Monday, May 7, 2012
NASA Launches Unprecedented Drone Mission to Study the Mysteries of Hurricane Formation
An unmanned Global Hawk recon drone will join a team of aircraft—all
equipped with advanced weather instrumentation to observe the 2010 storm
season closer than ever before. This weekend, NASA is launching a
six-week mission to study the formation and intensification of
hurricanes, hoping to inform forecast models and improve hurricane
prediction abilities. The GRIP experiment (for Genesis and Rapid
Intensification Processes) involves more than a dozen satellite-quality
scientific instruments onboard a Global Hawk unmanned drone, a converted
WB-57 cold-war bomber and a modified DC-8. Ramesh Kakar, the weather
focus area leader for NASA’s science programs, says the goal is to
improve understanding of the physical processes that generate
hurricanes. He hopes forecasters will assimilate GRIP data into their
prediction models, improving forecasts and providing earlier warning for
communities in a burgeoning hurricane’s path.
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