuid": "137f63ed163c469fbc09ab78cdb64339",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: metoffice-aimms",
                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument metoffice-aimms"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8352,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 15410,
                "uuid": "b1853545dadc47958920477ccb085b9a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester: Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS)",
                "abstract": "Aerodyne Tunable IR Laser Direct Absorption Spectrometer (TILDAS) model QC-TILDAS-CS is a laser spectrometer producing measurements of Ethane dry mole fraction at 1 Hz.\r\n\r\nThe QC-TILDAS-CS is manufactured by Aerodyne Research Inc. (USA). It measures ethane dry mole fraction in ambient air. Sample air is pumped through a cell into which the single laser beam is directed. The laser beam passes many times across the cell before exiting onto a photodetector. The laser frequency is tuned across an ethane absorption line - the depth of this lines is used to determine the ethane mole fraction."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8353,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8354,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 13711,
                "uuid": "70634267111c4cd68a0ee1f9209f923e",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester:  Retrievals from Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "Retrieved temperature, water vapour, ozone, methane, and carbon monoxide from data collected by the Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES) on board the FAAM BAe-146 aircraft"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8355,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 11730,
                "uuid": "ca3c48564db10ffbdfe37264a4ff16fd",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser",
                "abstract": "FAAM Fast Greenhouse Gas analyser. FAAM non-core instrument first used in BORTAS project."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17482,
                "uuid": "507b20818db74ae992b1f106f2ab7427",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B805 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8356,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17486,
                "uuid": "1d170df4f55b4ea4832456c6eae4aef7",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8357,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17486,
                "uuid": "1d170df4f55b4ea4832456c6eae4aef7",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8358,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 2770,
                "uuid": "723bb5e1edad4ad48f927759bdcf10cb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM (Universities' Facilities for Atmospheric Measurements): Cloud Particle Imager (CPI) - formerly umist-cpi",
                "abstract": "The CPI can image and count particles in the size range of 15-2500um, with the images having a nominal 2.3um resolution. Image analysis and data processing software provided with the probe takes particle size information (including area and volume) and ice crystal habit classification from the images to produce histograms etc. The CPI is especially suitable for use in ice and mixed phase clouds which typically have relatively low (compared to water clouds) particle concentration of 1000/L. The CPI may be used in much higher particle concentrations, but under these conditions while particle spectra are reliable, absolute particle concentrations are not due to coincidence errors in the particle detection system. While designed for aircraft use, and able to operate at any aircraft speed and altitude, the CPI, with the use of a suitable aspiration device may also be used for ground based, or lab studies. The University of Manchester and UFAM (Universities' Facility for Atmospheric Measurements) operated this instrument."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17486,
                "uuid": "1d170df4f55b4ea4832456c6eae4aef7",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B200 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8359,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17490,
                "uuid": "6b3b2708670e4e2c97993b276b1644bc",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8360,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17490,
                "uuid": "6b3b2708670e4e2c97993b276b1644bc",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8361,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 2770,
                "uuid": "723bb5e1edad4ad48f927759bdcf10cb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM (Universities' Facilities for Atmospheric Measurements): Cloud Particle Imager (CPI) - formerly umist-cpi",
                "abstract": "The CPI can image and count particles in the size range of 15-2500um, with the images having a nominal 2.3um resolution. Image analysis and data processing software provided with the probe takes particle size information (including area and volume) and ice crystal habit classification from the images to produce histograms etc. The CPI is especially suitable for use in ice and mixed phase clouds which typically have relatively low (compared to water clouds) particle concentration of 1000/L. The CPI may be used in much higher particle concentrations, but under these conditions while particle spectra are reliable, absolute particle concentrations are not due to coincidence errors in the particle detection system. While designed for aircraft use, and able to operate at any aircraft speed and altitude, the CPI, with the use of a suitable aspiration device may also be used for ground based, or lab studies. The University of Manchester and UFAM (Universities' Facility for Atmospheric Measurements) operated this instrument."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17490,
                "uuid": "6b3b2708670e4e2c97993b276b1644bc",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B201 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8362,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17494,
