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Aug.
21, 1998: (This is the sixth in a series
of stories covering the ongoing CAMEX mission to hunt hurricane
data in a way not done since the 50s. Other
stories are linked in below.)
Tropical Storm Bonnie is headed for the southeast United States
and a probable rendezvous with the CAMEX-3 scientists who want
to measure how a hurricane gains strength and how it is lost
when the storm is over land.
The CAMEX-3 team flew the DC-8 Thursday to measure conditions
in the area ahead of Bonnie since the moisture and energy there
will determine how strong it becomes as a hurricane.
Bonnie
was upgraded from tropical depression to storm during the night,
and is expected to hit hurricane strength in the next day or
two. Its current track would put it at Patrick Air Force Base,
Fla., where the CAMEX-3 team is based, on Monday morning.
Left:
This National Hurricane Center display shows the probability
that the center of the tropical cyclone will pass within 120
km (75 mi) of a location during the next 72 hours. Contour levels
shown are 10%, 20%, 50% and 100% (links to 16KB
image).
"Might be a trip inland if Bonnie tracks at us. Still
the most significant feature on the map for us, but I would expect
that the following wave will have become TD-04 [tropical depression-4]
by this time, and might reach tropical storm strength by the
end of the period," wrote CAMEX forecaster R. Wohlman.
"Elsewhere, another wave at 40W has some potential for
development, as does the most recent off of the African continent
at 21W."
No changes over Florida are expected until Sunday.
"Watch
for afternoon thunder storms over much of Florida, with the east
coast of Florida remaining in this same regime. I like the current
track for Bonnie- but think that they may bend it a bit more
south heading more to the south of us (hunch)," Wohlman's
forecast continues. "It will depend on the ridge weakening
to the north, and right now I don't see anything that looks like
it will break it down."
Into the storm: The image at right shows
atmospheric instruments protruding from the nose of the instrumentation
"superpod" on the port wing of the ER-2 that will study
hurricanes at high altitude during CAMEX-3 (links to 91KB
image). credit: Bill Ingalls/NASA
With the 2- to 3-day forecast, Wohlman foresees a possible
trip inland for the CAMEX-3 team. Patrick Air Force Base will
be fully exposed to the hurricane's fury. It is on Florida's
Atlantic coast, a low, thin strip of land between the ocean and
the Indian River before you reach the peninsula proper. The airfield
is less than a mile from the beach. Thus, the trip "inland"
would be all the way to Warner Robbins Air Force Base in Georgia.
Even after Bonnie moves through, the CAMEX team will have
plenty to keep it busy.
"Looks like a daisy chain of waves continuing from Africa,"
Wohlman continues "Might be a decent hurricane season! Long
range probabilities bring a front into the east of the U.S. by
Tuesday, but this all might be moot with Bonnie wandering around,
but the mid-range forecast looks for another tropical storm in
the Bahama region by the end of the period."
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Note: More details
are available in the NASA press
release describing CAMEX-3. Check back as hurricane season
progresses. We will post science updates as the campaign develops.
PIX: High resolution scans of 35mm camera photos from
the CAMEX-3 campaign are available from Public Affairs Office
at NASA headquarters. Please call the NASA Headquarters Photo
Department at 202-358-1900, or contact Bill Ingalls at bingalls@hq.nasa.gov.
CAMEX Series Headlines
August 12:
Overview CAMEX story , describes
the program in detail.
August 13: CAMEX
maiden flight , for calibration
of TRMM satellite instruments
August 14: CAMEX
test flights , CAMEX flies over
tropical storm weather in successful calibration run
August 18: CAMEX
aircraft make second flight with TRMM
, second calibration run for TRMM
August 20: CAMEX
may get first chance at a tropical storm , later this week
August 21: Here comes Bonnie!
, CAMEX scheduled to fly over T.S. Bonnie (this story)
August 22:
West by Northwest , CAMEX team
may have to evacuate to Georgia
August 24: Eye-to-eye, and Bonnie
winks, CAMEX team makes first flight through eye
August 25: Snow in August,
Bonnie surprises the hurricane team
August 26: Camera of many colors
Hurricane hunters using advanced scanner to peer into storms
August 28: Preparing for Danielle
NASA team takes break as Bonnie fades away
August 31: Quite a Windfall Hurricane
team completes first half of unique science campaign
September 2: Bonnie Cuts a Towering
Figure Satellite radar shows mountainous cloud chimney
September 4: Hurricane team studies
Earl Four aircraft probe storm
September 10: NASA team awaits
next hurricane
September 16:
Hurricane season passing its prime Thunderstorm
studies continue as a new hurricane candidate wends its way from
Africa.
September 18: Two new storms brewing
for hurricane research team Scientists fly 4 out of 5
days, clear air sampled over the Bahamas, oceanic convection
data collected east of Cape Canaveral
September 21:The last hurricane
- CAMEX team wrapping up campaign with flights into Georges
September 23: Hurricane Georges
puts on a light show - CAMEX team treated to purple sprites
and weird lightning
NCAR has an extensive writeup on the GPS
dropsondes used in CAMEX-3 and other atmospheric campaigns.
A new study - not related to CAMEX-3 - by
the Arizona State University suggests a
link between hurricanes in the northwest Atlantic and air pollution. |
CAMEX-3 - the third Convection and Moisture
Experiment - is an interagency project to measure hurricane dynamics
at high altitude, a method never employed before over Atlantic
storms. From this, scientists hope to understand better how hurricanes
are powered and to improve the tools they use to predict hurricane
intensity.
An overview
story (Aug. 12, 1998) describes
the program in detail. The study is part of NASA's Earth Science
enterprise to better understand the total Earth system and the
effects of natural and human-induced changes on the global environment.
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Web Links |
CAMEX-3 home page contains
links to daily flight operations and instrument descriptions.
Lightning
Imaging Sensor
aboard the TRMM satellite observes lightning from above the clouds
- and my lead to better warnings on the ground.
MACAWS uses the Doppler
effect (red and blue shifts) to measure wind velocity.
SPARCLE is a Space Shuttle experiment
set for 2001 to demonstrate laser wind measurement from space. |
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