NASA'S Global Hawk Mission Begins With Flight to Hurricane Leslie

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Sept. 7, 2012

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

Keith Koehler 
Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Va. 
keith.a.koehler@xxxxxxxx 
757-824-1579 


RELEASE: 12-310

NASA'S GLOBAL HAWK MISSION BEGINS WITH FLIGHT TO HURRICANE LESLIE

WASHINGTON -- NASA has begun its latest hurricane science field 
campaign by flying an unmanned Global Hawk aircraft over Hurricane 
Leslie in the Atlantic Ocean during a day-long flight from California 
to Virginia. With the Hurricane and Severe Storm Sentinel (HS3) 
mission, NASA for the first time will be flying Global Hawks from the 
U.S. East Coast. 

The Global Hawk took off from NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at 
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., Thursday and landed at the agency's 
Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va., today at 11:37 a.m. 
EDT after spending 10 hours collecting data on Hurricane Leslie. The 
month-long HS3 mission will help researchers and forecasters uncover 
information about how hurricanes and tropical storms form and 
intensify. 

NASA will fly two Global Hawks from Wallops during the HS3 mission. 
The planes, which can stay in the air for as long as 28 hours and fly 
over hurricanes at altitudes greater than 60,000 feet, will be 
operated by pilots in ground control stations at Wallops and Dryden 
Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. 

The mission targets the processes that underlie hurricane formation 
and intensity change. The aircraft help scientists decipher the 
relative roles of the large-scale environment and internal storm 
processes that shape these systems. Studying hurricanes is a 
challenge for a field campaign like HS3 because of the small sample 
of storms available for study and the great variety of scenarios 
under which they form and evolve. HS3 flights will continue into 
early October of this year and be repeated from Wallops during the 
2013 and 2014 hurricane seasons. 

The first Global Hawk arrived Sept. 7 at Wallops carrying a payload of 
three instruments that will sample the environment around hurricanes. 
A second Global Hawk, scheduled to arrive in two weeks, will look 
inside hurricanes and developing storms with a different set of 
instruments. The pair will measure winds, temperature, water vapor, 
precipitation and aerosols from the surface to the lower 
stratosphere. 

"The primary objective of the environmental Global Hawk is to describe 
the interaction of tropical disturbances and cyclones with the hot, 
dry and dusty air that moves westward off the Saharan desert and 
appears to affect the ability of storms to form and intensify," said 
Scott Braun, HS3 mission principal investigator and research 
meteorologist at NASA1s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. 


This Global Hawk will carry a laser system called the Cloud Physics 
Lidar (CPL), the Scanning High-resolution Interferometer Sounder 
(S-HIS), and the Advanced Vertical Atmospheric Profiling System 
(AVAPS). 

The CPL will measure cloud structure and aerosols such as dust, sea 
salt and smoke particles. The S-HIS can remotely sense the 
temperature and water vapor vertical profile along with the sea 
surface temperature and cloud properties. The AVAPS dropsonde system 
will eject small sensors tied to parachutes that drift down through 
the storm, measuring winds, temperature and humidity. 

"Instruments on the 'over-storm' Global Hawk will examine the role of 
deep thunderstorm systems in hurricane intensity change, particularly 
to detect changes in low-level wind fields in the vicinity of these 
thunderstorms," said Braun. 

These instruments will measure eyewall and rainband winds and 
precipitation using a Doppler 

radar and other microwave sensors called the High-altitude Imaging 
Wind and Rain Airborne Profiler (HIWRAP), High-Altitude MMIC Sounding 
Radiometer (HAMSR) and Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD). 

HIWRAP measures cloud structure and winds, providing a 
three-dimensional view of these conditions. HAMSR uses microwave 
wavelengths to measure temperature, water vapor, and precipitation 
from the top of the storm to the surface. HIRAD measures surface wind 
speeds and rain rates. 

The HS3 mission is supported by several NASA centers including 
Wallops; Goddard; Dryden; Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, 
Calif.; Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.; and the Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. HS3 also has collaborations 
with partners from government agencies and academia. 

HS3 is an Earth Venture mission funded by NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate in Washington. Earth Venture missions are managed by 
NASA's Earth System Science Pathfinder Program at the agency's 
Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. The HS3 mission is managed by 
the Earth Science Project Office at NASA's Ames Research Center. 

For more about the HS3 mission, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/HS3 

For more information about NASA's Airborne Science Program, visit: 

http://airbornescience.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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