. Earth Science News .
NASA Test Provides Pilots With Better Weather Forecasts

-
by Staff Writers
Hampton VA (SPX) Jan 31, 2006
Weather forecasters in the middle of the United States are making better local predictions for pilots, and others, thanks to an airborne sensor being tested by NASA's Aviation Safety Program.

Researchers at NASA's Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., led the team that designed, built and equipped dozens of Mesaba Airlines aircraft with the Tropospheric Airborne Meteorological Data Report instrument. Mesaba is a Northwest Airlink affiliate, headquartered in Minneapolis. The airline mainly flies shorter commuter routes.

The instrument allows aircraft to automatically sense and report atmospheric conditions. Observations are sent by satellite to a ground data center that processes and distributes up-to-date weather information to forecasters and pilots.

"Initial research shows the airborne sensor makes a 10 to 20 percent improvement in forecast error in numerical models and that's just with temperature," said Taumi Daniels, NASA project leader. The sensor also measures humidity, pressure, winds, icing and turbulence with the help of location, time and altitude provided by built-in Global Positioning System technology.

Large airliners fly above most weather and collect limited atmospheric data. When equipped with the weather sensor, regional aircraft, which typically fly below 25,000 feet, can provide more information. The information the team collects can also benefit weather models and forecasts, because it increases the number of observations in the lower atmosphere. There are only 70 weather balloon sites in the continental United States that collect temperature, wind and moisture data from twice-daily atmospheric soundings. The experiment added 800 more daily atmospheric soundings.

"Meteorologists at the National Weather Service have found the Tropospheric Airborne Meteorological Data Report to be useful in forecasting severe thunderstorms, dense fog, precipitation types of winter storms and low-level wind shear," said Richard Mamrosh, National Weather Service meteorologist in Green Bay, Wis. "In summertime its best use is in determining if and when thunderstorms might develop. In wintertime it really helps in determining whether a storm will bring sleet, freezing rain or snow," he added.

Industry, meteorologists, researchers and scientists are part of the partnership analyzing data. The partners include: AirDat L.L.C., Morrisville, N.C.; Federal Aviation Administration and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Washington; National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colo.; Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, Mass.; Meteorological Service of Canada, Montreal; UK MET Office, London; and Meteorological Network of Europe, Toulouse, France.

The program is part of NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate. The focus of the program is on the way vehicles are designed, built, operated, and maintained. The program is developing principles, guidelines, concepts, tools, methods, and technologies to address four areas: aircraft aging and durability; integrated intelligent flight deck technologies; integrated vehicle health management; and integrated resilient aircraft control.

Related Links
NASA's aeronautics research
NASA and agency programs

Wyoming Cloud Seeding Experiment Begins This Month
Boulder CO (SPX) January 31, 2006
A five-year, $8.8 million pilot project to examine whether seeding clouds with silver iodide produces a measurable increase in snowfall over Wyoming's Medicine Bow, Sierra Madre, and Wind River mountain ranges starts this month with intensive observations of Wyoming snow clouds.







  • Natural Disasters Killed 91,900 In 2005
  • Coral, Mangroves Priceless As Natural Buffers, Fishing Grounds
  • Darkness Spikes EMS Helicopter Crashes, Fatalities
  • Contigency Plan Issued For Accidental Calamities

  • Sat Portrait Of Global Plant Growth Will Aid Climate Research
  • Two New Lakes Found Beneath Antarctic Ice Sheet
  • Polar Ice Sheets Could Start To Melt This Century
  • Of Mice Men Trees And The Global Carbon Cycle

  • Raytheon And SGI Tech Process NOAA'S GOES-R Sats Data
  • Landsat 5 Resumes Operations
  • Japan's ALOS In Orbit: ESA Will Deliver Its Data To European Researchers
  • Winter Snow On The Hindu Kush

  • Russia Muzzles Experts Critical Of Oil Pipeline To Asia
  • Ethanol Can Replace Gasoline With Big Energy Savings
  • Portugal Pushes Back Deadline For International Wind Farm Bids
  • Energy Techs Cut Path To Reduced Emissions

  • Avian Influenza Arrives In Middle East
  • Vaccine Provides 100% Protection Against Avian Flu Virus In Animal Study
  • Scientists Says Bird Flu Threatens National Security
  • Internet Game Provides Breakthrough In Predicting The Spread Of Epidemics

  • Pitt Professor's Theory Of Evolution Gets Boost From Cell Research
  • Life Leaves Subtle Signature In The Lay Of The Land, Say Berkeley Researchers
  • Duck Bill Dinosaur Mystery Finally Solved
  • Mute Swan Population Helps Explain Longstanding Evolutionary Question

  • Questions Linger After Songhua River Spill
  • Rain Gardens Soak Up Urban Storm Water Pollution
  • Clean Up Launched At One Of Czech Republic Most Dangerous Pollution Blackspots
  • Russia Halts Monitoring As Toxic Slick Dissolves In Amur

  • Study Suggests Why Neanderthals Vanished
  • New Technique Puts Brain-Imaging Research On Its Head
  • New Maps Reveal True Extent Of Human Footprint On Earth
  • Distinct Brain Regions Specialized For Faces And Bodies

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement