Keeping a spare on hand simply makes sense. Just as drivers keep
spare tires on hand to replace a flat or blowout, NASA routinely
maintains “spares,” too. These flight hardware backups allow NASA to
seamlessly continue work in the unlikely event something goes down for a
repair. When projects end, these handy spares can sometimes find second
lives in new areas for use.
Researchers at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., developed a sophisticated piece of flight hardware called a Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS)
to detect and locate lightning over the tropical region of the globe.
Launched into space in 1997 as part of NASA’s Tropical Rainfall
Measuring Mission (TRMM),
the sensor undertook a three-year baseline mission, delivering data
used to improve weather forecasts. It continues to operate successfully
aboard the TRMM satellite today.
The team that created this hardware in the mid-1990s built a spare --
and now that second unit is stepping up to contribute, as well. The
sensor is scheduled to launch on a Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) rocket to the International Space Station
in February 2016. Once mounted to the station, it will serve a two-year
baseline mission as part of a U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) Space Test Program (STP)-H5
science and technology development payload. STP-H5 is integrated and
flown under the management and direction of the DoD's STP.
NASA selected the LIS spare hardware to fly to the space station in
order to take advantage of the orbiting laboratory’s high inclination.
This vantage point gives the sensor the ability to "look" farther
towards Earth's poles than the original LIS can aboard the TRMM
satellite. Once installed, the sensor will monitor global lightning for
Earth science studies, provide cross-sensor calibration and validation
with other space-borne instruments, and ground-based lightning networks.
LIS will also supply real-time lightning data over data-sparse regions,
such as oceans, to support operational weather forecasting and warning.
"Only LIS globally detects all in-cloud and cloud-to-ground lightning
-- what we call total lightning -- during both day and night," said
Richard Blakeslee, LIS project scientist at Marshall. "As previously
demonstrated by the TRMM mission, better understanding lightning and its
connections to weather and related phenomena can provide unique and
affordable gap-filling information to a variety of science disciplines
including weather, climate, atmospheric chemistry and lightning
physics.”
LIS measures the amount, rate and radiant energy of global lightning,
providing storm-scale resolution, millisecond timing, and high,
uniform-detection efficiency -- and it does this without land-ocean
bias.
The sensor consists of an optical imager enhanced to locate and
detect lightning from thunderstorms within its 400-by-400-mile
field-of-view on the Earth's surface. The station travels more than
17,000 mph as it orbits our planet, allowing the LIS to observe a point
on the Earth, or a cloud, for almost 90 seconds as it passes overhead.
Despite this brief viewing duration, it is long enough to estimate the
lightning-flashing rate of most storms.
Since more than 70 percent of lightning occurs during the day,
daytime detection drove the technical design of the LIS. From space,
lightning appears like a pool of light on the top of a thundercloud.
During the day, sunlight reflected from the cloud tops completely masks
the lightning signal, making it difficult to detect. However, LIS
creates a solution by applying special techniques that take advantage of
the differences in the behavior and physical characteristics of
lightning and sunlight signals. These allow LIS to extract the strikes
from bright background illumination.
As a final step in processing, a real-time event processor inside the
LIS electronics unit removes the remaining background signal, enabling
the system to detect the lightning signatures and achieve 90-percent
detection efficiency.
Once the sensor is installed on the space station, the LIS team will
operate it remotely. They will then assess the data it produces and
disseminate it to forecasters and researchers from the Global Hydrology Resource Center, one of NASA’s Earth science data centers.
This instrument also can help our lives on Earth in many ways. The
LIS science team has received strong endorsements from several national
and international government agencies and university science
organizations. These include the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), European Space Agency (ESA), Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite R- Series Program (GOES-R). Operational users, such as NOAA’s National Weather Service (NWS), Aviation Weather Center (AWC), Ocean Prediction Center (OPC) and Pacific Region
will be interested in the data for their operational weather warning,
forecasting and even validation applications. For other users, their
science and application investigations will be improved and will benefit
from the new lightning observations provided by LIS.
From a research standpoint, LIS data could be very useful to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
Randy Bass, a member of the FAA's Aviation Weather Research Team, said
the information obtained could help them with validation activities of
several oceanic convection ensemble model products they're developing,
either in real-time or archive mode.
"It could also be used for validation of detection of convection from
other ground- and space-based sensors we will be using at the time,"
said Bass. "Any data we can use for 'ground truth' over oceanic areas
will be extremely helpful in development of better observing and
forecasting products used for offshore aviation, especially as we expand
our coverage throughout the Atlantic and Pacific oceans."
The end result would be better short-term forecasts of thunderstorms
over offshore areas, giving pilots and air traffic controllers a better
ability to reroute planes around hazards such as turbulence and
lightning strikes. Bass said that while pilots have weather radar
aboard, they can only see limited areas ahead of them. The FAA wants to
improve their capability and give controllers the opportunity to see the
weather activity too, which they don't have right now.
As lightning flashes above our heads, there's a lot to be learned
about this electrical phenomena -- and the LIS team aims to find the
answers to a lot of those questions.
"Measuring lightning is important for knowledge about the weather and
also operationally important for aviation safety. By adding an
instrument on space station, we can add observations from higher
latitudes covering the 48 contiguous states,” said International Space
Station Chief Scientist Julie Robinson, Ph.D. “This is a prime example
of science on the International Space Station benefiting our nation.”
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