                "uuid": "1484b8aac546402bb016122a3ac16744",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8363,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17494,
                "uuid": "1484b8aac546402bb016122a3ac16744",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8364,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
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                "uuid": "723bb5e1edad4ad48f927759bdcf10cb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM (Universities' Facilities for Atmospheric Measurements): Cloud Particle Imager (CPI) - formerly umist-cpi",
                "abstract": "The CPI can image and count particles in the size range of 15-2500um, with the images having a nominal 2.3um resolution. Image analysis and data processing software provided with the probe takes particle size information (including area and volume) and ice crystal habit classification from the images to produce histograms etc. The CPI is especially suitable for use in ice and mixed phase clouds which typically have relatively low (compared to water clouds) particle concentration of 1000/L. The CPI may be used in much higher particle concentrations, but under these conditions while particle spectra are reliable, absolute particle concentrations are not due to coincidence errors in the particle detection system. While designed for aircraft use, and able to operate at any aircraft speed and altitude, the CPI, with the use of a suitable aspiration device may also be used for ground based, or lab studies. The University of Manchester and UFAM (Universities' Facility for Atmospheric Measurements) operated this instrument."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17494,
                "uuid": "1484b8aac546402bb016122a3ac16744",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B202 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8365,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17499,
                "uuid": "a5a3514d960f43e8b633a259a08a3178",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8366,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17499,
                "uuid": "a5a3514d960f43e8b633a259a08a3178",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8367,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17499,
                "uuid": "a5a3514d960f43e8b633a259a08a3178",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B203 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8368,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17503,
                "uuid": "1247f4193f7643eb9cfb3240cfa5503b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8369,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17503,
                "uuid": "1247f4193f7643eb9cfb3240cfa5503b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8370,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17503,
                "uuid": "1247f4193f7643eb9cfb3240cfa5503b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B204 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8371,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17507,
                "uuid": "ec43b9067c204d3eaddfbc49f8cb4577",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 8372,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17507,
                "uuid": "ec43b9067c204d3eaddfbc49f8cb4577",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8373,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17507,
                "uuid": "ec43b9067c204d3eaddfbc49f8cb4577",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B205 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 8374,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
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                "ob_id": 17511,
                "uuid": "9cee86074864403993b2755e8c9c0b33",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B206 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B206 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 8375,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
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                "ob_id": 17511,
                "uuid": "9cee86074864403993b2755e8c9c0b33",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B206 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B206 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8376,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
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                "ob_id": 17515,
                "uuid": "c7bd9eda825547b089d45b9b1974b7a5",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B207 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B207 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
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            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
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                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
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                "uuid": "c7bd9eda825547b089d45b9b1974b7a5",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B207 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B207 Acquisition"
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        {
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                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
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                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
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                "uuid": "c7bd9eda825547b089d45b9b1974b7a5",
                "short_code": "acq",
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                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
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                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
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                "uuid": "61cf19dc266144e1a33cc96ce86350f2",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B208 Acquisition",
