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The pilots chasing 'sky rivers' and cyclones from Japan to the US

The pilots chasing 'sky rivers' and cyclones from Japan to the US

BBC News19-05-2025

Storm-hunting planes chase atmospheric rivers through the sky from Japan to the US, revealing new insights into these powerful storms and how we can keep ourselves safe.
It was an early morning in February, and Capt Nate Wordal, a storm-hunting US Air Force pilot, was flying out of Yokota Air Base west of Tokyo. After fighting some turbulence coming off Mount Fuji, he was headed for the vast, blue expanse of the Pacific Ocean. His destination: a type of storm known as an atmospheric river, which was developing off the coast of Japan.
Atmospheric rivers are invisible ribbons of water vapour in the sky. The ones Capt Wordal was hunting form in the Pacific Ocean then travel eastwards to the US West Coast. When they hit the coast and flow up the mountains, the vapour cools, turns into rain or snow and is dumped on the ground – where it can bring devastating floods and avalanches. But the "sky rivers" also bring benefits, and are vital for preventing droughts: in California, they contribute up to 50% of annual rain and snow in just a few days each year. They occur in winter – which for storm-chasing pilots like Capt Wordal, adds another job after the summer hurricane season.
"Our main mission during the year is hurricane hunting," says Capt Wordal, a hurricane hunter with the Air Force 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron. He usually spends the months between May and November flying through hurricanes and dropping weather instruments that capture real-time data for the National Hurricane Center. "And then our next season that we've started in the last few years is this atmospheric river mission," he adds, where the flights gather data on those storms, typically between November and March.
This year, for the first time, some of the flights started in Japan, in addition to flights out of Hawaii and the US West Coast, to measure the storms early on in their journey and create more accurate forecasts.
Generally speaking, "our weather is moving west to east around the northern hemisphere, so the more accurate information you have about a storm further [west], the more you can understand how it's going to evolve," including how much rain or snow it will bring once it makes landfall, says Anna Wilson, an extreme weather specialist. Wilson is the field research manager for the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego – which is is one of the partners of the mission, along with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).
The flights, known as the Atmospheric River Reconnaissance campaign (or AR Recon for short), were started almost 10 years ago by Scripps, Noaa and the Air Force. The missions have grown in scope and reach since then, as atmospheric rivers and their impact have been increasingly in the spotlight.
In the western US, atmospheric rivers are the main cause of flood damage, causing more than $1bn (£753m) a year in such damage. They are becoming bigger, and the strongest ones are becoming more frequent, due to climate change, as warmer air holds more moisture. But people's ability to forecast, prepare for, and cope with these storms and the floods they bring, is also advancing – helped by data from the flights.
"We fly to the [atmospheric river], we cross it multiple times if we can. We really target the [atmospheric river] itself as well as the weather conditions near it that will influence its movements, its growth, its weakening," says Marty Ralph, a meteorologist and the director of the Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at Scripps, as well as the Atmospheric River Reconnaissance programme's principal investigator.
To gather the data, a team in the back of each plane drops cylindrical instruments called dropsondes into the atmospheric river. The dropsondes collect data as they fall through the evolving storm, measuring its temperature, air pressure, wind and moisture, as well as its direction. In addition, the flights out of Japan dropped drifting ocean buoys – each of which is "about the size of a washing machine", says Capt Wordal. They drift in the Pacific Ocean and measure the waves and water temperature, for an ocean observation programme run by Noaa.
"Our data is changing the forecast of where [atmospheric river] is going to hit the coast, when, with what strength and from what angle," Ralph explains. These measurements fill gaps in the data from satellites.
More days to get ready
The information provided by the flights results in more accurate forecasts days before the storm hits, evaluations of their impact suggest. This in turn can help weather services issue appropriate warnings in time, as well as helping reservoir managers decide whether to release water to catch the coming rain and prevent floods.
Until this year, the flights measured atmospheric rivers and fed the information into the forecasts up to five days before the storms hit the coast. With the Japan flights, the aim was to extend these accurate, detailed forecasts by a few more days – and give people on the ground even more days to prepare.
"Our goal in going to the western Pacific, is to maybe try and get an eight-day forecast improved, or even, a 10-day forecast," says Ralph. "The further west we can go, the more likely it is we can improve the forecast more than five days out."
He adds that it can be several storms, influencing and sometimes merging with each other: "It's not like it's one single storm moving the whole way." Each atmospheric river can be several hundreds of kilometres wide, and can transport over 20 times as much water as the Mississippi River.
Flying over cyclones
