While we were busy looking up, six researchers from NASA‘s Langley Research Center were in Fort Drum, New York collecting data. NASA teamed up with the World Meteorological Organization, National Center for Atmospheric Research, and the University of Albany to find out how today’s eclipse impacted the troposphere.
Weather sensors similar to what is used on daily weather balloons by the National Weather Service will be added to a specially modified Alta X Uncrewed Aircraft System (UAS) and flown to a maximum altitude of nearly two miles, higher than the team has ever flown the UAS. The UAS will provide vertical modeling of temperature, relative humidity, pressure, and wind to test an alternative data collection to using traditional weather balloons in the troposphere. The troposphere is the lowest layer of Earth’s atmosphere where most types of clouds are found and where weather occurs.
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