Southwest Airlines planes
now gathering weather data as they fly
Southwest Airlines has installed water vapor sensing
systems on many of its aircraft
Every 12 hours, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) launches weather balloons
from approximately 70 locations across the US. While these do provide valuable
data, a lot can change between those intervals and those locations. That's why a
new project is taking advantage of something that's already going up in the sky
on a much more frequent basis and in a higher number of locations - Southwest
Airlines jets.
Along with NOAA and Southwest, the other partners in the
initiative are SpectraSensors and Aeronautical Radio Incorporated.
So
far, 87 of the airline's Boeing 737s have been fitted with Water Vapor Sensing
Systems (WVSS-II) made by SpectraSensors. These are the same sensors already
used on balloons, to measure moisture distribution throughout the atmosphere. By
observing how that distribution changes over time, aviation weather forecasters
are able to make predictions regarding things like "location and timing of fog,
cloud formation and dissipation, and altitudes of cloud ceilings."
The streamlined air sampler (white) is the only part
of the WVSS-II that's located on the outside of the
aircraft
The newly-deployed sensors will make measurements
hundreds of times in one flight, as each aircraft ascends and descends through
the atmosphere during take-off and landing. Readings will be automatically
transmitted to the headquarters of Aeronautical Radio Incorporated, then
processed and relayed to the US National Weather Service (part of NOAA) for use
in weather forecasts and warnings.
Plans call for additional WVSS-II's to
be added to more aircraft in Southwest's fleet. The project is part of NOAA's
Weather Ready Nation initiative, which is aimed at "building community
resilience in the face of extreme weather events."
More information is
available in the video below.
Sources: Southwest Airlines, SpectraSensors
via Wired
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