The flights from Japan started on 3 February, and measured a big atmospheric river that formed off Japan, Ralph says, showing a series of maps on a video call. In the days that followed, that atmospheric river then triggered a cyclone northwest of Hawaii, he explains. (Studies suggest that atmospheric rivers can make cyclones more powerful due to the moisture they bring.) A separate flight out of Hawaii measured that cyclone, while others flew over further atmospheric rivers developing off Japan, he says. After about a week of these atmospheric rivers moving east, gathering strength, and another one developing into a cyclone, the storm then made landfall over California on 12 February.
The storm brought heavy rain and floods to coastal California, and deep snow to the Sierra Nevada, leading streams and reservoirs to rise. It forced some evacuations due to the risk of landslides near burn scars from the recent Eaton and Palisades fires in Los Angeles. But it also helped improve drought conditions in Central and Southern California, according to a preliminary analysis – an illustration of benefits alongside the risks of atmospheric rivers.
For the pilots, the mission is in some ways less intense than hurricane hunting, says Capt Wordal – but the long flights required to chase atmospheric rivers, which can last 10 hours or more, present their own challenges, such as fatigue. The missions are flown with the Air Force's Lockheed WC-130J Hurricane Hunter aircraft, and Noaa's Gulfstream IV aircraft.
"The flying is completely different [to hurricane hunting]," says Capt Wordal. To measure a hurricane, he and his crew fly into it, and spend two-to-four hours battling intense conditions: "Some people compare it to driving through a car wash, because you can get just unbelievable amounts of rain," as well as hail, lightning and heavy turbulence, he says.
By comparison, flying through or over a brewing atmospheric river is calm, says Capt Wordal: "We're doing these giant race tracks across the Pacific Ocean, these really long flights, and we're getting the data of this atmospheric river that's going though the sky."
However, as the atmospheric rivers approach the US West Coast, they become more aggressive and the crews can then experience more storm-like, turbulent conditions, Capt Wordal says. This makes returning to base and landing on any coast much more difficult due to the intense winds and rain hitting the airfield, he adds. In his experience, the challenge is to stay fully alert and engaged to support the crew doing the measurements and keep everyone safe.
The pilots – usually two or three – ensure that the plane is where it needs to be, and that there are no ships below. Navigators are a large part of the mission and work very closely with the pilots and weather officers to chart a safe and efficient flight plan, he explains. In the back of the plane, loadmasters load and drop the dropsondes, and weather officers process the real-time data from the dropsonde and send it to Scripps. "And then they're right onto the next dropsonde. They do this for hours upon hours at a time, they have a lot of work to do in the back, they're really on it," he says.
The next big storm
The impact of the flights out of Japan, and the potential difference they made to the forecasts and situation on the ground, is still being analysed, according to Ralph and Wilson.
"What we expect strongly to see, based on our prior results [and preliminary results from the Japan mission], is seeing additional lead time for impactful events for the US West Coast, just because of having those initial observations upstream, where some of those atmospheric rivers are being generated," says Wilson, who serves as the AR Recon programme's coordinator.
"Getting better and better at targeting the right spots there and then seeing the impact in the forecasts on the US West Coast, is really exciting," she adds.
In 2021, for example, flights out of Hawaii measured several atmospheric rivers and cyclones about five days before they hit California. Without the dropsonde data, the forecast was for a not very concerning storm, but with the data, the forecast changed to a major atmospheric river storm, Ralph says. This in turn helped people get ready: knowing that a big storm was coming, "the emergency preparedness community sprung into action, they closed roads, they evacuated neighbourhoods, in anticipation of a possible serious storm," he says. When the storm did hit, it caused substantial damage, "but there wasn't a loss of any life, so that was a success story in emergency preparedness," he concludes.
Preventing droughts
In addition, such preparedness can be vital for drought prevention, Ralph says. Given that atmospheric rivers are so important for the water supply, reservoir managers face a difficult choice, he explains: if they empty a full reservoir ahead of a predicted big storm with heavy rain, and that rain then turns out to be less than expected, they've lost the next summer's water supply. "If there are no more storms for that winter, they can never get that water back [before the summer]," he says – when it will be needed for farming, for example.
But if reservoir managers have accurate forecasts, thanks to the flights, telling them for example that a big storm is coming in three days, they can confidently release water from the reservoir, knowing how much rain will come, and creating space to catch it. (Read more from the BBC about what the flights have revealed about atmospheric rivers, and how these powerful storms are evolving with climate change.)
With the atmospheric river season now over, Capt Wordal is ready to switch over to his other task: chasing hurricanes.
"End of this month is when the hurricane season starts," he says, speaking in May. "April, May, are somewhat down months, where we get back to our training, and getting everyone ready – before we launch into the tropical storm season."
--
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What a US mission to control hurricanes taught us about deadly storms
What a US mission to control hurricanes taught us about deadly storms

