IMPACTS 2022
Narration: Kathleen Gaeta
Transcript:
1
00:00:02,399 --> 00:00:05,911
On February 3, scientists
boarded a NASA flight headed
2
00:00:05,976 --> 00:00:09,879
straight first snowstorm the
kind of weather both pilots and
3
00:00:09,944 --> 00:00:13,782
passengers typically like to
avoid. But this flight was all
4
00:00:13,847 --> 00:00:17,490
in the name of science,
specifically the IMPACTS mission
5
00:00:17,555 --> 00:00:21,653
or investigation of microphysics
and precipitation for Atlantic
6
00:00:21,718 --> 00:00:25,686
Coast threatening snowstorms.
The team is tracking snowstorms
7
00:00:25,751 --> 00:00:29,199
across the Midwest and eastern
United States with two
8
00:00:29,264 --> 00:00:33,297
aircrafts, a P3 equipped with
multiple instruments operated by
9
00:00:33,362 --> 00:00:37,460
scientists and a high altitude
flying ER-2 crewed by one pilot.
10
00:00:37,525 --> 00:00:41,038
They're looking to better
understand the formation and
11
00:00:41,103 --> 00:00:42,990
development of winter storms.
12
00:00:44,610 --> 00:00:48,767
So our goal is to observe and
measure winter storms that
13
00:00:48,841 --> 00:00:53,369
mostly that happen along the
east coast of the United States.
14
00:00:53,443 --> 00:00:57,675
On this specific flight we are
flying over a really major
15
00:00:57,749 --> 00:01:02,351
winter storm that is affecting
the Midwest as well as tomorrow
16
00:01:02,426 --> 00:01:04,950
is going to go into the Northeast.
17
00:01:07,980 --> 00:01:11,088
Ultimately, what the impacts
team learns about snowstorms
18
00:01:11,143 --> 00:01:14,252
will improve meteorological
models and our ability to use
19
00:01:14,306 --> 00:01:17,579
satellite data to predict how
much snow will fall and where.
20
00:01:23,310 --> 00:01:26,383
For today's flight it's been
almost unnervingly smooth so far
21
00:01:26,434 --> 00:01:29,457
at all altitudes. We're dealing
with a lot of crosswinds and
22
00:01:29,507 --> 00:01:32,581
changing winds, particularly as
we move up and down the track
23
00:01:32,631 --> 00:01:33,690
across the frontline.
24
00:01:36,359 --> 00:01:40,156
The inflight team members work
in conjunction with ground
25
00:01:40,222 --> 00:01:43,886
operations, monitoring, changing
weather conditions and
26
00:01:43,953 --> 00:01:47,816
coordinating flight paths with
the other aircraft. On this
27
00:01:47,883 --> 00:01:51,746
flight, the P3 flew a total of
eight hours flying the same
28
00:01:51,813 --> 00:01:55,876
200-mile stretch of snowstorm
three times each at a different
29
00:01:55,943 --> 00:02:00,540
elevation in order to capture
data from precipitation as it descends.
30
00:02:01,920 --> 00:02:06,704
Especially in turbulent cloud,
turbulent storm, ice particles
31
00:02:06,783 --> 00:02:10,940
that form at certain
temperatures, certain altitudes.
32
00:02:11,018 --> 00:02:14,862
So right now we're actually
seeing a lot of plate
33
00:02:14,940 --> 00:02:19,803
aggregates. So we have a lot of
not individual plates that I'm
34
00:02:19,881 --> 00:02:23,490
seeing but mostly just large
plate aggregates.
35
00:02:25,500 --> 00:02:29,040
The multi year impacts campaign
is the first comprehensive study
36
00:02:29,070 --> 00:02:32,670
of snowstorms across the eastern
United States in 30 years.