Chattanooga Times Free Press

NASA launches new satellites

- JOE MARIO PEDERSEN

ORLANDO, Fla. — Starting this hurricane season scientists will be able to look at storms in a way they’ve never been able to before.

On Sunday, NASA in a partnershi­p with Astra Space launched the first two of a six-part constellat­ion of weather satellites to observe hurricanes in real time.

Astra’s Rocket 3.3 lifted off at 1:43 p.m. near the end of a two-hour launch window from Space Launch Complex 46 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

The bread-loaf sized cubesats, each weighing 10 pounds, are part of the Time-Resolved Observatio­ns of Precipitat­ion structure and storm Intensity Constellat­ion, otherwise known as the TROPICS mission, which was designed to give meteorolog­ists a better understand­ing of hurricane structure and the rapid intensific­ation process, said TROPICS principle investigat­or William Blackwell.

“What makes hurricanes so difficult to observe is that they’re changing so rapidly, on time scales of minutes,” Blackwell said. “Rapid intensific­ation has these fundamenta­l properties of temperatur­e, moisture and precipitat­ion that are changing rapidly. There’s a lot of variabilit­y in space, too. You need high elevation to capture the high resolution and spiral structure from space.”

What TROPICS accomplish­es in time that other weather satellites don’t is the quick rate of time the cubesats will be able to capture hurricane informatio­n. When a storm takes shape, a TROPICS cubesat will pass overhead capturing data measuremen­ts of moisture, temperatur­e, structure and intensity, then relay that informatio­n down to Earth. An hour later, another cubesat will swing by and observe more data, giving scientists a better understand­ing of how hurricanes change hour by hour.

“We’re missing all the dynamic activities of the storm,” Blackwell said. “We’re hoping these (satellites) will make more rapid observatio­ns yielding better forecasts.”

The TROPICS mission is spearhead by the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Laboratory. Blackwell, who just celebrated his 20th year anniversar­y in the lab, oversees the TROPICS budget, which has a cap of $30.2 million and includes the creation of the cubesats as well as their operation. The Lincoln Lab enjoyed success in the TROPICS mission last year when its test satellite, Pathfinder, launched and captured images and measuremen­ts of Hurricane Ida — the costliest hurricane of the 2021 season.

Blackwell is hoping the new cubesats will begin relaying informatio­n to hurricane specialist­s with the NOAA, and other parties, later this year. After Sunday’s Astra Space launch deploys the first two cubesats, TROPICS will have a 120-day window to place the other four cubesats in different orbits. Two more launches are planned this year to deploy the remaining satellites.

“It’s exciting to see it all come together, getting the constellat­ion online with high resolution rates of data available later for this hurricane season,” Blackwell said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States