8.2
Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD)

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Wednesday, 5 February 2014: 10:45 AM
Room C203 (The Georgia World Congress Center )
Daniel J. Cecil, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; and M. W. James, J. B. Roberts, S. Biswas, L. Jones, J. W. Johnson, S. Farrar, S. Sahawneh, C. S. Ruf, M. Morris, P. G. Black, and C. B. Blankenship

The Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD) is a synthetic thinned array passive microwave radiometer designed to allow retrieval of surface wind speed in hurricanes, up through category five intensity. The retrieval technology follows the Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer (SFMR), which measures surface wind speed in hurricanes along a narrow strip beneath the aircraft. HIRAD has flown in the NASA Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes (GRIP) experiement in 2010 on a WB-57 aircraft, and on a Global Hawk unmanned aircraft system (UAS) in 2012 and 2013 as part of NASA's Hurricane and Severe Storms Sentinel (HS3) program. The GRIP program included flights over Hurricanes Earl and Karl (2010). The 2012 HS3 deployment did not include any hurricane flights for the UAS carrying HIRAD. Hurricane flights are expected for HIRAD in 2013 during HS3.

This presentation will describe the HIRAD instrument, its results from the 2010 hurricane flights, and hopefully results from hurricane flights in August and September 2013.