NASA’s IMPACTS Campaign Seeks to Decode East Coast Winter Storms
- Visualizations by:
- Jacquelyn DeMink
- Written by:
- Ellen T. Gray
- Produced by:
- Katie Jepson
- View full credits
Complete transcript available.
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Music: "Snowfall" by Andy Blythe [PRS], Marten Joustra [PRS], "Snow Blanket" by Benjamin James Parsons [PRS]
Starting in January 2020, NASA is sending a team of scientists, a host of ground instruments, and two research aircraft to study the inner workings of snow storms. The Investigation of Microphysics Precipitation for Atlantic Coast-Threatening Snowstorms, or IMPACTS, field campaign will be the first comprehensive study of East Coast snowstorms in 30 years.

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Areas that get a lot of snow tend to be beneath narrow regions within the clouds called snowbands. To understand snowbands, the IMPACTS science team will fly through them in NASA’s P-3 Orion research aircraft, based out of NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.
IMPACTS forecaster, Joe Finlon post-doctoral fellow at the University of Washingston, describes how to find the freeze/thaw line on a chart.
Complete transcript available.
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Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Animator
- Jacquelyn DeMink (USRA) [Lead]
Writer
- Ellen T. Gray (NASA/HQ) [Lead]
Producer
- Katie Jepson (KBRwyle) [Lead]
Narrator
- Katie Jepson (KBRwyle)
Project support
- Kathryn Mersmann (KBRwyle)
- LK Ward (KBRwyle)
Technical support
- Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET)
Principal investigator
- Lynn McMurdie (University of Washington)