NASA Will Crash Helicopter for Science Wednesday: Watch It Live

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These dummies are about to go on a wild ride. On Wednesday (Aug. 28), NASA researchers will load them into the body of a former Marine helicopter and crash it.

These dummies are about to go on a wild ride.

On Wednesday (Aug. 28), NASA researchers will load them into the body of a former Marine helicopter and crash it.

The test, which is aimed at improving aircraft safety features, will be broadcast live at 1 p.m. ET from NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. [ WATCH LIVE @ 1:00 p.m. ET: NASA'S Helicopter Crash Test ]

The chopper will be hoisted by cables about 30 feet into the air and then pendulum-swung into a bed of soil, slamming into the ground at about 30 mph (48 km/h). These conditions will mimic a real-world, survivable impact scenario, according to NASA.

The 13 crash test dummies onboard will include a side-facing dummy and one that is lying down like a person on a medical stretcher. Cameras inside and outside of the vehicle will track how the dummies move before, during and after the crash, lead test engineer Martin Annett said in a statement.

More than 350 channels of data will be recorded inside the aircraft, Annett said. The monitoring devices include a motion detector that's used in video games to track gestures, faces and voices.

"We installed an Xbox Kinect inside the helicopter," test engineer Justin Littell said in a statement. "We want to see if it can be used as an additional instrument to track dummies' movements."

One side of the helicopter, a former CH-46 Sea Knight, has been painted white with black polka dots, though not for aesthetic reasons. Each dot is a data point that will be tracked by cameras taking 500 images per second from the ground. Using that data, researchers can  reconstruct the crash  and see just how the chopper bends and breaks when it wrecks.

The results of the tests will be used to improve rotorcraft performance and efficiency. NASA says the overall goal of the research is to make helicopters quicker, quieter, safer, greener and capable of carrying more passengers and cargo.

Follow LiveScience, &. Original article on  LiveScience.

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