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        {
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                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17519,
                "uuid": "61cf19dc266144e1a33cc96ce86350f2",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B208 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B208 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8381,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17523,
                "uuid": "1b56e8ea919d4513adb01b3e8f81d341",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8382,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
                "uuid": "a7e69cf336ab4cd985bb4a03508c834d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office: Airborne Research Interferometer Evaluation System (ARIES)",
                "abstract": "ARIES is a Fourier transform spectrometer based on the Bomem MB100 interferometer, modified by ABB Bomem (Canada) for airborne use, with Met Office designed pointing optics, external black bodies and control electronics. Although designed, and primarily used, for airborne measurements ARIES can also be used for ground based work away from the aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17523,
                "uuid": "1b56e8ea919d4513adb01b3e8f81d341",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8383,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17523,
                "uuid": "1b56e8ea919d4513adb01b3e8f81d341",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B209 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8384,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8385,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5651,
                "uuid": "34ab3e5c7d8f48c2a6019d4f7d3851fb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Set of several core and/or non-core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core and non-core instruments on board the FAAM BAe-146 aircraft"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8386,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 115,
                "uuid": "fa81f4481fc0403d843dae1be91c0e01",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Leeds: Fluorecence Assay by Gas Expansion instrument (FAGE)",
                "abstract": "This is a ground-based laser-induced fluorescence instrument for detection of OH, HO2, and RO2 radicals. OH reactivity measurements using a laser flash-photolysis technique can be provided alongside the radical measurements. The instrument is housed in and operated from a custom-built 20 ft shipping container. OH and HO2 measurement is challenging but necessary due to their role in atmospheric chemistry. The laser induced fluorescence at low pressure is measured. \r\n \r\nThis instrument has a wide range of applications including simultaneous detection of OH, HO2, RO2 radical species and total OH reactivity. Detection of iodine monoxide and glyoxal is also possible, although not at the same time as the other radical measurements."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8387,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 71,
                "uuid": "e83377d7770b4ac3b9ecf8d6eeaf769b",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: Dual Column Gas Chromatograph-Flame Ionization Detector (DC-GC-FID)",
                "abstract": "The Dual Channel Gas Chromatograph with Flame Ionisation Detectors is capable of reporting mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. \r\n\r\nThe output includes mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The data from the instrument are split (across three seperate files: -fid1, -fid2, -fid3) according to compound type. The output for -fid1 is Alkanes.\r\n\r\nThe instrument has variable measurement frequency dependent upon sampling frequency of the Whole Air Sampling (WAS) system.\r\n\r\nSamples of air are dried, and then pre-concentrated on a dual-bed adsorbent trap held at sub-ambient temperature (typically -20°C). Sample volumes of up to one litre of air are acquired and then the trap is resistively heated during desorption within a stream of helium (or hydrogen) and injected into the GC oven for analysis. The eluent is split in approximately equal portions between a Na2SO4 deactivated aluminium oxide (Al2O3) porous layer open tubular (PLOT) column (50 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the less polar NMHCs and a LOWOX columns (10 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the more polar VOCs including monoterpenes and oxygenated species. Analytes elute from the GC columns into two flame ionisation detectors for detection. The GC oven has been programmed for optimal separation of all compounds of interest. \r\n\r\nThere are two near-identical GC instruments for the measurement of Volatile organic compounds. The first is a Perkin Elmer GC with home-built autosampler and flow control box, a home-built preconcentrator and an Ai Qualitek injector. The other is an Agilent GC with a MARKES UNITY2 preconcentrator and CIA Advantage autosampler. \r\n\r\nMeasurement of VOCs in the atmosphere have been used for a wide range of applications including providing information regarding: quantification of emissions; air mass age; and atmospheric processing during transport."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8388,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8391,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5339,
                "uuid": "dfb00124d5e0434f8af7be00811a9fe7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: PAN GC (PeroxyAcetyl Nitrate Gas Chromatograph)",
