PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

HS3 mission identifies area of strong winds, rain in Hurricane Ingrid

2013-09-27
(Press-News.org) One of the instruments that flew aboard one of two unmanned Global Hawk aircraft during NASA's HS3 mission was the Hurricane Imaging Radiometer known as HIRAD. HIRAD identified an area of heavy rains and and likely strong winds in Hurricane Ingrid by measuring surface wind speeds and rain rates using its rectangular antenna to track activity on the ocean's surface.

NASA's Global Hawk 871 is the over-storm Global Hawk that carried HIRAD on a flight over Hurricane Ingrid on Sept. 15 as the storm moved through the extreme southwestern Gulf of Mexico and traveled west-northwestward along Mexico's east coast.

Along with HIRAD, Global Hawk 871 also carried the High-altitude Imaging Wind and Rain Airborne Profiler or HIWRAP, the High-Altitude Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuit Sounding Radiometer or HAMSR and the Airborne Detector for Energetic Lightning Emission or ADELE instrument.

Late on Sept. 14, Ingrid had strengthened into a hurricane. At 11 a.m. EDT on Sept. 15 the center of Hurricane Ingrid was located near latitude 22.56 north and longitude 95.8 west, about 135 miles/220 km east of Tampico, Mexico. Ingrid was moving toward the west-northwest at 6 mph/ 11 kph. Maximum sustained winds were near 75 mph/ 120 kph.

On Sept. 15, the HIRAD instrument scanned Hurricane Ingrid from its perch on NASA Global Hawk 871. "HIRAD data definitely saw most of the strong wind and heavy rain on the northern and eastern sides of Hurricane Ingrid in the area generally near 23 degrees north latitude and 95 degrees west longitude," said Daniel J. Cecil, the Principal Investigator for the HIRAD instrument at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.

HIRAD data provides "brightness temperature data" that is color-coded by Cecil and his team to indicate areas of falling rain and possible moderate-to-strong surface winds.

The antenna on HIRAD makes measurements of microwaves emitted by the ocean surface that are increased by the storm. As winds move across the surface of the sea they generate white, frothy foam. This sea foam causes the ocean surface to emit increasingly large amounts of microwave radiation, similar in frequency or wavelength, but much lower intensity, to that generated within a typical home microwave oven. HIRAD measures that microwave energy and, in doing so, allows scientists to deduce how powerfully the wind is blowing. With HIRAD's unique capabilities, the two-dimensional structure of the surface wind field can be much more accurately determined than current operational capabilities allow. HIRAD was developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.

Later that night, NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission or TRMM satellite passed over Hurricane Ingrid at 10:27 p.m. EDT and confirmed some heavy rainfall north and east of its center. In those areas, rain was falling at a rate of 2 inches/50 mm per hour. Hurricane Ingrid made landfall in La Pesca located in northeastern Mexico on Monday, Sept. 16.

There is a difference between the HIRAD and TRMM data. "HIRAD uses lower frequencies than TRMM, and measures surface wind speed in addition to rain rate," said Cecil. HIRAD gives a higher resolution rain mapping. "By being on an airplane, HIRAD can fly across a storm several times with the exact track being chosen; a satellite like TRMM will only cross the storm occasionally and its track cannot be adjusted."

There are a couple of other differences between TRMM and HIRAD data. TRMM covers a much larger viewing area than HIRAD and TRMM provides information about vertical cross-sections of storms in addition to horizontal maps. TRMM has been observing storms since 1997 from its orbit around the Earth and HIRAD gathers data from an airplane within ~24 hour long flights.



INFORMATION:



For more information about the storm history and how NASA satellites captured it, visit Ingrid's story history on the NASA Hurricane page: http://www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/ingrid-atlanticgulf-of-mexico/

For more information about NASA's HS3 Mission, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/HS3



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ballet dancers' brains adapt to stop them getting in a spin

2013-09-27
Scientists have discovered differences in the brain structure of ballet dancers that may help them avoid feeling dizzy when they perform pirouettes. The research suggests that years of training can enable dancers to suppress signals from the balance organs in the inner ear. The findings, published in the journal Cerebral Cortex, could help to improve treatment for patients with chronic dizziness. Around one in four people experience this condition at some time in their lives. Normally, the feeling of dizziness stems from the vestibular organs in the inner ear. These ...

Repurposed antidepressants have potential to treat small-cell lung cancer

2013-09-27
PHILADELPHIA — A bioinformatics approach to repurposing drugs resulted in identification of a class of antidepressants as a potential new treatment for small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), according to a study published in Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. Based on data generated using bioinformatics, two drugs approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat symptoms of depression were tested on SCLC cells and animal models. Both antidepressants were found to induce SCLC cell death. They were also effective in mice ...

FDA-approved antidepressant may combat deadly form of lung cancer, Stanford study finds

2013-09-27
STANFORD, Calif. — A little-used class of antidepressants appears potentially effective in combating a particularly deadly form of lung cancer, according to a new study from researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. And because the drugs have already been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in humans, the researchers have been able to quickly launch a clinical trial to test their theory in patients. The phase-2 trial is now recruiting participants with small-cell lung cancer and other, similar conditions like aggressive gastrointestinal ...

