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=9300
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=9400",
    "previous": "https://api.catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/api/v3/ipps/?format=api&limit=100&offset=9200",
    "results": [
        {
            "ob_id": 9655,
            "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": 18624,
                "uuid": "8b8e5f149a564084856f8f810a7897e5",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B356 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B356 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9656,
            "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": 18624,
                "uuid": "8b8e5f149a564084856f8f810a7897e5",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B356 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B356 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9657,
            "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": 11230,
                "uuid": "4475880cd0f2432fa88d2cbe1e03a791",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Manchester: Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2)",
                "abstract": "The Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) is manufactured by Droplet Measurement Technologies (DMT). It measures the soot (also known as black carbon) content of individual airborne particles, known as aerosols. \r\n\r\nThe SP2 is a laser-based instrument, which detects black carbon particles by heating them to their point of 'incandescence'. This results in the emission of radiation that can be measured and related to the mass of black carbon. \r\n\r\nThe instrument can be operated in a range of environments (lab, ground-based, aircraft) and its high sensitivity and fast response makes it ideal for a number of atmospheric science applications. The measurement frequency of this instrument is 1Hz. \r\n\r\nThe outputs include: black carbon mass, number and size; as well as information relating to the mixing state of black carbon-containing particles. Number and volume concentration of scattering particles; as well as their optical size are also included. \r\n\r\nBlack carbon is an important component of atmospheric aerosol and is a strong absorber of solar radiation. It is a product of incomplete combustion activities and the major sources include vehicle engines, burning of domestic fuels for heating/cooking and forest/agricultural fires. Human activities have increased the amount of black carbon in the atmosphere, which leads to a warming of the Earth's temperature.\r\n\r\nThis instrument is regularly used on the FAAM BAe 146 aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18628,
                "uuid": "be6853ad59fc4a6fabf51f3717eed42c",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9658,
            "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": 18628,
                "uuid": "be6853ad59fc4a6fabf51f3717eed42c",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9659,
            "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": 6523,
                "uuid": "5aed8184a7ed4df7aa55f56afac4ff00",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Met Office Wet Nephelometer",
                "abstract": "The Met Office Wet Nephelometer is a system for measuring the dependence of aerosol scattering on relative humidity."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18628,
                "uuid": "be6853ad59fc4a6fabf51f3717eed42c",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9660,
            "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": 18628,
                "uuid": "be6853ad59fc4a6fabf51f3717eed42c",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9661,
            "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": 18628,
                "uuid": "be6853ad59fc4a6fabf51f3717eed42c",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B357 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9662,
            "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": 18632,
                "uuid": "68d8ddced25f4af28c46e8521e04b299",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B354 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B354 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9663,
            "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": 11230,
                "uuid": "4475880cd0f2432fa88d2cbe1e03a791",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "Manchester: Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2)",
                "abstract": "The Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) is manufactured by Droplet Measurement Technologies (DMT). It measures the soot (also known as black carbon) content of individual airborne particles, known as aerosols. \r\n\r\nThe SP2 is a laser-based instrument, which detects black carbon particles by heating them to their point of 'incandescence'. This results in the emission of radiation that can be measured and related to the mass of black carbon. \r\n\r\nThe instrument can be operated in a range of environments (lab, ground-based, aircraft) and its high sensitivity and fast response makes it ideal for a number of atmospheric science applications. The measurement frequency of this instrument is 1Hz. \r\n\r\nThe outputs include: black carbon mass, number and size; as well as information relating to the mixing state of black carbon-containing particles. Number and volume concentration of scattering particles; as well as their optical size are also included. \r\n\r\nBlack carbon is an important component of atmospheric aerosol and is a strong absorber of solar radiation. It is a product of incomplete combustion activities and the major sources include vehicle engines, burning of domestic fuels for heating/cooking and forest/agricultural fires. Human activities have increased the amount of black carbon in the atmosphere, which leads to a warming of the Earth's temperature.\r\n\r\nThis instrument is regularly used on the FAAM BAe 146 aircraft."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18636,
                "uuid": "7010319390074735b9ab8d92e7b4aaab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9664,
            "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": 18636,
                "uuid": "7010319390074735b9ab8d92e7b4aaab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9665,
            "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": 18636,
                "uuid": "7010319390074735b9ab8d92e7b4aaab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9666,
            "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": 18636,
