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August 3, 2007
NASA HELPS TEXAS RESPOND TO MOST WIDESPREAD
FLOODING IN
50 YEARS
On July 3, a NASA aircraft
equipped with a state-of-the-art sensor provided emergency response
officials
with critical soil moisture data for several regions across Texas that
were
threatened by flooding. NASA responded to the heavy rains and flooding
in Texas by
redirecting a NASA research aircraft, the P-3B,
to Texas after it
completed an interagency
project in Oklahoma.
The aircraft had been flying a sensor developed by the University
of Colorado
at Boulder,
NOAA and U.S. Department of
Agriculture that could provide detailed maps of ground surface water.
At the
request of researchers at the University
of Colorado’s
Center for Environmental
Technology, which built the sensor, NASA detoured the plane to Texas
to help emergency
response teams there better track the areas subject to flash flooding.
On June 13, a low-pressure weather system entered Texas
from the Rocky Mountains
and persisted until
July 7, triggering storms across the state that flooded every major
river
basin. The state received more than three times the average rainfall
for the
period. Nearly two dozen people were killed in the flooding. At one
point
during the crisis, officials measured 19 inches of rainfall in just 24
hours.
Eight inches of rain fell in one hour over Marble
Falls, a
town 70 miles west of Austin.
During the first week of July, Texas
officials
accepted an offer from the University of Colorado
and NASA to
fly the sensor over a large area. During the day-long mission, the
Polarimetric
Scanning Radiometer, an airborne remote-sensing system, enabled
researchers to
quickly create soil moisture maps identifying areas where additional
rainfall
could lead to flooding.
"During the floods, the instrument aboard NASA's P-3B aircraft flew
over
areas where the greatest rainfall had been forecast and informed us of
the
degree of saturation of the soil in urban and rural locations at a time
when we
had no other means of making those judgments for such a broad area,"
said
Gordon Wells, program manager at the Center for Space Research at the
University of Texas, Austin. "The data enabled the state to stage Coast
Guard and Department of Public Safety helicopters in those areas to
stand by
for search-and-rescue should it have been necessary."
"We're always concerned about when and where the next flooding
conditions
may occur, especially if it may affect major metropolitan areas like
Austin or
San Antonio, or a remote, hard-to-access rural area where only air
evacuation
may be possible," said Wells. Wells works with state officials
regularly
in search-and-rescue emergencies, overseeing field teams that must
decide what
resources to deploy – including several hundred boats and
several aircraft –
depending on the nature and extent of the crisis.
According to Wells, NASA's P-3B and the onboard sensor contributed to
officials' full awareness of the flood situation, and became an extra
tool they
used to make decisions. "It's important to pre-plan how to prevent
casualties and injuries. So the more we know and the sooner we know it,
the
more casualties can be avoided," said Wells.
State officials typically would have relied on reports of flooding on
roads and
highways to help them predict the likelihood of future flooding in the
affected
areas, as well as imaging radar data to identify the location of pooled
water
and the level of reservoirs. "The first-cut data product sent to Wells'
team from the P-3B provided them with images of precise, geographically
identifiable points of concern for flooding," said Al Gasiewski,
principal
investigator for the sensor at the University of Colorado
and director
of the school’s Center for Environmental Technology.
“Our team has worked with
NASA over several years to develop airborne microwave mapping
technology. We’re
pleased to see it used for humanitarian purposes.”
"From the Sabine River near the eastern Texas-Louisiana border to the Nueces River
in the southwest, the Red River to the north and the Colorado River that cuts across
the state, heavy rains these last few weeks
unleashed some of the worst flash flooding this state has seen. We're
very
pleased and grateful that NASA and the university offered to assist
with a
mission that very well may have helped save lives," said Wells.
“This was really a joint effort between NASA, the University
of Colorado
and the University
of Texas
of which all of our organizations can be proud.” said
Gasiewski. “It was an
important demonstration of new technology, close teamwork, rapid
response, and
interagency coordination. There are many positive lessons that can be
learned
from it.”
Writer: Gretchen
Cook-Anderson, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
##
Contact:
Lynn Chandler
NASA Goddard Space Flight
Center
301-286-2806
Lynn.Chandler-1@nasa.gov
This
text is derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/flooding_50.html
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