BBC News

time20 hours ago

  • BBC News

What a US mission to control hurricanes taught us about deadly storms

An ambitious project to weaken or divert hurricanes generated decades of suspicion and disagreement. What did we learn – and will it ever be revived? As a grad student in the 1960s, Joe Golden flew on about a dozen of missions into the "eyewall" of a hurricane, where winds of 160mph (260km/h) battered the sides of his propeller-powered plane. "You could think of it as a ring of thunderstorms that often tower over 40,000ft [12,200m]," says Golden, who photographed hurricanes and gathered data on their development. "And it can also have frequent lightning in it," he adds, matter-of-factly. "So that's another hazard." Crews on the "hurricane hunting" flights padded their planes' cabin and learned to never ignore orders to strap in when penetrating the wall. But meteorologist Hugh Willoughby recalls thrilling "white-knuckle" flights, including one when life rafts and safety equipment crashed against the ceiling when the plane began falling about 200ft (60m), its engine flaming out. "This is something I dearly loved: get up at 2:00 in the morning, put on my flight suit, lace up my boots," says Willoughby. "Go into the kids' room, pull the covers up over them, kiss them on the forehead, and go out and fly into a raging tempest." Since the 1940s, pioneers like Willoughby and Golden have been embarking on daring flights into this most intense region of a hurricane to gather data that has expanded scientific knowledge about them and revealed how they develop their lethal force. But, for a brief window of a few decades, the US Department of Defense and weather services flew missions into the eyewall with an even more ambitious objective: to not only observe these towering storms but to change them. Between 1962 and 1983, under the name Project Stormfury, navy pilots flew missions that released a silver compound into "the belt of maximum winds", just beyond the wall, in the belief that this region was violent but unstable. If so, perhaps it could be disrupted, calming the storm's vicious force. Six decades after its first flights – and 42 years since it was cancelled – Stormfury veterans Golden and Willoughby remember a project that gave us vital knowledge that has helped to save lives. But along with this, US attempts to control storms have left behind a controversial legacy that has fueled distrust and conspiracy theories, with some unanswered questions that linger today. From nuclear weapons to hurricane experiments Both Golden and Willoughby recall that weather modification projects emerged at a time of enormous optimism following the end of World War Two, when there was a widespread perception that there was no limit to what science could achieve. In the background was the nuclear bomb, says Kristine Harper, professor of history and sciences at the University of Copenhagen. After the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was expectation that constructive uses of atomic energy would follow, from nuclear power to " atomic gardening" that used radioactive substances to breed new mutant crops. In 1946, newspaper and radio stations speculated that nuclear weapons might soon safeguard us from acts of God, recounts Harper in her book Make It Rain, an account of the US government's attempts at weather control. One New York Times article asked whether atomic energy "by its explosive force" could divert hurricanes away from cities. "You know, maybe we could destroy hurricanes with nuclear bombs?" laughs Harper. (This is not a good idea, meteorologists have repeatedly clarified.) Early efforts to explore weather control were backed by veterans of the Manhattan Project, including John von Neumann and the so-called "father of the H-bomb" Edward Teller. But the most important breakthrough arrived, instead, inside a small, adapted freezer. At the research laboratory at US firm General Electric run by Nobel Prize-winning chemist Irving Langmuir, experiments had shown it might be possible to induce rain in clouds, by releasing substances that would cause supercooled water in the clouds to crystallise into snowflakes. To test this "cloud seeding" technology in the field, Langmuir's assistant dropped dry ice out of the window of a single-engine airplane into a cloud hanging over western Massachusetts in November 1946. Langmuir was watching through binoculars from the ground below as snow began to fall in autumn toward a mountain called Mount Greylock. "This is history!" he cried down the phone to reporters, according to Caesar's Last Breath: The Epic Story of the Air Around Us by Sam Kean. At a time when many dreamed they