                "uuid": "7010319390074735b9ab8d92e7b4aaab",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B355 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9667,
            "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": 18640,
                "uuid": "be44a954b0fd4b8d93a2a322e63d6327",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9668,
            "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": 713,
                "uuid": "39b878b7689f4725aaeef97dd4094e8f",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18640,
                "uuid": "be44a954b0fd4b8d93a2a322e63d6327",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9669,
            "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": 18640,
                "uuid": "be44a954b0fd4b8d93a2a322e63d6327",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B929 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9670,
            "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": 18644,
                "uuid": "6cfdcaa1b1c94bfaad82a2528b7c61ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9671,
            "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": 18644,
                "uuid": "6cfdcaa1b1c94bfaad82a2528b7c61ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9672,
            "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": 713,
                "uuid": "39b878b7689f4725aaeef97dd4094e8f",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18644,
                "uuid": "6cfdcaa1b1c94bfaad82a2528b7c61ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9673,
            "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": 18644,
                "uuid": "6cfdcaa1b1c94bfaad82a2528b7c61ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9674,
            "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": 18644,
                "uuid": "6cfdcaa1b1c94bfaad82a2528b7c61ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B928 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9675,
            "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": 18648,
                "uuid": "4ed7d410a2f04d26a79c91593f50b575",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9676,
            "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": 5250,
                "uuid": "1b3e4500e8c347698de4d264b6daa0da",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM: DMT Dual Column Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN)",
                "abstract": "The CCN (Cloud Condensation Nuclei) counter measures the number of cloud condensation nuclei in a sample for a given set point supersaturation. The column operates on the principle that the diffusion of water vapour in air is quicker than heat allowing a region in the center of the CCN column to be supersaturated when a vertical temperature gradient in is maintained."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18648,
                "uuid": "4ed7d410a2f04d26a79c91593f50b575",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9677,
            "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": 18648,
                "uuid": "4ed7d410a2f04d26a79c91593f50b575",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition"
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        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9678,
            "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": 15141,
                "uuid": "50d7f4a192c44f3eb410745897683a0d",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: faam-3786cpc",
                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument faam-3786cpc"
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18648,
                "uuid": "4ed7d410a2f04d26a79c91593f50b575",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B479 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 9679,
            "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": 18652,
                "uuid": "660f366d8df74dfdae646416bdbd1792",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 9680,
            "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": 18652,
                "uuid": "660f366d8df74dfdae646416bdbd1792",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9681,
            "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": 18652,
                "uuid": "660f366d8df74dfdae646416bdbd1792",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B921 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9682,
            "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": 18656,
                "uuid": "51b0bd495f8b4113b4f7d88e5a6eb9fe",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9683,
            "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": 18656,
                "uuid": "51b0bd495f8b4113b4f7d88e5a6eb9fe",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9684,
            "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": 713,
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                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
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                "short_code": "acq",
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                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition"
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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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                "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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                "ob_id": 18656,
                "uuid": "51b0bd495f8b4113b4f7d88e5a6eb9fe",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B920 Acquisition"
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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"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 448,
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                "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": "51b0bd495f8b4113b4f7d88e5a6eb9fe",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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"
            },
            "instrument": {
                "ob_id": 61,
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                "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": 18660,
                "uuid": "facf65eddcab4a1f8beaf5e5363e49ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B923 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B923 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 9688,
            "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."
