NOAA aircraft reconnaissance continued for Major Hurricane Delta on October 6, capturing the system’s quick maturation overnight. P-3 and G-IV missions are scheduled every 12 hours from Lakeland, FL. The National Hurricane Center (NHC) tasked NOAA’s Hurricane Hunters to identify the location and strength of the circulation center, and to survey the atmospheric conditions nearby and ahead of Delta. Instrumentation onboard the aircraft have sampled the system’s development, revealing a 55 knot (64 mph) rapid intensification in just 24 hours.

Los científicos que apoyan estas misiones se aseguran de que los datos recogidos reflejen adecuadamente la máxima velocidad del viento en superficie del Delta, localicen su centro y proporcionen suficiente cobertura de observación para inicializar los modelos de previsión numérica.
The most recent P-3 mission took off from Lakeland at 5:30 PM EDT on October 6 for regular assessments of the storm’s structure and intensity. While NHC’s operational tasking remains the focus, AOML’s hurricane experts expected additional science objectives to be performed.

Goals outlined in AOML’s Synoptic Flow experiment, Analysis of Intensity Change Processes Experiment (AIPEX), and Rainband Complex module were addressed as part of NOAA’s Intensity Forecasting Experiment (IFEX).
Data collected using dropsondes, Tail Doppler Radar, Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer, and other onboard sensors allow experts to study processes important for intensification in this favorable environment. Measurements collected describing Delta’s winds, pressure, and rainfall may be vital to understanding how Major Hurricane Delta evolves as it adjusts its precipitation and wind structure while interacting with the environment in which it’s embedded.

NOAA’s G-IV and P-3 aircraft will sample the conditions in Delta’s core and its surrounding environment throughout the system’s approach to the Yucatán Peninsula, extending into its future trajectory across the Gulf of America. NHC notes that while the storm has experienced some dissipation, Major Hurricane Delta has the potential to make landfall along the Gulf Coast as a very large and dangerous tropical cyclone.
>> Scientists K. Ryan / H. Holbach
>> Edits by R. Kravetz
For details about reconnaissance aircraft missions, please see NOAA’s official Plan of the Day.
For the latest information about tropical cyclones and other weather systems, please visit the NOAA/NWS/National Hurricane Center.
For information on numerical prediction of tropical cyclones, please visit NOAA/NCEP/Environmental Modeling Center.
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DISCLAIMER: The above discussion is intended to provide a brief summary of recent and future HRD Hurricane Field Program Operations. Any use of this material beyond its original intent is prohibited without permission of the HRD Director, Frank Marks (Frank.Marks@noaa.gov). Media inquiries should be directed to AOML Communications (aoml.communications@noaa.gov), Monica Allen (301-734-1123) or Monica.Allen@noaa.gov.