might soon "be able to choose their weather much as they chose a radio station", writes Harper, the era of weather control appeared to be startlingly close at hand. How to weaken a hurricane Although little was known at the time about hurricane structure and behaviour, the US Navy and Army agreed to collaborate with Langmuir's lab on Project Cirrus, which aimed to understand if cloud seeding technology might be able to help extinguish hurricanes at birth, divert them off-course, or else weaken deadly tropical cyclones before they hit land. Data gathered by weather balloons and aircraft indicated that hurricane clouds might contain large quantities of supercooled water, like the cloud Langmuir had seeded. During the hurricane season of 1947, on October 13, he convinced a navy crew to drop 80kg (200lb) of dry ice into an ice crusher in the belly of a B-17 bomber, sprinkling powder into a hurricane crossing Florida. This would be the historic first attempt to use this technology to modify a tropical cyclone. Although the adapted World War Two bombers did not have the technology to precisely target areas of the hurricane, their mission was enough to encourage the project's directors. Flying in a B-17 half-a-mile behind the seeding plane, a US Navy meteorologist observed overcast clouds turned into snowfall, noting the hurricane appeared to undergo "pronounced modification", recounts Fixing The Sky by Jim Flemming. But in the days after, the unexpected happened. The hurricane that had been heading out harmlessly to sea, swerved from its course. Hitching westward, toward shore, it smashed the city of Savannah, Georgia, resulting in one recorded death and damage estimated at millions of dollars. Despite no firm evidence, Langmuir said he was "99% sure" the storm had changed course due to the seeding. Stormfury's goal Fears among the public and questions from meteorologists plagued Project Cirrus until it ended in 1952. But the US military maintained a strong interest in storm modification as their involvement in the Vietnam War escalated in the 1960s, says Harper. "The Navy had a secret programme out at China Lake Naval Air Station [in California] where they were working on seeding techniques or weather-control techniques that were going to be used in Laos in Vietnam," she says. These classified missions, codenamed Operation Popeye, aimed to develop a "weather weapon" that could seed rain storms to wash out the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the North Vietnamese military supply line. For these efforts, says Harper, a civilian programme to research weather modification would provide the "perfect cover". According to Stormfury's working hypothesis, by seeding the area just outside the eye wall with silver iodide, they could cause clouds to form a second eyewall, which in turn would compete with the inner eye wall. If they could make an eyewall to reform at a greater width, they expected that they would slow the hurricane's speed, Harper explains – like an ice skater extending their arms to slow their twirl. Noaa "If they could reduce the wind speed by 10% or so, that could make a difference in the category of intensity at landfall," says Willoughby, who started out flying storm-monitoring missions in the Pacific for the US Navy during the early 1970s. If a 100mph (160 km/h) wind could be slowed to (80km/h), it would actually lose 75% of its force. Hurricane Esther would provide the crucial test for the theory. Emerging around the islands of Cabo Verde (Cape Verde) in September 1961, the storm was becoming more intense as it swept through the Atlantic, about 400 miles (640km) north of Puerto Rico. On 16 September, an aircraft belonging to the US Weather Bureau flew through Esther's eyewall and dropped eight canisters of silver iodide into the raging winds. On a radar instrument monitoring Esther, US Weather Bureau planes detected a weakening of the eyewall. Despite other checks showing no change, it was declared a success, the Stormfury era was officially launched. Penned in The 1947 Project Cirrus mission still loomed large, despite research indicating the hurricane had already begun to turn before the seeding flight. As a result, Stormfury was restricted by a stringent set of requirements for how and where hurricanes could be modified. What resulted was a polygon zone drawn on a map: a confined experimental area, over the open Atlantic far from the US – yet close enough to Cuba that Fidel Castro accused the US of trying to attack his communist regime. As a result of these restrictions, many storm seasons came and went during the 1960s, as Stormfury waited on call, frustrated. After another seeding mission in 