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                "ob_id": 18660,
                "uuid": "facf65eddcab4a1f8beaf5e5363e49ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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"
            },
            "instrument": {
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                "uuid": "39b878b7689f4725aaeef97dd4094e8f",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
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                "uuid": "facf65eddcab4a1f8beaf5e5363e49ed",
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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": {
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                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "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": "facf65eddcab4a1f8beaf5e5363e49ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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": "facf65eddcab4a1f8beaf5e5363e49ed",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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 (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": "4a131ecdfd3d493c927ea1aee82a76c3",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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: DMT Dual Column Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN)",
                "abstract": "The CCN (Cloud Condensation Nuclei) counter measures the number of cloud condensation nuclei in a sample for a given set point supersaturation. The column operates on the principle that the diffusion of water vapour in air is quicker than heat allowing a region in the center of the CCN column to be supersaturated when a vertical temperature gradient in is maintained."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
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                "uuid": "4a131ecdfd3d493c927ea1aee82a76c3",
                "short_code": "acq",
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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"
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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": "4a131ecdfd3d493c927ea1aee82a76c3",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B478 Acquisition",
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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"
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                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: faam-3786cpc",
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                "uuid": "4a131ecdfd3d493c927ea1aee82a76c3",
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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": {
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                "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": 18668,
                "uuid": "2604fd5dc55d43ae90fc92d4d2f6b30f",
                "short_code": "acq",
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                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
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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"
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                "uuid": "c7e2a6a5c6204b09ac3a5c266752ca9c",
                "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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                "short_code": "acq",
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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"
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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"
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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"
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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"
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                "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": 18680,
                "uuid": "c73352c8a56d40e88be3891ae974ac01",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B926 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B926 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9713,
            "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": 18686,
                "uuid": "6cee22f40b7649af8ab4d258b3d91294",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9714,
            "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": 713,
                "uuid": "39b878b7689f4725aaeef97dd4094e8f",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18686,
                "uuid": "6cee22f40b7649af8ab4d258b3d91294",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9715,
            "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": 18686,
                "uuid": "6cee22f40b7649af8ab4d258b3d91294",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B728 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9716,
            "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": 18690,
                "uuid": "ddd8fcc2ed264de083836ef31bbe60e3",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9717,
            "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": 18690,
                "uuid": "ddd8fcc2ed264de083836ef31bbe60e3",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9718,
            "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": 18690,
                "uuid": "ddd8fcc2ed264de083836ef31bbe60e3",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B587 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9719,
            "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": 18714,
                "uuid": "2fc6510a015d474d9942bdffc25ad197",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9720,
            "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": 18714,
                "uuid": "2fc6510a015d474d9942bdffc25ad197",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9721,
            "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": 18714,
                "uuid": "2fc6510a015d474d9942bdffc25ad197",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9722,
            "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": 18714,
                "uuid": "2fc6510a015d474d9942bdffc25ad197",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B815 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9723,
            "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": 18718,
                "uuid": "044d8e2b549744708facfd339cadef52",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9724,
            "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": 18718,
                "uuid": "044d8e2b549744708facfd339cadef52",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9725,
            "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": 713,
                "uuid": "39b878b7689f4725aaeef97dd4094e8f",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
            },
            "relatedTo": {
                "ob_id": 18718,
                "uuid": "044d8e2b549744708facfd339cadef52",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9726,
            "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": 18718,
                "uuid": "044d8e2b549744708facfd339cadef52",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9727,
            "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": 18718,
                "uuid": "044d8e2b549744708facfd339cadef52",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B814 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9728,
            "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"
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                "short_code": "instr",
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                "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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                "short_code": "acq",
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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"
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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"
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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"
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                "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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                "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",
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                "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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                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B816 Acquisition",
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                "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"
            },
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                "short_code": "instr",
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                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument metoffice-aimms"
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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"
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                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
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                "short_code": "acq",
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                "uuid": "dda4596d5d374564acf8c79b7a119127",
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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"
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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": "56e4605d92b64e9484159053fb39a7fa",
                "short_code": "acq",
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        {
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            "platform": {
                "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": 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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                "uuid": "56e4605d92b64e9484159053fb39a7fa",
                "short_code": "acq",
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        {
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                "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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                "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": 18730,
                "uuid": "7804e06fa75345218d04869154ec84a6",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B811 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B811 Acquisition"
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        {
            "ob_id": 9739,
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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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                "uuid": "137f63ed163c469fbc09ab78cdb64339",
                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "New Instrument: metoffice-aimms",
                "abstract": "New instrument created, more details to follow for instrument metoffice-aimms"
            },
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                "uuid": "7804e06fa75345218d04869154ec84a6",
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                "title": "FAAM Flight B811 Acquisition",
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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": {
                "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": 18734,
                "uuid": "53f7809988c647f08b33c48fbcd1fff4",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B810 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"
            },
            "instrument": {
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                "short_code": "instr",
                "title": "FAAM/BAE systems or other aircraft: Dropsonde",
                "abstract": "The Vaisala Dropsonde RD93 is a general-purpose dropsonde for high-altitude deployment from a variety of aircraft. Slowed in its descent through the atmosphere by a special parachute, the RD93 measures the atmospheric profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and wind from the point of launch to the ground."
            },
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                "uuid": "53f7809988c647f08b33c48fbcd1fff4",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B810 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B810 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"
            },
            "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": 18734,
                "uuid": "53f7809988c647f08b33c48fbcd1fff4",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B810 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B810 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9743,
            "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": 18734,
                "uuid": "53f7809988c647f08b33c48fbcd1fff4",
                "short_code": "acq",
                "title": "FAAM Flight B810 Acquisition",
                "abstract": "FAAM Flight B810 Acquisition"
            }
        },
        {
            "ob_id": 9744,
            "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"
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}