CuPIDO, or the Cumulus Photogrammetric, In-situ and Doppler Observations (CuPIDO) field experiment is designed to study the development of thunderstorms that form during the summer monsoon season. CuPIDO will consist of observations taken from sets of digital cameras, six 10 m portable automated surface weather stations, 4 10 m tower-based integrated surface flux facilities (ISFF), two balloon sounding systems (MGAUS) and the Wyoming King Air research aircraft carrying a W-band dual-beam radar.
The purpose of CuPIDO is to examine the development of the earliest stages of the thunderstorms. The clouds begin to form over the highest peaks each morning and the reliability of the formation makes these areas natural cloud laboratories. In contrast to conventional "storm chasing", where investigators intercept the weather systems, CuPIDO will measure conditions prior to the storms beginning and monitor the way that the initial, shallow clouds interact with and modify the environment as they develop. The information gained will help improve the forecast models used by the National Weather Service and ultimately provide more accurate and timely warnings.
NCAR Site Survey Information:
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Photos | Notes: Militzer (text) | Notes: Horst (text) |
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