WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.050 When it comes to hurricanes, research has come a long 2 00:00:04.070 --> 00:00:08.110 way to help predict when and where a storm will hit. 3 00:00:08.130 --> 00:00:12.160 Forecasting intensity is a much bigger challenge, and 4 00:00:12.180 --> 00:00:16.210 an instrument called HIWRAP will investigate the strength of a storm. 5 00:00:16.230 --> 00:00:20.250 The HIWRAP instrument will fly aboard an aircraft to study storms 6 00:00:20.270 --> 00:00:24.280 from the very large down to the very small scale. Braun: And because those smaller 7 00:00:24.300 --> 00:00:28.330 scales tend to be much chaotic and difficult to predict, 8 00:00:28.350 --> 00:00:32.350 and the interactions between those smaller scales and the large scales is far more 9 00:00:32.370 --> 00:00:36.350 complex, it makes it a huge challenge to try to 10 00:00:36.370 --> 00:00:40.410 improve intensity forecasts. The High-Altitude Imaging 11 00:00:40.430 --> 00:00:44.500 Wind and Rain Airborne Profiler, or HIWRAP, is a 12 00:00:44.520 --> 00:00:48.560 radar designed to examine the factors of storm intensity. 13 00:00:48.580 --> 00:00:52.610 Braun: The HIWRAP Doppler radar is a dual-frequency radar, so it has two frequencies 14 00:00:52.630 --> 00:00:56.650 that measure at two different angles and as the plane is 15 00:00:56.670 --> 00:01:00.700 flying, it's sort of scanning in a cone. 16 00:01:00.720 --> 00:01:04.730 And as it's flying over a particular target--say, the eyewall of a storm--by scanning 17 00:01:04.750 --> 00:01:08.750 in a cone it looks first one way, and then sees the storm from a different direction. 18 00:01:08.770 --> 00:01:12.760 And that's what allows us then to measure the three-dimensional 19 00:01:12.780 --> 00:01:16.850 winds and precipitation within the storm. Because the storm and the aircraft 20 00:01:16.870 --> 00:01:20.920 are both moving, the HIWRAP must send out 5,000 pulses 21 00:01:20.940 --> 00:01:24.980 a second to get an accurate read on precipitation particles, 22 00:01:25.000 --> 00:01:29.040 like rain or ice. The signals that bounce back reveal the type, 23 00:01:29.060 --> 00:01:33.090 size, and distribution of rain or ice particles, as well as 24 00:01:33.110 --> 00:01:37.130 how fast the particles are moving. The speed of the particles can help determine 25 00:01:37.150 --> 00:01:41.160 the wind and circulation in a storm. HIWRAP will provide 26 00:01:41.180 --> 00:01:45.210 scientists with years of unprecedented data that will allow them to 27 00:01:45.230 --> 00:01:49.220 decipher the formation, structure, and intensification 28 00:01:49.240 --> 00:01:53.300 of hurricanes. 29 00:01:53.320 --> 00:01:57.380 30 00:01:57.400 --> 00:02:01.440 31 00:02:01.460 --> 00:02:05.450 32 00:02:05.470 --> 00:02:05.472