1 00:00:00,110 --> 00:00:04,200 On our seventh research flight, we left Punta Arenas, Chile 2 00:00:04,200 --> 00:00:08,380 and flew to Ascension Island in the middle of the south Atlantic ocean. 3 00:00:08,380 --> 00:00:12,520 This is often the most stressful flight for the pilots, 4 00:00:12,520 --> 00:00:16,680 because there are not many places we can divert to. Thankfully, we had pretty good weather this time around 5 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:20,800 and we made it without incident. Last time we were in Ascension, in August, 6 00:00:20,800 --> 00:00:24,850 the air quality was pretty bad. There were fires from Africa, 7 00:00:24,850 --> 00:00:28,940 influencing everything. This time around, the air quality was actually pretty good; 8 00:00:28,940 --> 00:00:33,150 we could actually see the ground on our way in. As we left Ascension, 9 00:00:33,150 --> 00:00:37,250 on our eighth research flight, heading to Lajes in the Azore Islands, 10 00:00:37,250 --> 00:00:41,250 we saw all the pollution Ascension had seen last time around, but we saw it 11 00:00:41,250 --> 00:00:45,820 as soon as we left Ascension and for nearly three hours as we were flying north. 12 00:00:45,820 --> 00:00:50,050 We saw fresh fires from Africa and the concentrations 13 00:00:50,050 --> 00:00:54,100 in that were huge. There was a mixture of emissions from the fires, 14 00:00:54,100 --> 00:00:58,250 dust from the Sahara and everything else mixed in together. 15 00:00:58,250 --> 00:01:02,250 So it made for probably the most exciting chemistry we've seen, as we flew along 16 00:01:02,250 --> 00:01:11,605 or probably the most depressing, too.