| Taumi
Daniels
TAMDAR Project Lead, NASA's Langley Research
Center
Hampton, VA
Weather forecasters in the middle of the United States are
making better local predictions for pilots thanks to an airborne
sensor being tested by NASA's Aviation Safety Program. Taumi
Daniels led the team of researchers at Langley Research Center
that designed, built, and equipped dozens of Mesaba Airlines
aircraft with the Tropospheric Airborne Meteorological Data
Report instrument (TAMDAR) that allows aircraft to automatically
sense and report atmospheric conditions. The Georgia Institute
of Technology Research Institute, Atlanta, GA, and AirDAT, L.L.C.,
Morrisville, NC, developed TAMDAR for NASA.
NASA Tech Briefs: How does the TAMDAR project
serve the mission of NASA's Aviation Safety Program?
Taumi Daniels: The small component of NASA’s
overall Aviation Safety Program that funded the TAMDAR project
has a particular interest in improving aviation weather information
for pilots. Statistics show that weather is a contributing cause
to 30% of all aviation accidents. To tackle this problem, we
realized that we had to provide pilots with better weather information.
If you go back about six years and look at the type of information
that was available for pilots, you realize that the weather
information that was being provided had to be improved. To accomplish
this task more weather data has to be collected. That data can
be used to create improved weather products, which in turn can
be data-linked back into the cockpits so that pilots can make
better-informed decisions with respect to weather.
NTB: How are weather conditions currently measured?
Daniels: Prior to TAMDAR – and still
in use today – you had four sources of upper-air measurements:
(1) next-generation radar, such as the system that was deployed
in 1988 called the wind shear radar system (WSR88 NEXRAD), which
are deployed all across the U.S. and provide moisture and wind
measurements; (2) wind profilers – microwave radiometer
radars that are mounted on the ground, point straight up, and
measure the wind fields – that are deployed mainly across
the Great Plains; (3) weather balloons that are launched twice
a day from 70 locations across the U.S.; and (4) satellites
that measure temperature, irradiances, and cloud cover, as well
as extract moisture and icing information. In addition to these
sources, the big airliners provide temperature and wind data
called MDCRS (meteorological data collection reporting system).
All of this data is ingested into the forecast models on an
hourly basis. The National Weather Service does a fantastic
job with ingesting all of this data, outputting all of the models,
and providing forecasts; however, if you look at the huge amount
of data – where it is collected, how often it is collected
– you see gaps. This is where TAMDAR comes in.
NTB: How is TAMDAR different?
Daniels: First, the instrument measures temperature,
humidity, pressure, winds icing, and turbulence, which is time
and location stamped using GPS (Global Positioning System) technology.
All of this information forms an observation that is then automatically
sent to the ground in the form of an automated PIREP (PIlot
REPort – a voice report from a pilot on current weather
conditions). The NSF sponsored an aviation weather task force
in 1986 and one of the highest priorities was the development
of an automated PIREP system. There isn’t necessarily
a lack of these reports, but they are subjective. So, an objective,
automated measurement of the weather was needed. This is the
purpose of TAMDAR; it is an automated system.
NTB: How was the sensor tested?
Daniels: To begin with, if you look at all
of the little airports where the regional airliners fly –
in particular the company (AirDAT) contracted by NASA to develop
the sensor that partnered with Mesaba Airlines (a Northwest
Airlink affiliate headquartered in Minneapolis, MN) –
they are in locations where there is no weather balloon launch
or NEXRAD radar system; so, this information is not being collected
in these locations. Every time a Mesaba airplane takes off or
lands you get a “sounding.” A sounding is all of
that weather data mentioned earlier that is measured at each
altitude as the aircraft flies up or down. With a sounding,
a meteorologist at any of the local offices then knows what
the structure of the atmosphere is and can therefore make a
very good forecast of, for example, precipitation type, or the
onset of fog or snow.
So there are two uses for the collected weather data: feed it
into the huge computer forecast models and give it to the local
forecasters. This is what we did in the Great Lakes Fleet Experiment,
this is a big, yearlong experiment that we conducted starting
in January of 2004 and just ended a couple of weeks ago. The
objective of the experiment was to determine the impact of airborne
observations on numerical models and on the local forecasts.
This was a really big experiment with a whole bunch of researchers
from around the country working on it together. I thought of
it as kind of like the Linux Open Source model – provide
the data for free and then see who is willing to use it.
In addition, we wanted to see the impact of this data on some
of the product development teams. The FAA has a program called
the aviation weather research program, which is composed of
10-12 product development teams (PDT). Each of these teams is
composed of researchers scattered across the country who are
trying to improve weather products that will then eventually
be used by pilots, weather briefers, and others in aviation-weather
community. In particular, there is the turbulence PDT, the icing
PDT, the convection PDT, a team that is trying to improve the
NEXRAD radar, and several others. Four of them – the icing,
turbulence, surface temperature, and convection PDTs –
are currently evaluating the use of TAMDAR data and the impact
of the data on their particular weather product. While the experiment
is completed, I am still waiting for final results from these
different groups.
NTB: Will the TAMDAR sensors be utilized on
commercial aircraft?
Daniels: Originally, the TAMDAR was intended
for the GA (general aviation) community – the small airplanes.
When we first thought of the idea for the TAMDAR we thought
that these are the aircraft that have the most accidents, so
these were the pilots that we had to help the most; however,
the business model simply was not there. You are not going to
be able to ask someone who flies the little airplanes to pay
for a $4,000-$5,000 sensor and report all this weather data
that is not necessarily going to help them immediately. We had
a business feasibility study done, and in that study they pointed
out the obvious fact that the sensor should be installed on
regional airliners – the turbo prop planes and the smaller
jets. This is why when we finished the sensor development we
partnered with Mesaba.
AirDAT’s new business model includes providing the weather
data for free and they are using the information to develop
their own weather products. The company did announce in December
that they partnered with Horizon Airlines. They are continuing
to equip more airplanes across the U.S. and collect more of
this data. It is nice to know that this is actually going to
result in something long term.
A full transcript of this interview appears online at www.techbriefs.com/whoswho.
For more information, please contact Taumi Daniels at taumi.daniels@nasa.gov.
|