NASA Cold Weather Airborne Campaign to Measure Falling Snow Over Canada

NASA scientists are coming to Canada to study snowfall!
Beginning Jan. 17, NASA will fly an airborne DC8 science laboratory above Canadian snowstorms to tackle a difficult challenge facing the upcoming Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite mission — measuring snowfall from space.


The GPM mission is to be launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency(JAXA) in 2014. The mission will set new standards for precipitation measurements worldwide using a network of satellites united by the GPM Core Observatory. By providing next-generation observations of worldwide rain and snow every three hours, it is the first mission designed to detect falling snow from space. The spacecraft will orbit Earth at a 65-degree inclination, covering the world from the Antarctic Circle to the Arctic Circle.

“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. ”
“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.”
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.
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.

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 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.

About Randy Attwood

Amateur astronomer, astrophotographer, space exploration historian. Executive Director, The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada / Publisher - SkyNews magazine.

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