Space Travel News  
Dusty Hurricanes

EO view of dust blowing off the Sahara region of Africa and out into the Atlantic.
by Sherrie Super and Dr Tony Phillips
Huntsville AL (SPX) Apr 16, 2007
Throw gasoline on a fire, and the flames swell to a raging inferno. Throw dirt on a fire, and the flames suffocate. But what happens when you throw dirt on a hurricane? It's a serious question.

Hurricanes are born in Atlantic waters just off the west coast of Africa. Thunderstorms gather there and, sometimes, for reasons no one fully understands, they merge into swirling monster storms that can cross the ocean to hit the United States thousands of miles away.

The place where hurricanes are born is very close to the Sahara desert-a prodigious source of fine dirt and dust-and Sahara dust storms can blow right into the hurricane genesis region. What does all that dry, dusty air do to a baby hurricane? This is a mystery of hurricane science.

"There are at least two possibilities," notes Bill Lapenta, an atmospheric scientist from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. On one hand, dust might strengthen a hurricane. Dust grains serve as nucleation points for clouds and raindrops. This could cause a young storm to intensify because rain is a key part of a hurricane's internal "heat engine." On the other hand, dry, dusty air might have the opposite effect, choking off a storm's development by altering atmospheric circulation patterns normal to a growing storm.

Which theory is true? Lapenta and colleagues recently gathered data that brings them closer to the answer. They did it by flying directly into a dusty hurricane.

Along with dozens of other scientists, Lapenta spent last fall in the Cape Verde Islands off the west coast of Africa. Their mission: to catch hurricanes in the act of being born. The name of the expedition was NASA African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses-or NAMMA for short. NAMMA researchers monitored the ocean near Cape Verde for promising clusters of thunderstorms, and when they saw a group gathering into a potential hurricane, they sprang into action.

NASA's DC-8 Airborne Laboratory flew in and around the storms equipped with instruments to measure wins, water vapor, moisture, atmospheric pressure and temperature. NASA and NOAA satellites, weather balloons and ground-based radar gathered even more data.

"We sampled one particular storm two days in a row," recalls Lapenta. "On the first day, our instruments detected very little dust in the storm system. It was clean and pristine. But the next day, using the same aircraft and the same instruments, we detected lots of dust." From one day to the next, the storm system had behaved like a dust mop, swooping up tiny particles from the atmosphere and pulling them in.

What happened next? The storm eventually went on to form a category three hurricane, Helene, one of the strongest of the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season.

So dust promotes hurricanes, right? Lapenta isn't ready to leap to that conclusion. "It's a very complicated problem," he explains. "Dust is one factor in hurricane formation, but there are many others, too." Atmospheric winds, humidity, sea-surface temperature-they all play a role. The effect of dust may be "situation dependent," meaning it depends on what the rest of the atmosphere is doing when the dust hits. "We're still analyzing our data to get the whole picture," he says.

So long after the aircraft has landed, the study continues. NAMMA is a three-year mission, with the first year dedicated to field research, followed by two years of data-analysis. Stay tuned to Science@NASA for updates.

Related Links
Science@NASA
NASA African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses (NAMMA)
A world of storm and tempest
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Rare Tornado In Western Japan
Tokyo (AFP) April 4, 2007
A rare tornado swept Japan's coast Wednesday as the nation was swamped by rain and hail, causing no injuries but bringing the beloved cherry blossom season closer to the end, officials said.







  • Boeing Submits Ares I Crew Launch Vehicle Upper Stage Production Proposal
  • KSC Hosts Private Jet Suborbital Pathfinder Flights
  • SpaceX Completes Primary Structure Of The Falcon 9 First Stage Tank
  • Orbital To Provide Abort Test Booster For NASA Testing

  • Indian Space Agency Set For First Commercial Launch Of Foreign Satellite
  • Russia To Launch Four US Satellites In May
  • PSLV-C8 To Be Launched On April 23
  • ILS Proton Successfully Launches Anik F3 Satellite

  • NASA to launch Shuttle Atlantis as early as June
  • Shuttle Assessments And Repair Work Ongoing
  • NASA Assigns Crew For Shuttle Mission To Install Japanese Lab
  • Shuttle Atlantis Grounded by Fuel Tank Damage

  • ISS Ready For Crew Change Over
  • NASA Extends Contract With Russian Federal Space Agency
  • The Race From Space
  • Expedition 15 Crew To Launch From Baikonur

  • Merlin Secures NASA SEWP IV Contract With Potential Value Of Over USD 5 Billion
  • Bill Gates Eyes Flight To Space
  • Latest Space Tourist Docks At Space Station For Week Long Holiday
  • The Facts On US Commercial Human Space Flight

  • China Launches Ocean Monitoring Satellite
  • China To Pursue Space Instead Of Socialism
  • China Outlines Space Program Till 2010
  • China To Launch New Direct Broadcast Satellite To Replace SinoSat-2

  • Top Robotics Teams To Rack And Roll Atlanta Georgia Dome
  • Assistive Robot Adapts To People And New Places
  • Flexible Electronics Could Find Applications As Sensors And Artificial Muscles
  • Machine Shop Keeps Robots Rolling

  • Report Reveals Likely Causes Of Mars Spacecraft Loss
  • Through A Telescope Darkly
  • Mars Project To Simulate Radiation Exposure
  • Experiment Simulates Radiation Exposure

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement