File:KSC-05-S-00143 (van 050905 noaaweather).webm
KSC-05-S-00143_(van_050905_noaaweather).webm (WebM audio/video file, VP9/Opus, length 2 min 32 s, 320 × 212 pixels, 213 kbps overall, file size: 3.86 MB)
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[edit]DescriptionKSC-05-S-00143 (van 050905 noaaweather).webm |
English: Tiffany Nail: Also with us today is Captain Paul Lucyk, the weather officer for the NOAA-N launch. Thanks for joining us, Captain. Paul Lucyk: Thank you, Tiffany. It's great to be here. Nail: Can you please tell us how the weather is looking for launch day? Explain how it affects NASA's decision to launch. Lucyk: Sure, I'd be glad to. On the night of launch, my weather team and I will monitor multiple constraints throughout the count. Several of these constraints are established to protect the vehicle against natural and triggered lightening and also monitor constraints for precipitation which could damage the vehicle during the assent and fly-out, as well as surface winds that are essential for the safety of tower rolls, fueling and lift off. Now, if any of these constraints are violated, NASA, along with the 30th Space Wing and Boeing, will establish either a hold or a potential scrub. Looking at our satellite imagery, I can talk a little bit about the forecast. We have a low pressure system just off to the northeast corner of California and into the southeastern of Oregon. That low pressure system brought a frontal system through here this morning, and behind that frontal system, we have high pressure building in. That high pressure is going to serve to tighten our pressure gradient and allow our winds to increase throughout the day tomorrow, afternoon and into tomorrow evening. That can be our primary concern for launch, is those surface winds that I just mentioned. Now, looking at our launch forecast at T-0, it calls for stratocumulus clouds in a few scattered areas from 1,000 to 4,000 feet. Our visibility will be unrestricted and we'll have temperatures in the low to mid 50s. We won't have any significant weather in the area other than those gusty winds. We are expecting winds from the north from 20 to 25 knots at T-0. But as I said, we'll expect to see higher winds in the afternoon for tower roll. We are expecting about 35 knots tomorrow afternoon, so overall probability of violation before T-0 is 40 percent. Should we have to scrub and go into a longer time frame, looking at 24 hours out, our forecast calls for much of the same conditions. We do expect some gusty winds again on Wednesday afternoon, which again will present a problem for tower roll. But we do expect those to subside once we get into a -- later on in the count. We will expect winds from the north, again 18 to 22 knots. So our probability of violation for a 24-hour scrub is 20 percent. Looking beyond that, the high pressure will build in more significantly and that will loosen the pressure gradient and bring more favorable weather for later on in the week. Tiffany? Nail: Thank you so much, Captain, and good luck with the launch. Lucyk: Thank you. |
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Date | Taken on 23 May 2005 | ||
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Author | NASA Kennedy Space Center | ||
Keywords InfoField | atmosphere; noaa; nasa; forecasting; goes; polar_operational_environmental; poes; climate; national_weather_service; earth-observing_satellites; geostationary |
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current | 03:11, 10 May 2024 | 2 min 32 s, 320 × 212 (3.86 MB) | OptimusPrimeBot (talk | contribs) | Imported media from http://images-assets.nasa.gov/video/van_050905_noaaweather/van_050905_noaaweather~orig.mp4 |
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Short title | NOAA-N Webcast 5-9-05 |
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Copyright holder | 2005 |
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