1963, which produced mostly inconclusive results, Hurricane Betsy in 1965 appeared the perfect candidate, explains Golden, who joined Stormfury in 1964 and spent four decades at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa). As the hurricane approached the Caribbean, Golden recalls Stormfury's leaders, the pioneering meteorologists Joanne and Robert Simpson, waiting on the line for Noaa's chief Robert White to give the go-ahead. "We could only seed if the eye was within a prescribed area – and it was 50 miles [80km] outside the prescribed area," he says, so the crew stood down. Although a huge disappointment to the team, that turned out to be a stroke of luck, he adds, which avoided a repeat of Project Cirrus's controversy. "Hurricane Betsy made a very strange loop and it actually tracked to the south-west and hit just south of Miami." Stormfury's biggest mission would finally arrive in 1969. On 18 and 20 August, 13 aircraft were involved in five runs across Hurricane Debbie, including a Navy A-6 Intruder jet, which dropped 1,000 silver iodide canisters each day. After nearly a decade of false starts, the data they gathered was jaw-dropping: most encouragingly, they documented a second eye wall emerging after seeding flights, with weaker winds, matching the hypothesis. During the two seeding days, winds decreased by 31% and 15%. Stormfury director R Cecil Gentry concluded that there was less than a one-in-10 chance of this happening naturally and his paper in the journal Science found that the data suggested the storm had been successfully modified by the scientists. The end of Stormfury Debbie was not the springboard to greater success that many involved in the project hoped. The last seeding flight flew in 1971, dropping canisters into the ill-defined eyewall of Hurricane Ginger with no discernible effect. Later the same year the Navy pulled support. The Navy's exit was in part because they no longer needed to test it, says Harper: "They were using the techniques in Vietnam and Laos – they didn't need to test them in the Atlantic anymore on hurricanes." Figures revealed in the Pentagon Papers in 1974 showed a far less cautious use of silver iodide and similar compounds in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, where Air Force and Navy planes dropped in a total of 47,409 canisters in 2,600 seeding missions. In total, Stormfury's seeding flights had dropped canisters of silver iodide into four hurricanes on eight different days. Data across these flights found that on four days, winds reduced, falling in wind-speed by between 10% or more. Other days, nothing happened, which was blamed on flights failing to hit targets or poorly chosen storms. With few candidate storms in the Atlantic, during the 1970s, the US attempted to strike deals with Australia and the Philippines to run further tests on storms in the Pacific Ocean, off their coastlines. "The countries in the Pacific Rim just said, no," says Harper. "Just: 'No. That's not going to happen.'" Around the time of Debbie's apparent success, the scientific basis of the project began to crumble. Images appeared to show some hurricanes spontaneously developed multiple concentric eyewalls, a phenomenon that Willoughby personally observed while flying through tropical storms with the Navy. If this was the case, Debbie's results could be mere coincidence. At the same time, research increasingly questioned whether hurricanes contained the vast clouds of supercooled water that Stormfury believed could be seeded, instead finding ice, which would be unaffected by silver iodide. "Probably [either] one would have carried the day in an objective scientific evaluation," says Willoughby. Although he had joined Stormfury with the intention of contributing to storm modification, being assigned to seeding crews, Willoughby never flew a seeding mission and found a project adrift. "Frankly, to my mind, the experiment did not seem to be well-thought-out in those later days," he says. Writing the final evaluation of the project in 1985, Willougby concluded that despite the team's determined efforts, "the expected results of seeding are often indistinguishable from naturally occurring intensity changes". Did Stormfury fail? To all involved, it was clear that Stormfury was never a normal meteorological study – instead, an experiment that began "at the wrong end", according to the Navy's project leader Pierre St Amand, quoted in Make it Rain. Because of the project's military value, and potential impact on civilian safety, Stormfury received millions of dollars in funding and support that most meteorological studies can only imagine. At the same time, hurricane science was still