I have to admit that I was thrilled with the news.
On Thursday, September 30, an autonomous (unmanned) sailboat, called a Saildrone, made it into the center of Hurricane Sam, a category four tropical cyclone, measuring extraordinary winds and seas.
And it even sent back live video.
The hurricane Saildrone project, a joint effort of NOAA and an innovative private firm (Saildrone, Inc), has the goal of collecting valuable surface observations within tropical cyclones. Observations of the upper layers of the ocean and near-surface atmosphere are particularly valuable because they provide information regarding the critical transfer of energy and moisture from the warm tropical ocean into the lower atmosphere.
One of the missing pieces in understanding and forecasting tropical storms.
There is really only one way to get this information: by having observing assets at the ocean-atmosphere interface. And no manned vehicle would dare enter such a severe environment.
On Thursday, Hurricane Sam was an impressive category 4 storm with the strongest sustained winds estimated at 125 knots (144 mph), with gusts to 150 knots (173 mph). The central pressure was estimated to be 938 hPa.
Richard Jenkins, the CEO of Saildrone, shared these observations from the boat that day. Significant wave heights go to 14 meters (46 feet), with peak gusts reaching 114 knots (131 mph).
Last year, I served as the meteorologist for a test of new hurricane-ready Saildrones with shorter, stockier sails that are far less liable to sheared off or be damaged (check out the first picture above to compare). Ironically, the historic Saildrone that entered hurricane SAM had a technical problem last year off the Northwest coast and struggled to reach the Washington Coast where it was retrieved.
The Second Edition of My Northwest Weather Book is Now Available!
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