Hurricane Observations by Uncrewed Systems

Author:

Zhang Chidong1,Foltz Gregory R.2,Chiodi Andy M.3,Mordy Calvin W.3,Edwards Catherine R.4,Meinig Christian1,Zhang Dongxiao3,Mazza Edoardo5,Cokelet Edward D.1,Burger Eugene F.1,Bringas Francis2,Goni Gustavo J.2,Hristova Hristina G.6,Kim Hyun-Sook2,Trinanes Joaquin A.7,Zhang Jun A.8,Bailey Kathleen E.9,O’Brien Kevin M.3,Morales-Caez Maria10,Lawrence-Slavas Noah1,Jenkins Richard11,Chen Shuyi S.5,Chen Xingchao10

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/Pacific Marine Environment Laboratory, Seattle, Washington;

2. NOAA/Atlantic Oceanic and Meteorological Laboratory, Miami, Florida;

3. NOAA/Pacific Marine Environment Laboratory, and University of Washington, Seattle, Washington;

4. Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia;

5. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington;

6. NOAA/Pacific Marine Environment Laboratory, Seattle, Washington, and University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu, Hawaii;

7. NOAA/Atlantic Oceanic and Meteorological Laboratory, Miami, Florida, and University of Santiago, Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain;

8. NOAA/Atlantic Oceanic and Meteorological Laboratory, and University of Miami, Miami, Florida;

9. U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System, Silver Spring, Maryland;

10. The Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania;

11. Saildrone, Inc., Alameda, California

Abstract

Abstract On 30 September 2021, a saildrone uncrewed surface vehicle (USV) was steered into category 4 Hurricane Sam, the most intense storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season. It measured significant wave heights up to 14 m (maximum wave height = 27 m) and near-surface winds exceeding 55 m s−1. This was the first time in more than seven decades of hurricane observations that in real time a USV transmitted scientific data, images, and videos of the dynamic ocean surface near a hurricane’s eyewall. The saildrone was part of a five-saildrone deployment of the NOAA 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Observations Mission. These saildrones observed the atmospheric and oceanic near-surface conditions of five other tropical storms, of which two became hurricanes. Such observations inside tropical cyclones help to advance the understanding and prediction of hurricanes, with the ultimate goal of saving lives and protecting property. The 2021 deployment pioneered a new practice of coordinating measurements by saildrones, underwater gliders, and airborne dropsondes to make simultaneous and near-collocated observations of the air–sea interface, the ocean immediately below, and the atmosphere immediately above. This experimental deployment opened the door to a new era of using remotely piloted uncrewed systems to observe one of the most extreme phenomena on Earth in a way previously impossible. This article provides an overview of this saildrone hurricane observations mission, describes how the saildrones were coordinated with other observing platforms, presents preliminary scientific results from these observations to demonstrate their potential utility and motivate further data analysis, and offers a vision of future hurricane observations using combined uncrewed platforms.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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