The primary mission of the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron
(53rd WRS) is to conduct tropical storm reconnaissance. The 53rd WRS
is aligned under the 403rd Reserve Wing located at Keesler AFB in
Biloxi, Mississippi. Although the airplanes and people are
Department of Defense assets the units “primary tasking” command is
the Department of Commerce. Although a strange set-up it has worked
well. Tropical reconnaissance is governed by the National Hurricane
Operations Plan. This plan specifics that the 53rd WRS will support
24 hour a day continuous operations and have the ability to fly up
to 3 storms at a time with a response time of 16 hours. I am sure
you thinking, 3 storms a day, that would never happen! Well, our AOR
is not just the Caribbean and the Atlantic it actually extends from
the Mid-Atlantic (55W Longitude) to the International Dateline in
the Pacific.
 
Since the 53rd WRS is tasked to
fly three storms, twice a day, there is a necessity for ten
full-time aircrews and ten part-time. Many of the part-timers
are part of the civilian work force and hold a wide array of
jobs including airline pilots, school teachers, realtors, you
name it.
They come to the base a couple of times
every month to train and will fly recon missions when available. The 53rd WRS
flies the WC-130J with a five person crew element to include a
pilot, co-pilot, navigator, aerial reconnaissance weather
officer (ARWO), and a Weather Loadmaster.
Low Level Investigation:

When a storm is beginning to form, the
National Hurricane Center will send the 53rd WRS to investigate
whether the winds are blowing in a counterclockwise rotation
therefore indicating a “closed system”. This mission is flown
from 500 - 1500 feet above the ocean surface; the ARWO will
constantly monitor the ocean waves in order to determine the
wind speed and direction from the sea state. The low-level wind
and pressure fields will provide an accurate snapshot for the
Hurricane Center Forecasters. Once it is determined that there
is a circulation within the disturbance, the mission will
transform into a “fix” mission.
Fix Mission:
The “fix” mission is where the ARWO
will direct the crew to the true center of the storm. In order
to get a good overall look at the storm the unit flies the storm
using an alpha pattern (see image below), which consists of
intercardinal headings with legs 105 nautical miles in length.
This alpha pattern is repeated 2 times during one mission.

During flight weather data is continuously
collected and sent directly to the National Hurricane Center via
satellite communications. Since the WC-130J is not equipped for
aerial refueling, the alpha pattern will continue until “bingo”
fuel is reached or the National Hurricane Center has received
all the information it needs. We enter major hurricanes
(category 3 or above) at 10,000 feet. While penetrating the
eyewall, a weather instrument, called a dropsonde, is released
to determine the maximum winds at the surface and than another
“sonde” is released in the eye to detect the lowest pressure at
the surface. After exiting the eye the ARWO creates a vortex
message that includes the exact latitude and longitude of the
center as well as maximum winds, maximum temperature and minimum
pressure. For more information where to get their data and how
to read it, click here.
The graphic above illustrates what a sonde looks
like. Sondes collect the same vertical data that weather
balloons over land do just they go down instead of going up.
This instrument gathers weather data including wind direction
and speed, pressure, temperature, and humidity from the planes
altitude to the waters surface creating a vertical profile of
the atmosphere.
Why they do what they do:
So, why do they do this? The impact of hurricane hunter data is
drastic – up to 30% more accurate according to the National
Hurricane Center. The 30% metric sounds great, but what does it
really mean to the public and the government? Below was a
four-day forecast issued by the National Hurricane Center of
Hurricane Ivan with the white bubble indicating their margin of
error in the forecast. Without recon data the forecast would
have a margin of error similar to the red bubble and with the
estimated cost to evacuate one U.S. coastal mile at one million
dollars the savings can be enormous. Indirectly, the Hurricane
Hunter’s data save lives. Since people believe the forecast,
they heed warning areas and evacuate the affected areas. Without
the only operational hurricane reconnaissance unit in the world
flying into storm every season, the negative impact on forecast
accuracy could be devastating.

Buoy Drops:
A mission we are sometimes tasked to do during the hurricane
season is dropping various weather buoys in the path of oncoming
hurricanes and tropical storms. We load the required buoys on
the aircraft and drop the buoys via parachute at predetermined
locations. It's an exciting mission as we don't often get to
open the back of the plane up in flight!
Winter Storm Mission:
So, what do we do in the winter? The 53rd WRS also collects data
for winter storms which has proven to be very valuable to the
National Weather Service. The goal is to release the dropsonde
as high as possible in the atmosphere and ahead of the storm
extending the network of weather data over the water. This data
drastically increases the accuracy of computer weather forecasts
for nor’easters and pacific winter low pressure systems. The
Hurricane Hunters use the month of February to fly Pacific
storms from Elmendorf AFB, Alaska or Hickam AFB, Hawaii.
Research Missions:
Most folks know that both the 53rd WRS and NOAA perform flights
into tropical systems. One of the biggest differences between
our missions is that we usually collect data for operational
meteorology use while NOAA flights are usually for research use.
But occasionally we do get to do research missions as well. This
past year we participated in the joint Tropical Cyclone
Structure research project with NOAA, the U.S. Navy, and the
countries of Taiwan, Germany, and Japan flying our missions out
of Guam and Japan. The research missions are often exciting and
interesting but the work we do is much the same as we do on a
daily basis, launching instruments like sondes and buoys into
tropical or mid-latitude systems to collect data for research
meteorologists.
Tactics:
As a U.S. Air Force unit flying one of the most capable tactic
airlift platforms in the inventory, our crews are also required
to maintain proficiency it tactical airlift operations. This
includes training in safe combat flight operations, combat
offload of cargo, and flight operations under night vision
goggles (NVGs).
|