False alarm on hepatitis virus highlights challenges of pathogen sleuthing

2013-09-26
The report by scientists of a new hepatitis virus earlier this year was a false alarm, according to UC San Francisco researchers who correctly identified the virus as a contaminant present in a type of glassware used in many research labs. Their finding, they said, highlights both the promise and peril of today’s powerful “next-generation” lab techniques that are used to track down new agents of disease. In research published online September 11, 2013, in the Journal of Virology, researchers led by Charles Chiu, MD, PhD, director of the UCSF Viral Diagnostics ...

Magnetic field may shape 'blooming' star

2013-09-26
A star is "blooming" in the southern sky — and astronomers using a CSIRO telescope are a step closer to knowing why. An old star, IRAS 15445-5449, has begun to push out a jet of charged particles that glow with radio waves. A few old stars are known to have jets, "but this is the first one where the radio waves tell us the jet is held together by a strong magnetic field", said Dr Jessica Chapman of CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, a member of the research team. "That's a clue to what makes these jets switch on." The finding has been published online in the journal ...

Astronomers find missing link pulsar

2013-09-26
VIDEO: The aging pulsar rotates slower and slower, then matter from its companion spins it up again. As the pulsar is spun up, it alternates between emitting X-rays (white) and radio... Click here for more information. An international team of astronomers has used X-ray telescopes in space and ground-based telescopes, including two of CSIRO's, to identify a pulsar that switches between emitting X-rays and emitting radio waves. This is the first direct evidence of one kind ...

Patient's own cells might be used as treatment for Parkinson's disease

2013-09-26
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) taken from a patient hold great therapeutic potential for many diseases. However, studies in rodents have suggested that the body may mount an immune response and destroy cells derived from iPSCs. New research in monkeys refutes these findings, suggesting that in primates like us, such cells will not be rejected by the immune system. In the paper, publishing September 26 in the ISSCR's journal Stem Cell Reports, published by Cell Press, iPSCs from nonhuman primates successfully developed into the neurons depleted by Parkinson's disease ...

Tick tock: Marine animals with at least 2 clocks

2013-09-26
VIDEO: This is a Eurydice crustacean swimming. Click here for more information. Animals living in marine environments keep to their schedules with the aid of multiple independent—and, in at least some cases, interacting—internal clocks. The findings, presented by two research groups in papers appearing in the Cell Press journals Current Biology and Cell Reports on September 26, suggest that multiple clocks—not just the familiar, 24-hour circadian clock—might even be standard ...

Newly identified antibodies effectively treat Alzheimer's-like disease in mice

2013-09-26
Alzheimer's disease is characterized by the accumulation of particular toxic proteins in the brain that are believed to underlie the cognitive decline in patients. A new study conducted in mice suggests that newly identified antibody treatments can prevent the accumulation of one of these of these toxic components, called tau proteins. The findings, online September 26 in the Cell Press journal Neuron, suggest that these antibodies may provide a basis for a promising therapy for patients with Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. In the brains of ...

Autologous transplantation shows promising results for iPS cell therapy in Parkinson's disease

2013-09-26
A research team led by Professor Jun Takahashi and Assistant Professor Asuka Morizane at the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application (CiRA) at Kyoto University, Japan, has carried out a study to compare the impact of immune response in autologous transplantation (transplantation of cells from the subject's own body) and allogeneic transplantation (transplantation of cells from a different individual of the same species). The researchers used cynomolgus monkeys to carry out transplantation into the brain of neural cells derived from iPS cells. Autologous transplantation ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Understanding the world within: Study reveals new insights into phage–bacteria interactions in the gut microbiome

Cold treatment does not appear to protect preterm infants from disability or death caused by oxygen loss, according to NIH-funded study

Pennington Biomedical researchers uncover role of hormone in influencing brain reward pathway and food preferences

Rethinking equity in electric vehicle infrastructure

Lunar Trailblazer blasts off to map water on the moon

Beacon Technology Solutions, Illinois Tech awarded grant to advance far-UVC disinfection research

University of Houston researchers paving the way for new era in medical imaging

High-tech startup CrySyst provides quality-by-control solutions for pharmaceutical, fine chemical industries

From scraps to sips: Everyday biomass produces drinking water from thin air

Scientists design novel battery that runs on atomic waste

“Ultra-rapid” testing unlocks cancer genetics in the operating room

Mimicking shark skin to create clean cutting boards

Adherence to the Mediterranean diet and obesity-linked cancer risk

New technique reveals how the same mutations give rise to very different types of leukaemia

New insights into how gut cells respond to bacterial toxins

Designing self-destructing bacteria to make effective tuberculosis vaccines

SwRI-led PUNCH spacecraft poised for launch into polar orbit

Orthopedic team from Peking Union Medical College Hospital publishes longest-term follow-up study on post-TKA outcomes in Chinese patients with knee osteoarthritis

Lung abnormalities seen in children and teens with long COVID

NBA and NBA G League Player Ambassadors urge fans to learn lifesaving CPR in 90 seconds

Hormones may have therapeutic potential to prevent wrinkles, hair graying

Clashing with classmates: Off-putting traits spark enemy relationships

Ferulic acid: a promising ally against colon cancer

Superbugs in our food: a new hope for tackling drug resistance

Submersible robot surfs water currents

Using brain scans to forecast human choice at scale

AI’s emotional blunting effect

Modifying graphene with plasma to produce better gas sensors

Study reveals Africa will reach 1.5C climate change threshold by 2040 even under low emission scenarios

Researchers discover 16 new Alzheimer’s disease susceptibility genes

[Press-News.org] HS3 mission identifies area of strong winds, rain in Hurricane Ingrid