NASA To Fly Into Hurricane Research This Summer

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July 07, 2010

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx   
202-358-0918 

Rob Gutro 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
robert.j.gutro@xxxxxxxx   
301-286-4044 


RELEASE: 10-160

NASA TO FLY INTO HURRICANE RESEARCH THIS SUMMER

WASHINGTON -- Three NASA aircraft will begin flights to study tropical 
cyclones on Aug. 15 during the agency's first major U.S.-based 
hurricane field campaign since 2001. The Genesis and Rapid 
Intensification Processes mission, or GRIP, will study the creation 
and rapid intensification of hurricanes. 

One of the major challenges in tropical cyclone forecasting is knowing 
when a tropical cyclone is going to form. Scientists will use the 
data from this six-week field mission to better understand how 
tropical storms form and develop into major hurricanes. Mission 
scientists will also be looking at how storms strengthen, weaken and 
die. 

"This is really going to be a game-changing hurricane experiment," 
said Ramesh Kakar, GRIP program scientist at NASA Headquarters in 
Washington. "For the first time, scientists will be able to study 
these storms and the conditions that produce them for up to 20 hours 
straight. GRIP will provide a sustained, continuous look at hurricane 
behavior at critical times during their formation and evolution." 

GRIP is being led by Kakar and three project scientists: Scott Braun 
and Gerry Heymsfield of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md., and Edward Zipser of the University of Utah in Salt 
Lake City. 

Three NASA satellites will play a key role in supplying data about 
tropical cyclones during the field mission. The Tropical Rainfall 
Measuring Mission, or TRMM, managed by both NASA and the Japan 
Aerospace Exploration Agency, will provide rainfall estimates and 
help pinpoint the locations of "hot towers" or powerhouse 
thunderstorms in tropical cyclones. The CloudSat spacecraft will 
provide cloud profiles of storms, which include altitude, 
temperatures and rainfall intensity. 

Several instruments onboard NASA's Aqua satellite will provide 
infrared, visible and microwave data that reveal such factors as 
temperature, air pressure, precipitation, cloud ice content, 
convection and sea surface temperatures. 

The three NASA aircraft taking part in the mission are a DC-8, WB-57 
and a remotely piloted Global Hawk. The DC-8 will fly out of the Fort 
Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida. The WB-57 will 
be based at the NASA Johnson Space Center's Ellington Field in 
Houston. The Global Hawk will be piloted and based from NASA's Dryden 
Flight Research Center, in Palmdale, Calif., while flying for up to 
20 hours in the vicinity of hurricanes in the Atlantic and Gulf of 
Mexico. 

The aircraft will carry a total of 15 instruments, ranging from an 
advanced microwave sounder to dropsondes that take measurements as 
they fall through the atmosphere to the ocean surface. In order to 
determine how a tropical cyclone will behave, the instruments will 
analyze many factors including: cloud droplet and aerosol 
concentrations, air temperature, wind speed and direction in storms 
and on the ocean's surface, air pressure, humidity, lightning, 
aerosols and water vapor. The data also will validate the 
observations from space. 

"It was a lot of hard work to assemble the science team and the 
payload for the three aircraft for GRIP," Kakar said. "But now that 
the start of the field experiment is almost here, we can hardly 
contain our excitement." 

Several NASA field centers are involved in the mission including 
Goddard, Johnson, Dryden, the Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, 
Calif., Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., Langley 
Research Center in Hampton, Va., and Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala. Centers provide scientists, instrument teams, 
project management or aircraft operations. 

GRIP mission planning is being coordinated with two separate hurricane 
airborne research campaigns that will be in the field at the same 
time. The National Science Foundation is sponsoring the 
PRE-Depression Investigation of Cloud-systems in the Tropics mission. 
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is conducting the 
Intensity Forecast Experiment 2010. These flights will be based in 
St. Croix in the Virgin Islands and Tampa, Fla. 

For more information about the GRIP field experiment, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/grip 


For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov   

	
-end-



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