by Maj. Marnee A.C. Losurdo
403rd Wing Public Affairs
10/21/2014 - KEESLER AIR FORCE BASE, Miss. -- It's
been a busy two weeks for the Air Force Reserve's Hurricane Hunters.
The 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron flew their last of 15 missions
into Hurricane Ana in the Pacific Monday while gathering weather data
for the Central Pacific Hurricane Center.
On the other side of the globe, the hunters wrapped up a week-long
deployment to St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, flying their last
Hurricane Gonzalo mission Oct. 16 in the Atlantic.
It's not unusual to have storms this late in the season, said Maj. Jon Brady, 53rd WRS aerial reconnaissance weather officer.
"The peak of the season is in September, but there is a historical trend
for it to re-spike in October. Some of the biggest storms and hybrid
storms form in October," he said, adding that Hurricane Sandy struck in
October and was the deadliest and most destructive hurricane of the 2012
Atlantic hurricane season.
What is extremely rare is to have a third hurricane hit Hawaii in the
same season, said Brady, who added the Hurricane Hunters only deploy to
the Central Pacific when Hawaii is threatened. Hawaii has been hit by
five hurricanes since 1952, until this year the last hurricane to strike
the islands was Hurricane Iniki in 1992.
The Hurricane Hunters deployed to Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam Hawaii
for the second time this season and began flying missions into Ana Oct.
16. The unit deployed to Hawaii in August to fly Hurricanes Iselle and
Julio. The last time the squadron deployed to Hawaii was in 2007 for
Hurricane Flossie, which wasn't a direct hit and brought light damage to
the islands.
"The Pacific is much warmer than normal," said Brady. "This is
indicative of an El Nino, which gets the water much hotter than normal
and causes more storms to form in the Pacific than the Atlantic, which
was the case this year."
Ana, the 21st named storm in the Pacific, became a Hurricane Oct. 18,
passing to the south of the Hawaiian Islands, but caused severe weather
and heavy rains over the weekend.
The National Weather Service's Central Pacific Hurricane Center in
Honolulu and the National Hurricane Center in Miami rely on satellite
images and Doppler radar for their forecasts models. The data the
hurricane hunters provide improves the accuracy of the track forecast by
15 to 20 percent, said Dennis Feltgen, NHC public affairs officer.
"When you look at the satellite imagery you are not sure what is going
on inside the storm. Sending the Hurricane Hunters into a storm is the
equivalent of going to the doctor's office and getting an MRI," he said.
To gather this data, aircrews fly through the eye of a storm four to six
times to locate the low-pressure center and circulation of the storm.
During each pass through the eye, they release a dropsonde, which
collects weather data on its descent to the ocean surface, measuring
wind speed and direction, temperature, dew point and pressure. During
storm flights, the aircrews transmit weather data via satellite
communication every 10 minutes to the NHC or CPHC providing forecasters
vital data on a storm's intensity and direction, assisting them with
their forecasts and storm warnings.
The NHC used this data earlier in the month for forecast and storm
warnings for the Caribbean Islands impacted by Hurricane Gonzalo.
The squadron deployed to the Henry E. Rohlsen Airport in St. Croix Oct.
10 to track the weather system that formed into Tropical Storm Gonzalo
Oct. 12 and became a hurricane Oct. 14.
As the system made its way through the Caribbean Islands, the deployed
aircrews relocated to Homestead Air Reserve Base, Florida, Oct. 13.
Aircrews continued around-the-clock reconnaissance of the hurricane
until Oct. 16. They flew out of Homestead and Keesler Air Force Base,
Mississippi. The squadron flew 15 missions gathering data on the storm,
which at its strongest was a Category 4, and caused damage in Antigua,
Saint Martin and Bermuda. The storm struck Bermuda Oct. 18 as a Category
2. The storm's remnants hit the United Kingdom late Monday.
While crews recover from Hurricanes Ana and Gonzalo, the squadron is
moving on to the next storm. The Hurricane Hunters are flying a low
level investigation mission today on a storm forming in the Gulf of
Mexico near the Bay of Campeche west of Yucatan.
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