in its infancy, with not enough known to make accurate predictions about their interior structure and behaviour. "There was a germ of science," Harper summarises. But it's a pretty safe bet Stormfury would've remained in the lab if it weren't for military interests, she adds. Nevertheless, the project delivered results that are still keeping us safe in other ways. "The aircraft measurements taught us a lot about hurricane structure and behaviour," says Joe Golden. "And those data helped to improve the models at the time." The funding it generated for meteorology helped address these knowledge gaps. Willoughby, who is currently a research professor at Florida International University, says that since the start of Stormfury, the 24-hour forecast for hurricane's path has vastly increased in accuracy, from an error of more 120 nautical miles (138 miles/222km) to around 50 nautical miles (58 miles/93km), and forecast of hurricane intensity have improved from vague guidance to predictions accurate to within 10 knots (12mph/19km/h). Data gathered by the observer planes are still being researched, and instruments developed by Stormfury provide more accurate ways for airplanes to track hurricanes. Two highly modified P3 airplanes that were purchased for Stormfury – known affectionately as Kermit and Miss Piggy – continue to be used, some 50 years on. A future for storm modification? For some, Stormfury is unfinished work. "Stormfury was one of the most frustrating scientific experiments in my life," Golden says. "In a nutshell, I think that Noaa gave up too soon." Over the years, Golden has continued to make a case for government agencies to step up and show ambition to make hurricane modification a reality. Spurred by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, in which nearly 2,000 people died, Golden began working with the US Department of Homeland Security on "Hamp", the Hurricane Aerosol and Microphysics Program. "It was also aimed at weakening hurricanes, but it had a whole different approach. Instead of silver iodide, we were going to use very tiny salt aerosols as the seeding agent," he says. "Had the funding continued, we were going to do some field experiments – not on hurricanes initially, but just on cloud lines." "The modeling results were very, very encouraging," he says, indicating that aerosols could not only diminish a hurricane's intensity but alter its course. "That's very important: if you can steer a hurricane like Katrina away from New Orleans, think of all the lives and the property damage that you would have saved." "That had some very tantalising results but – yet again – the funding ran out," he says. Willoughby, meanwhile, feels Noaa was right to end research. "It was a beguiling idea – what's not to like about making it rain in the desert or keeping typhoons and hurricanes from wrecking cities?" he asks. "But the science didn't work out." For anyone with a theory of how to stop hurricanes, the hurdles are clear, says Willoughby. "What you do is you come up with an idea, you'd have to do a tabletop experiment or a small-scale field trial, and then use that to simulate it in a numerical model." Yet he doubts a solution will find a way to match the force of a tropical storm – even if we use nuclear weapons. Stormfury was a humbling reality check, says Willoughby, pitting humans against the "immense" energy of a hurricane – estimated to be equivalent to a 10-megatonne nuclear bomb exploding every 20 minutes. "Perhaps some day, somebody will come up with a way to weaken hurricanes artificially," he writes in an email. "Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could do it." -- If you liked this story, sign up for The Essential List newsletter – a handpicked selection of features, videos and can't-miss news, delivered to your inbox twice a week. For more science, technology, environment and health stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram.

‘Flying blind': leading Florida weatherman warns Trump funding cuts will degrade forecasts
‘Flying blind': leading Florida weatherman warns Trump funding cuts will degrade forecasts

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

‘Flying blind': leading Florida weatherman warns Trump funding cuts will degrade forecasts

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Weatherman warns hurricane forecasts in doubt after DOGE's ‘attack on science'
Weatherman warns hurricane forecasts in doubt after DOGE's ‘attack on science'

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • The Independent

Weatherman warns hurricane forecasts in doubt after DOGE's ‘attack on science'

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