                "abstract": "The PAN GC is a custom-built gas chromatograph with electron capture detection (Ai Qualitek, Cambridge, UK). The This instrument is regularly used on the FAAM BAe 146 research aircraft. \r\n\r\nThe outputs include: the mixing ratio of peroxy acetyl nitrate (PAN).\r\n\r\nAir samples are drawn from the main sampling manifold of the aircraft via a metal bellows pump (outlet pressure of 15 psi). Containing a dual channel separation and detection system with staggered loop injection, this instrument achieves a time resolution of 90 s and a detection limit (concentration corresponding to a signal three times the noise level of the background) of 5 pptV. The expanded uncertainty of the measurements (± 2 σ) for atmospheric mixing ratios in the low pptV to mixing ratios at the ppbV level is less than 5 % on both channels. \r\n\r\nWithin the instrument, air is drawn into one of two thermostated and pressure-monitored 2 ml sample loops by a small diaphragm pump housed within the GC. Each analysis channel is equipped with a fused silica capillary column system comprising a 10 m pre-column and a 30 m analytical column (both columns have a 0.53 mm i.d. SPB-5, 1.5 micron film thickness). An electrically-actuated 10-port valve provides a back-flush facility from the pre-column, ensuring that more retained compounds do not enter the analytical column and interfere with subsequent analyses. After 90 s flushing, the analytes in the sample loop are swept onto each column in a flow of argon carrier gas. Both the column system and sample loops are thermostated in a Peltier cooled oven at 25 ºC. The instrument is equipped with two ECDs mounted in a thermostated enclosure at 50 ºC. Argon gas is also used as the ECD make-up gas. Moisture is added to the Argon gas line via a hydrated copper sulphate trap which helps to improve the baseline stability. \r\n\r\n"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17527,
                "uuid": "8246a2a2b1ca4f748260d8220935ed01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B563 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8392,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8393,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5651,
                "uuid": "34ab3e5c7d8f48c2a6019d4f7d3851fb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Set of several core and/or non-core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core and non-core instruments on board the FAAM BAe-146 aircraft"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8394,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 115,
                "uuid": "fa81f4481fc0403d843dae1be91c0e01",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Leeds: Fluorecence Assay by Gas Expansion instrument (FAGE)",
                "abstract": "This is a ground-based laser-induced fluorescence instrument for detection of OH, HO2, and RO2 radicals. OH reactivity measurements using a laser flash-photolysis technique can be provided alongside the radical measurements. The instrument is housed in and operated from a custom-built 20 ft shipping container. OH and HO2 measurement is challenging but necessary due to their role in atmospheric chemistry. The laser induced fluorescence at low pressure is measured. \r\n \r\nThis instrument has a wide range of applications including simultaneous detection of OH, HO2, RO2 radical species and total OH reactivity. Detection of iodine monoxide and glyoxal is also possible, although not at the same time as the other radical measurements."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8395,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 99,
                "uuid": "98ab5fc9e63c403792e90e6b9b69e3c8",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM: Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) - formerly umist-ams",
                "abstract": "The Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) is the only currently available instrument capable of providing quantitative size and chemical mass loading information in real-time for non-refractory sub-micron aerosol particles. The AMS couples size-resolved particle sampling and mass spectrometric techniques into a single real-time measurement system. The Aerodyne AMS has been deployed world-wide at fixed sites, and on mobile laboratory, ship and aircraft platforms. Over 100 instruments are in use in industrial, academic and government laboratories.\r\n\r\nScientifically, the instrument can deliver quantitative mass concentrations of the major non-refractory chemical species present in submicron particles (ammonium, nitrate, sulphate, organics and non-sea-salt chloride) in microgrammes per cubic metre. It is also capable of delivering these concentrations as a function of diameter as a dM/dlog(D) distribution. Further to this, information on the chemical nature of the organic fraction can be derived by inspecting the relative sizes of the peaks within the mass spectrum. In order to produce fully quality assured and meaningful results, the data must be processed offline or near-real-time. The Compact Time-of-Flight AMS (C-ToF-AMS) is a version that enables continuous acquisition of complete mass spectra (1-800 m/z) of all sampled particles at rates as fast as 80 kHz."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8396,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 294,
                "uuid": "0785c5e1d0f241fd9ada13e3e0e4160a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Laquila:Noy LIF",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8397,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 71,
                "uuid": "e83377d7770b4ac3b9ecf8d6eeaf769b",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: Dual Column Gas Chromatograph-Flame Ionization Detector (DC-GC-FID)",
