SOFIA Saved!
July 31, 2006
This artist's concept shows the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) flying at 12,500 meters (41,000 feet). At this altitude, SOFIA's 2.5-meter-wide telescope is above more than 99% of the atmospheric water vapor that blocks cosmic infrared signals from reaching the ground.
Courtesy NASA.
Nearing completion in a hanger in Waco, Texas, the modified 747 that will soon take flight as the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) sits with its telescope-cavity door open.
Courtesy NASA, USRA, and L-3 Communications Integrated Systems.
NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) will move forward as well. Astronomers were concerned that WISE would be sacrificed to restore SOFIA. Instead SIM PlanetQuest, part of NASA's effort to find planets around other stars, will be postponed until astronomers can reconsider its importance relative to other space-astronomy missions on their wish list in a time of ever scarcer resources.

