Weather and Atmospheric Dynamics' Relevant Missions and Campaigns
This page contains the catalog of missions and campaigns that have, are, and will contribute data to the Weather and Atmospheric Dynamics Focus Area.
Operating Satellites
Aqua
Aqua is a NASA Earth Science satellite mission named for the large amount of information that the mission collects about the Earth's water cycle, including evaporation from the oceans, water vapor in the atmosphere, clouds, precipitation, soil moisture, sea ice, land ice, and snow cover on the land and ice.
TROPICS
The Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation structure and storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats (TROPICS) mission provides rapid-refresh microwave measurements that can be used to observe the thermodynamics of the troposphere and precipitation structure over the entire storm lifecycle.
Operating Suborbital
WHyMSIE
The Westcoast and Heartland Hyperspectral Microwave Sensor Intensive Experiment (WHymSIE) campaign is the first step forward towards an integrated, intelligent, and affordable PBL observing system. Goals include a coherent picture of essential PBL variables such as temperature, water vapor, and height.
Operating Ground-Based
In-Development/Under Study
PolSIR
Polarized Submillimeter Ice-cloud Radiometer (PolSIR) will help better understand Earth’s dynamic atmosphere and its impact on climate by studying ice clouds that form at high altitudes throughout tropical and subtropical regions. Identical pairs of the radiometers will fly aboard two CubeSats.
Past Satellites
TRMM
The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) was a satellite designed to improve our understanding of the distribution and variability of precipitation and water cycle in the current climate. TRMM provided information on rainfall and its associated heat release that helps drive the global atmospheric circulation.
Past Suborbital
CPEX
The NASA Convective Processes Experiment (CPEX) aircraft field campaign took place during the early summer of 2017 with follow-on projects in 2021 (CPEX-AW) and 2022 (CPEX-CV). The campaigns collected data that answered questions about convective storm initiation, organization, growth, and dissipation.