                "abstract": "The Dual Channel Gas Chromatograph with Flame Ionisation Detectors is capable of reporting mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. \r\n\r\nThe output includes mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The data from the instrument are split (across three seperate files: -fid1, -fid2, -fid3) according to compound type. The output for -fid1 is Alkanes.\r\n\r\nThe instrument has variable measurement frequency dependent upon sampling frequency of the Whole Air Sampling (WAS) system.\r\n\r\nSamples of air are dried, and then pre-concentrated on a dual-bed adsorbent trap held at sub-ambient temperature (typically -20°C). Sample volumes of up to one litre of air are acquired and then the trap is resistively heated during desorption within a stream of helium (or hydrogen) and injected into the GC oven for analysis. The eluent is split in approximately equal portions between a Na2SO4 deactivated aluminium oxide (Al2O3) porous layer open tubular (PLOT) column (50 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the less polar NMHCs and a LOWOX columns (10 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the more polar VOCs including monoterpenes and oxygenated species. Analytes elute from the GC columns into two flame ionisation detectors for detection. The GC oven has been programmed for optimal separation of all compounds of interest. \r\n\r\nThere are two near-identical GC instruments for the measurement of Volatile organic compounds. The first is a Perkin Elmer GC with home-built autosampler and flow control box, a home-built preconcentrator and an Ai Qualitek injector. The other is an Agilent GC with a MARKES UNITY2 preconcentrator and CIA Advantage autosampler. \r\n\r\nMeasurement of VOCs in the atmosphere have been used for a wide range of applications including providing information regarding: quantification of emissions; air mass age; and atmospheric processing during transport."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8398,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8401,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5339,
                "uuid": "dfb00124d5e0434f8af7be00811a9fe7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: PAN GC (PeroxyAcetyl Nitrate Gas Chromatograph)",
                "abstract": "The PAN GC is a custom-built gas chromatograph with electron capture detection (Ai Qualitek, Cambridge, UK). The This instrument is regularly used on the FAAM BAe 146 research aircraft. \r\n\r\nThe outputs include: the mixing ratio of peroxy acetyl nitrate (PAN).\r\n\r\nAir samples are drawn from the main sampling manifold of the aircraft via a metal bellows pump (outlet pressure of 15 psi). Containing a dual channel separation and detection system with staggered loop injection, this instrument achieves a time resolution of 90 s and a detection limit (concentration corresponding to a signal three times the noise level of the background) of 5 pptV. The expanded uncertainty of the measurements (± 2 σ) for atmospheric mixing ratios in the low pptV to mixing ratios at the ppbV level is less than 5 % on both channels. \r\n\r\nWithin the instrument, air is drawn into one of two thermostated and pressure-monitored 2 ml sample loops by a small diaphragm pump housed within the GC. Each analysis channel is equipped with a fused silica capillary column system comprising a 10 m pre-column and a 30 m analytical column (both columns have a 0.53 mm i.d. SPB-5, 1.5 micron film thickness). An electrically-actuated 10-port valve provides a back-flush facility from the pre-column, ensuring that more retained compounds do not enter the analytical column and interfere with subsequent analyses. After 90 s flushing, the analytes in the sample loop are swept onto each column in a flow of argon carrier gas. Both the column system and sample loops are thermostated in a Peltier cooled oven at 25 ºC. The instrument is equipped with two ECDs mounted in a thermostated enclosure at 50 ºC. Argon gas is also used as the ECD make-up gas. Moisture is added to the Argon gas line via a hydrated copper sulphate trap which helps to improve the baseline stability. \r\n\r\n"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8402,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 290,
                "uuid": "065b9d39e47b4228a84239654a4e9530",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Laquila:No2 LIF",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8403,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 326,
                "uuid": "c39cb6ce89ea4b4a9c3d3d9ae602f983",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "UEA: Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometer (PTR-MS)",
                "abstract": "The PTR-MS (Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometer) is an aircraft-certified instrument for the real time measurement of a selected range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the atmosphere at concentrations down to approximately 50 parts per trillion (ppt). The types of compound measured include:\r\n\r\n• Oxygenated hydrocarbons (e.g. methanol, acetone, acetaldehyde, acetic acid, methyl vinyl ketone and methacrolein)\r\n• Aromatic hydrocarbons (benzene, toluene, C8 and C9 aromatics)\r\n• Biogenic hydrocarbons (isoprene, total monoterpenes)\r\n• Acetonitrile; an excellent tracer of biomass burning\r\n\r\nThe PTR-MS is ideally suited for use on an aircraft since it produces a near real-time signal. In this way it has a distinct advantage over (and acts as a valuable complement to) traditional chromatographic or bottle sampling techniques. Sampling cycle times of down to ~1 second can be achieved, dependant on the number of compounds analysed at any one time, enabling small scale events such as pollution or biomass burning plumes to be sampled effectively. The instrument samples from the main aircraft inlet manifold via a short length of PFA tubing.\r\n\r\nPotential applications include:\r\n• Measurement of oxygenates in the upper troposphere in a study of the free radical chemistry and its sources in this region\r\n• Studies of oxygenate and isoprene emissions from vegetation in the tropics and at mid latitudes\r\n• Studies of oxygenate formation in urban plumes in the boundary layer for improvement of models of regional photochemistry\r\n• Studies of biomass burning in the tropics and over Northern Hemisphere forests to assess their contribution to the global carbon budget and to ozone formation"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17533,
                "uuid": "afb90393bb254610a16942273aab54fb",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B565 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8404,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8405,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5651,
