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<br />Pa ge 24 <br /> <br />IV. Conduct of Operations <br />A. Aircraft mission types <br />Throughout the following discussion it should be borne in mind <br />that the pilot in command has the responsibility and authority to <br />terminate any particular type of aircraft operation for reasons <br />of safety. Thus, the Bureau aircraft scientist may request that <br />particular patterns be flown but the pilot shall turn down any <br />and all requests he believes might result in hazardous flight. <br /> <br />The instrumented aircraft will be operated for two types of <br />missions. The primary mission will be to survey the spatiill and <br />temporal distribution of SLW, ice particles, and winds over the <br />high terrain of central Arizona. The secondary mission will be <br />to measure the transport and diffusion of SF6 released from <br />either the ground or in the air upwind of the Happy Jack <br />observing site (hereafter called Happy Jack). The cloud physics <br />aircraft will be the University of Wyoming King Air 200T <br />described in Chapter III. The SF6 dispensing aircraft will be <br />obtained locally. <br /> <br />The primary research investigations will be conducted in airspace <br />Area 2 (see fig. 1), which contains the Happy Jack region. <br />Secondary efforts wi 11 be concentrated in Area 3 contai ni n~1 the <br />Mogollon Rim area north of Payson, while Area 1 will be used only <br />