NASA Cold Weather Airborne Campaign to Measure Falling Snow

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Jan. 12, 2012

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

Rani Gran
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-2483
rani.c.gran@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 12-016

NASA COLD WEATHER AIRBORNE CAMPAIGN TO MEASURE FALLING SNOW

WASHINGTON - Beginning Jan. 17, NASA will fly an airborne science 
laboratory above Canadian snowstorms to tackle a difficult challenge 
facing the upcoming Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite 
mission -- measuring snowfall from space. 

GPM is an international satellite mission that will set a new standard 
for precipitation measurements from space, providing next-generation 
observations of worldwide rain and snow every three hours. It is also 
the first mission designed to detect falling snow from space.

"Snow is notoriously hard to measure as it falls," said Walter 
Petersen, the GPM ground validation scientist at NASA's Wallops 
Flight Facility in Virginia. "Snowflakes contain varying amounts of 
air and water, and they flutter, wobble and drift as they leave the 
clouds." 

Knowing how "wet" a snowflake is allows scientists to measure overall 
water content. A wet, heavy snow can shut down a city, and melted 
snow is a crucial source of freshwater in many areas.

Working with Environment Canada, NASA's GPM Cold-season Precipitation 
Experiment (GCPEx) will measure light rain and snow in Ontario from 
Jan. 17 to Feb. 29. The field campaign is designed to improve 
satellite estimates of falling snow and test ground validation 
capabilities in advance of the planned launch of the GPM Core 
satellite in 2014. 

NASA's DC-8 airborne science laboratory will fly out of Bangor, Maine, 
carrying radar and a radiometer that will simulate the measurements 
to be taken from space by GPM. At an altitude of 33,000 feet (10 
kilometers), the DC-8 will make multiple passes over an extensive 
ground network of snow gauges and sensors at Environment Canada's 
Center for Atmospheric Research Experiments north of Toronto.

The GCPEx field experiment will help scientists match measurements of 
snow in the air and on the ground with the satellite's measurements. 

"We will be looking at the precipitation and the physics of 
precipitation, such as snowflake types, sizes, shapes, numbers and 
water content," Petersen said. "These properties affect both how we 
interpret and improve our measurements."

GPM's Core satellite is being built at NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt, Md., with instruments provided by NASA and its 
mission partner, the Japanese Aerospace and Exploration Agency 
(JAXA). The spacecraft will orbit Earth at a 65-degree inclination, 
covering the world from the Antarctic Circle to the Arctic Circle.

GPM will carry a microwave radiometer and a dual-frequency 
precipitation radar that distinguishes a snowflake's size and shape, 
which affects how much water it holds. Knowing these microphysical 
properties will lead to more accurate estimates of rain and snowfall, 
especially during winter and at high latitudes where snow is the 
dominant form of precipitation.

The Ontario region is prone to both lake effect snow squalls and 
widespread snowstorms. If the opportunity exists, the DC-8 also will 
fly over blizzards along the northeastern United States. While the 
DC-8 flies above the clouds, two other aircraft, one from the 
University of North Dakota and another from Canada, will fly through 
the clouds, measuring the microphysical properties of the raindrops 
and snowflakes inside.

Advanced ground radars will scan the entire air column from the clouds 
to the Earth's surface. 

"These multiple measurements of snowfall provide a complete picture, a 
complete model, of the snowfall process from top to bottom," Petersen 
said.

NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center in Edwards, Calif., manages the 
DC-8 flights for the GCPEx mission. The aircraft is based at the 
center's aircraft operations facility in Palmdale, Calif. NASA's 
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., is providing 
aircraft tracking and guidance through the Real Time Mission Monitor, 
as well as GCPEx real-time data and personnel support for the ground 
instruments in Canada.

For more information on the GCPEx ground validation, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/gpm 

	
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