                "uuid": "34ab3e5c7d8f48c2a6019d4f7d3851fb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Set of several core and/or non-core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core and non-core instruments on board the FAAM BAe-146 aircraft"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8406,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 115,
                "uuid": "fa81f4481fc0403d843dae1be91c0e01",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Leeds: Fluorecence Assay by Gas Expansion instrument (FAGE)",
                "abstract": "This is a ground-based laser-induced fluorescence instrument for detection of OH, HO2, and RO2 radicals. OH reactivity measurements using a laser flash-photolysis technique can be provided alongside the radical measurements. The instrument is housed in and operated from a custom-built 20 ft shipping container. OH and HO2 measurement is challenging but necessary due to their role in atmospheric chemistry. The laser induced fluorescence at low pressure is measured. \r\n \r\nThis instrument has a wide range of applications including simultaneous detection of OH, HO2, RO2 radical species and total OH reactivity. Detection of iodine monoxide and glyoxal is also possible, although not at the same time as the other radical measurements."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8407,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 99,
                "uuid": "98ab5fc9e63c403792e90e6b9b69e3c8",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM: Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) - formerly umist-ams",
                "abstract": "The Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) is the only currently available instrument capable of providing quantitative size and chemical mass loading information in real-time for non-refractory sub-micron aerosol particles. The AMS couples size-resolved particle sampling and mass spectrometric techniques into a single real-time measurement system. The Aerodyne AMS has been deployed world-wide at fixed sites, and on mobile laboratory, ship and aircraft platforms. Over 100 instruments are in use in industrial, academic and government laboratories.\r\n\r\nScientifically, the instrument can deliver quantitative mass concentrations of the major non-refractory chemical species present in submicron particles (ammonium, nitrate, sulphate, organics and non-sea-salt chloride) in microgrammes per cubic metre. It is also capable of delivering these concentrations as a function of diameter as a dM/dlog(D) distribution. Further to this, information on the chemical nature of the organic fraction can be derived by inspecting the relative sizes of the peaks within the mass spectrum. In order to produce fully quality assured and meaningful results, the data must be processed offline or near-real-time. The Compact Time-of-Flight AMS (C-ToF-AMS) is a version that enables continuous acquisition of complete mass spectra (1-800 m/z) of all sampled particles at rates as fast as 80 kHz."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8408,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 294,
                "uuid": "0785c5e1d0f241fd9ada13e3e0e4160a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Laquila:Noy LIF",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8409,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 71,
                "uuid": "e83377d7770b4ac3b9ecf8d6eeaf769b",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: Dual Column Gas Chromatograph-Flame Ionization Detector (DC-GC-FID)",
                "abstract": "The Dual Channel Gas Chromatograph with Flame Ionisation Detectors is capable of reporting mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. \r\n\r\nThe output includes mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The data from the instrument are split (across three seperate files: -fid1, -fid2, -fid3) according to compound type. The output for -fid1 is Alkanes.\r\n\r\nThe instrument has variable measurement frequency dependent upon sampling frequency of the Whole Air Sampling (WAS) system.\r\n\r\nSamples of air are dried, and then pre-concentrated on a dual-bed adsorbent trap held at sub-ambient temperature (typically -20°C). Sample volumes of up to one litre of air are acquired and then the trap is resistively heated during desorption within a stream of helium (or hydrogen) and injected into the GC oven for analysis. The eluent is split in approximately equal portions between a Na2SO4 deactivated aluminium oxide (Al2O3) porous layer open tubular (PLOT) column (50 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the less polar NMHCs and a LOWOX columns (10 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the more polar VOCs including monoterpenes and oxygenated species. Analytes elute from the GC columns into two flame ionisation detectors for detection. The GC oven has been programmed for optimal separation of all compounds of interest. \r\n\r\nThere are two near-identical GC instruments for the measurement of Volatile organic compounds. The first is a Perkin Elmer GC with home-built autosampler and flow control box, a home-built preconcentrator and an Ai Qualitek injector. The other is an Agilent GC with a MARKES UNITY2 preconcentrator and CIA Advantage autosampler. \r\n\r\nMeasurement of VOCs in the atmosphere have been used for a wide range of applications including providing information regarding: quantification of emissions; air mass age; and atmospheric processing during transport."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8410,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8413,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5339,
                "uuid": "dfb00124d5e0434f8af7be00811a9fe7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: PAN GC (PeroxyAcetyl Nitrate Gas Chromatograph)",
