Scientists to study hurricanes by unmanned planes

2008-05-27 02:19:28 GMT       2008-05-27 10:19:28 (Beijing Time)       Xinhua English

BEIJING, May 27 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. researchers are planning to use unmanned, remote controlled airplanes this year to penetrate the heart of Atlantic hurricanes in the hope of learning more about what makes the giant storms tick, media reported Tuesday.

Storm researchers are confident their drones, which resemble hobbyists' model airplanes but can be controlled by satellites, will give them a more complete picture of the core of cyclones than they've ever had before.

The drones can fly into the eye of a storm just some 100 meters above the sea surface and send back a constant stream of temperature, pressure, wind and humidity readings.

"It can get measurements we couldn't get otherwise," said Joe Cione, a research meteorologist with the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "That area of the storm is critical because that's where the maximum winds are. It will give us a better understanding of where the energy is extracted out of the sea."

Made by Australia's Aerosonde Pty Ltd. and worth between 50,000 U.S. dollars and 80,000 dollars, the unmanned aircraft measure just some 2-meter long, have a 2.7-metre wingspan, and weigh only 28 pounds (12.7 kg).

They are much smaller and less sophisticated than those used by the U.S. military in war zones. Powered by a tiny 24 cc motor and a single propeller, they can fly at about 70 mph (113 kph) and cover an astonishing over 3,000 km on a single 0.66 U.S. gallon (2.5-litre) tank of fuel, Cione said.

They are catapulted into flight or launched from a moving vehicle, and are initially flown using a joystick before control is transferred to a laptop and then to satellite.

Unlike the manned hurricane hunter aircraft used for years to penetrate cyclones at around 3,000 meters, the Aerosondes will fly a few hundred feet above the ocean, where the critical energy transfer from sea surface to storm occurs.

(Agencies)

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