NASAโ€™s flying observatory, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, has returned to science operations with a new series of flights designed to study the chemistry of galaxies.

SOFIA flights were suspended on March 19 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. With the resumption of flights out of SOFIAโ€™s base at NASAโ€™s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Palmdale, California, new procedures are in place to ensure the health and safety of staff while enabling the observations of celestial targets visible from the Northern Hemisphere. SOFIA started by flying two flights beginning Aug. 17, to allow the team time to evaluate and adjust the new procedures, and now plans to return to its regular observing schedule with about four flights each week.

โ€œWe are so thrilled to begin observations again and very thankful to the scientists, operations staff and pilots who are returning us to flight,โ€ said Margaret Meixner, SOFIAโ€™s science mission operations director at the Universities Space Research Association. โ€œIn this flight series, SOFIA is studying the chemistry that influences the creation and evolution of galaxies across cosmic history. We cannot wait to see the data.โ€

The team will explore distant galaxies to learn how black holes control the galaxiesโ€™ growth and how quickly stars form in them. To further understand how stars are born, the team will examine how magnetic fields affect the celestial clouds that incubate natal stars.

In June, SOFIAโ€™s annual deployment to Christchurch, New Zealand was deemed not feasible given ongoing concerns related to the pandemic. Insteadย a new schedule wasย coordinated to take advantage of observing opportunities from California. New safety procedures are designed to meet NASA and Federal Aviation Administration requirements for safety and return to on-site work. New procedures include flying a minimal number of mission crew, social distancing and personal protective equipment for staff, and extra sanitation of the aircraft during and in-between flights.

SOFIAย is a Boeing 747SP jetliner modified to carry a 106-inch diameter telescope. It is a joint project ofย NASA and the Germanย Aerospace Center, DLR.ย NASAโ€™s Ames Research Center inย Californiaโ€™s Siliconย Valley manages the SOFIA program, science and missionย operations inย cooperationย with the Universities Space Research Associationย headquartered inย Columbia, Maryland, and the Germanย SOFIA Institute (DSI) at the University of Stuttgart. The aircraft is maintained and operated fromย NASAโ€™s Armstrong Flight Research Center Hangar 703.ย