                "abstract": "The PAN GC is a custom-built gas chromatograph with electron capture detection (Ai Qualitek, Cambridge, UK). The This instrument is regularly used on the FAAM BAe 146 research aircraft. \r\n\r\nThe outputs include: the mixing ratio of peroxy acetyl nitrate (PAN).\r\n\r\nAir samples are drawn from the main sampling manifold of the aircraft via a metal bellows pump (outlet pressure of 15 psi). Containing a dual channel separation and detection system with staggered loop injection, this instrument achieves a time resolution of 90 s and a detection limit (concentration corresponding to a signal three times the noise level of the background) of 5 pptV. The expanded uncertainty of the measurements (± 2 σ) for atmospheric mixing ratios in the low pptV to mixing ratios at the ppbV level is less than 5 % on both channels. \r\n\r\nWithin the instrument, air is drawn into one of two thermostated and pressure-monitored 2 ml sample loops by a small diaphragm pump housed within the GC. Each analysis channel is equipped with a fused silica capillary column system comprising a 10 m pre-column and a 30 m analytical column (both columns have a 0.53 mm i.d. SPB-5, 1.5 micron film thickness). An electrically-actuated 10-port valve provides a back-flush facility from the pre-column, ensuring that more retained compounds do not enter the analytical column and interfere with subsequent analyses. After 90 s flushing, the analytes in the sample loop are swept onto each column in a flow of argon carrier gas. Both the column system and sample loops are thermostated in a Peltier cooled oven at 25 ºC. The instrument is equipped with two ECDs mounted in a thermostated enclosure at 50 ºC. Argon gas is also used as the ECD make-up gas. Moisture is added to the Argon gas line via a hydrated copper sulphate trap which helps to improve the baseline stability. \r\n\r\n"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8414,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 290,
                "uuid": "065b9d39e47b4228a84239654a4e9530",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Laquila:No2 LIF",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8415,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 326,
                "uuid": "c39cb6ce89ea4b4a9c3d3d9ae602f983",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "UEA: Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometer (PTR-MS)",
                "abstract": "The PTR-MS (Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometer) is an aircraft-certified instrument for the real time measurement of a selected range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the atmosphere at concentrations down to approximately 50 parts per trillion (ppt). The types of compound measured include:\r\n\r\n• Oxygenated hydrocarbons (e.g. methanol, acetone, acetaldehyde, acetic acid, methyl vinyl ketone and methacrolein)\r\n• Aromatic hydrocarbons (benzene, toluene, C8 and C9 aromatics)\r\n• Biogenic hydrocarbons (isoprene, total monoterpenes)\r\n• Acetonitrile; an excellent tracer of biomass burning\r\n\r\nThe PTR-MS is ideally suited for use on an aircraft since it produces a near real-time signal. In this way it has a distinct advantage over (and acts as a valuable complement to) traditional chromatographic or bottle sampling techniques. Sampling cycle times of down to ~1 second can be achieved, dependant on the number of compounds analysed at any one time, enabling small scale events such as pollution or biomass burning plumes to be sampled effectively. The instrument samples from the main aircraft inlet manifold via a short length of PFA tubing.\r\n\r\nPotential applications include:\r\n• Measurement of oxygenates in the upper troposphere in a study of the free radical chemistry and its sources in this region\r\n• Studies of oxygenate and isoprene emissions from vegetation in the tropics and at mid latitudes\r\n• Studies of oxygenate formation in urban plumes in the boundary layer for improvement of models of regional photochemistry\r\n• Studies of biomass burning in the tropics and over Northern Hemisphere forests to assess their contribution to the global carbon budget and to ozone formation"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17537,
                "uuid": "f64af7c5b2de41db88f2b83cd0f1f75b",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B564 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8416,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
                "uuid": "306ac6a158514192baf813b4b8b46be7",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE (Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements/British AErospace) systems: Set of FAAM core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core instruments are provided and can be operated by FAAM. Data will be made available routinely at BADC. Some core instruments may not be operated on all flights. The standard core instrument data may, in some cases, be enhanced (e.g. provided at higher frequency or with greater accuracy) by collaboration with another group."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8417,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5651,
                "uuid": "34ab3e5c7d8f48c2a6019d4f7d3851fb",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Set of several core and/or non-core instruments",
                "abstract": "Core and non-core instruments on board the FAAM BAe-146 aircraft"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8418,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 115,
                "uuid": "fa81f4481fc0403d843dae1be91c0e01",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Leeds: Fluorecence Assay by Gas Expansion instrument (FAGE)",
                "abstract": "This is a ground-based laser-induced fluorescence instrument for detection of OH, HO2, and RO2 radicals. OH reactivity measurements using a laser flash-photolysis technique can be provided alongside the radical measurements. The instrument is housed in and operated from a custom-built 20 ft shipping container. OH and HO2 measurement is challenging but necessary due to their role in atmospheric chemistry. The laser induced fluorescence at low pressure is measured. \r\n \r\nThis instrument has a wide range of applications including simultaneous detection of OH, HO2, RO2 radical species and total OH reactivity. Detection of iodine monoxide and glyoxal is also possible, although not at the same time as the other radical measurements."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8419,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 99,
