Recent and Ongoing Improvements at Poker Flat Research Range

Since Poker Flat Research Range was created in 1968, it has undergone various upgrades and improvements to keep pace with technology and to support increasingly complicated research missions. A major upgrade of the range was initiated in 1988 after the U.S. Arctic Research Commission emphasized the importance of the site as a national resource for polar upper atmospheric studies. Since then, many projects have been initiated to make the range a national center for space and environmental research in the Arctic, and to enable it to serve as a focal point for future research by NASA, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Department of Defense, and other agencies. Japan's Communications Research Laboratories has become an important research partner, and other Japanese agencies and universities are involved with projects at Poker Flat.


Current Facilities Projects

As the decade draws to a close, several projects are underway to improve basic infrastructure at Poker Flat, and to add scientific research capabilities. These include:

Other ongoing improvements at Poker Flat include communications networks suitable for data transmission, computer activity, video and voice communications; roads, water and electric power distribution; fire protection, and sanitary facilities. For more information on recent construction, please see the Division of Design and Construction's Poker Flat Project Page.


Previous Upgrades

The first major effort in the recent improvement program was to upgrade an outdated electrical system at the range and to provide support for the 1992 Spirit II campaign, a complex mission including the first guided rocket launched from the range. Since then, other projects have included improving launch sites and scientific instrumentation to enable the range to accommodate larger, higher-flying sounding rockets and to perform a broader mission of basic research. Some of the facilities resulting from these efforts are:

In addition to the work done at Poker Flat, part of the effort has been directed at improving the support facilities which are necessary for efficient research activities.

A network of downrange observatories linked to PFRR via real-time telecommunications from the farthest parts of Alaska is being improved and expanded. The downrange observatories will continuously record magnetometer and riometer data, and some observatories will provide platforms for optical instruments and other instruments used during research projects.

The High-Latitude Monitoring Station (HLMS) near Anchorage, formerly operated by NOAA, has been acquired and integrated into the PFRR observatory network. HLMS supplies magnetometer, riometer, total electron content (TEC), and auroral radar data to PFRR.

The Data Analysis Center at the Geophysical Institute processes, stores, and analyzes the data from PFRR, the downrange observatories, and NOAA/SEC. The Data Analysis Center is the home of this WWW server, and supports anonymous ftp access as well.


Modified 28 September 1999 by ddr