Sofia, the Historic Airplane-Borne Telescope, Lands for the Last Time | WIRED
The Jet With a 17-Ton Telescope That NASA Uses as a Flying Observatory | WIRED
Why NASA's SOFIA Telescope On A Plane is "Perfectly Balanced" - YouTube
One of my first images with my new telescope. : r/aviation
Riding along with a Stratospheric Telescope - Scientific American Blog Network
Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy - Wikipedia
Sofia infrared telescope hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy
Inside Sofia, NASA's Airplane-Mounted Telescope | Popular Science
26 January 2021, Hamburg: Behind the open hatch, the reflecting telescope of the flying stratospheric observatory "SOFIA" can be seen inside a converted Boeing 747 during final checks at Lufthansa Technik. The
NASA's Flying SOFIA Telescope Observatory Damaged by Storm - CNET
Science on the SPOT: Up all Night with SOFIA, NASA's Flying Observatory | KQED
NASA's SOFIA plane telescope makes pit stop at MSP Airport
Airplane flew in front of telescope while watching moon : r/airplanes
SOFIA airborne observatory model - Stock Image - C051/9416 - Science Photo Library
Plane crosses sun seen through telescope! - Lost infinity
NASA DLR SOFIA 747-SP telescope aircraft. Graphic updated with telescope door open. That bit of art by Don Philip Troutman, c 202… | Aircraft, Telescope, Troutman
NASA's Boeing 747 Airborne Telescope SOFIA Discovers Water on the Moon
ESA Science & Technology - The cargo aircraft that transported the James Webb Space Telescope
NASA — Eight Things to Know About Our Flying Observatory
How NASA's Flying Telescope Captured the Cosmos | The SOFIA Observatory - YouTube
Costly SOFIA Telescope Faces Termination after Years of Problems | Scientific American
SOFIA's Final Flight – SOFIA: Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy
On board SOFIA - an airplane with the telescope | SFB 956 (2011-2022)
NASA's SOFIA airborne observatory takes flight – an annotated graphic – Engineering & Technology magazine
sofia - Is it possible to mount a telescope on a plane? Is it beneficial? - Astronomy Stack Exchange