                "uuid": "98ab5fc9e63c403792e90e6b9b69e3c8",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "University of Manchester/UFAM: Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) - formerly umist-ams",
                "abstract": "The Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) is the only currently available instrument capable of providing quantitative size and chemical mass loading information in real-time for non-refractory sub-micron aerosol particles. The AMS couples size-resolved particle sampling and mass spectrometric techniques into a single real-time measurement system. The Aerodyne AMS has been deployed world-wide at fixed sites, and on mobile laboratory, ship and aircraft platforms. Over 100 instruments are in use in industrial, academic and government laboratories.\r\n\r\nScientifically, the instrument can deliver quantitative mass concentrations of the major non-refractory chemical species present in submicron particles (ammonium, nitrate, sulphate, organics and non-sea-salt chloride) in microgrammes per cubic metre. It is also capable of delivering these concentrations as a function of diameter as a dM/dlog(D) distribution. Further to this, information on the chemical nature of the organic fraction can be derived by inspecting the relative sizes of the peaks within the mass spectrum. In order to produce fully quality assured and meaningful results, the data must be processed offline or near-real-time. The Compact Time-of-Flight AMS (C-ToF-AMS) is a version that enables continuous acquisition of complete mass spectra (1-800 m/z) of all sampled particles at rates as fast as 80 kHz."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8420,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 294,
                "uuid": "0785c5e1d0f241fd9ada13e3e0e4160a",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Laquila:Noy LIF",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8421,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 71,
                "uuid": "e83377d7770b4ac3b9ecf8d6eeaf769b",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "York: Dual Column Gas Chromatograph-Flame Ionization Detector (DC-GC-FID)",
                "abstract": "The Dual Channel Gas Chromatograph with Flame Ionisation Detectors is capable of reporting mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. \r\n\r\nThe output includes mixing ratios of a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The data from the instrument are split (across three seperate files: -fid1, -fid2, -fid3) according to compound type. The output for -fid1 is Alkanes.\r\n\r\nThe instrument has variable measurement frequency dependent upon sampling frequency of the Whole Air Sampling (WAS) system.\r\n\r\nSamples of air are dried, and then pre-concentrated on a dual-bed adsorbent trap held at sub-ambient temperature (typically -20°C). Sample volumes of up to one litre of air are acquired and then the trap is resistively heated during desorption within a stream of helium (or hydrogen) and injected into the GC oven for analysis. The eluent is split in approximately equal portions between a Na2SO4 deactivated aluminium oxide (Al2O3) porous layer open tubular (PLOT) column (50 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the less polar NMHCs and a LOWOX columns (10 m, 0.53 mm id, Varian Netherlands) for analysis of the more polar VOCs including monoterpenes and oxygenated species. Analytes elute from the GC columns into two flame ionisation detectors for detection. The GC oven has been programmed for optimal separation of all compounds of interest. \r\n\r\nThere are two near-identical GC instruments for the measurement of Volatile organic compounds. The first is a Perkin Elmer GC with home-built autosampler and flow control box, a home-built preconcentrator and an Ai Qualitek injector. The other is an Agilent GC with a MARKES UNITY2 preconcentrator and CIA Advantage autosampler. \r\n\r\nMeasurement of VOCs in the atmosphere have been used for a wide range of applications including providing information regarding: quantification of emissions; air mass age; and atmospheric processing during transport."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 8422,
            "platform": {
                "ob_id": 51,
                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
                "short_code": "plat",
                "title": "FAAM BAe-146-301 Large Atmospheric Research Aircraft G-LUXE",
                "abstract": "FAAM is the result of a collaboration between the Met Office(TM) and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and has been established as part of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) to provide an aircraft measurement platform for use by all the UK atmospheric research community on campaigns throughout the world. The modified BAE 146 aircraft (jet type) is owned by BAE Systems and operated for them by Directflight. The Home Base is at Cranfield University, Bedfordshire.\r\n\r\nThe FAAM BAE 146 aircraft allows for in-situ measurements taken by core and non-core instruments onboard the aircraft. The in-situ measurements will then be transported to the research organisations' respective laboratory for analysis"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 5799,
                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems: Subset of FAAM core instruments measuring cloud physics data",
                "abstract": "Instrument.abstract: DETAILS NEEDED"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 17541,
                "uuid": "86c6df1db5af4a89b02ce84fd4d84eab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B567 Acquisition"
            }
        }
    ]
}