The Arizona Republic

New ‘microsatel­lites’ to spy on hurricanes

Humansize craft designed for better forecasts of wind intensity, focusing on the tropics

- Doyle Rice Chris Ruf of the University of Michigan inspects a CYGNSS satellite. The new system is set to launch Dec. 12. NASA program executive for the mission An artist’s conception of one of the eight Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System satellite

Sometimes smaller is better. A new constellat­ion of eight “micro-satellites” — each about the size of a full-grown swan — that should improve hurricane forecasts is scheduled to launch into orbit in mid-December.

The Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System, or CYGNSS, is NASA’s first small-satellite constellat­ion devoted to Earth science and also the first that’s focused specifical­ly on the tropics, according to Christine Bonniksen, NASA program executive for the mission.

The $151 million system will gather key details about winds just above the ocean surface, which are crucial for hurricane-intensity forecasts, NASA said.

Though hurricane-track forecast accuracy has improved in the past few decades, there have been few advances in intensity forecast accuracy, experts say. This mission is specifical­ly targeted to investigat­e how and why hurricanes rapidly strengthen.

Using GPS technology, the satellites will be able to peer through rain and clouds to determine the wind speed just above the surface of the ocean by measuring the “ocean roughness,” said Chris Ruf, a University of Michigan professor and the principal investigat­or for the mission. Previously, this weather data had been available only from hurricane hunter airplanes sent out to analyze the storms.

“This will allow us to understand how hurricanes grow and predict how strong they’ll be,” Bonniksen said. The eight satellites will orbit around the world in 95 minutes and will be sending back data 24/7.

“CYGNSS will do what existing satellite technology can’t in terms of measuring wind speeds inside hurricanes to improve our ability to predict these deadly storms,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administra­tor for NASA’s Science Mission Directorat­e.

The computer models that meteorolog­ists use to forecast hurricanes “will love this new informatio­n,” said Ryan Maue, a meteorolog­ist from WeatherBel­l Christine Bonniksen, Analytics who is not involved in the mission.

The satellites will also be used to study other weather and oceanic patterns besides hurricanes. They will measure waves and currents in the tropics and create “a great scientific data set,” Maue said.

The satellites should be up and running by the end of January and sending back data by March, Bonniksen said.

Data from the satellites aren’t likely to be used to forecast storms during the 2017 hurricane season; the informatio­n will need to be carefully vetted for accuracy. The data will be used for research purposes, however, and may be used to forecast active storms by 2018.

Although funding for the satellites is secured for two years after launch, that funding could be extended if they prove successful, Ruf said. Hardware aboard the satellites should last for at least five years, he said. Their demise will come in about seven to nine years as their orbits decay and they eventually burn up in the atmosphere.

The mission will act as a a prototype for future similar smallsatel­lite systems for both private and public companies, Maue said.

The satellites were designed and built by scientists and engineers at the University of Michigan and the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. They are set to launch from Cape Canaveral aboard a Pegasus XL rocket on Dec. 12.

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JOSEPH XU, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
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