Sensors Mounted On Commercial Airliners Networked For Most Accurate Weather Forecasts Ever

Monday, August 17, 2009 - 09:49 in Earth & Climate

AirDat's sensors, currently installed on the nosecones of 160 commercial airplanes, beam real-time atmospheric data to forecasters Last September, five days before Hurricane Ike pulverized the Texas coast, the National Hurricane Center pegged a point near Corpus Christi as the storm’s most likely landfall. Residents of the low-lying region around Galveston, some 250 miles north, breathed a sigh of relief. But then, 20 hours before Ike reached land, it hooked a right turn in the Gulf of Mexico, plowed into Galveston, and buried the city under a deadly storm surge. If only a different prediction had gotten the headlines. The hurricane’s eye made landfall less than 10 miles from the location predicted by AirDat, an eight-person team of private-sector forecasters in Raleigh, North Carolina. AirDat has nailed the path of a number of storms and, as the Atlantic hurricane season hits its peak this month, national weather...

Read the whole article on PopSci

More from PopSci

Latest Science Newsletter

Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!

Check out our next project, Biology.Net