Current:Home > 新闻中心Watch stunning drone footage from the eye of Hurricane Debby -StockPrime
Watch stunning drone footage from the eye of Hurricane Debby
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:11:54
Tropical Storm Debby, already the fourth named storm of the season, has caused major flooding and spawned multiple tornadoes as it continues its march through the Southeast, dumping enough rain to potentially beat out Harvey as the wettest landfall hurricane ever.
Debby originally formed in the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday before making landfall in Florida as a Category 1 hurricane around 7 a.m. Monday. The storm blew ashore near the town of Steinhatchee, Florida, with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph and was blamed in the deaths of at least four people. Debby moved across northern Florida for hours before being downgraded to a tropical storm on Monday afternoon, with wind speeds slowing to 65 mph.
It has since made a slow, methodical crawl, causing significant weather events through Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina; flooding is expected to continue in mid-Atlantic states and southern New England through Sunday.
Before Debby even touched down in Florida, however, a drone had already ventured through raging sea waters right into the eye of the storm. The remotely controlled Saildrone Explorer drone is part of Saildrone's line of uncrewed surface vehicles (USVs), durable information-gathering machines that are piloted into storms with the help of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Saildrone and NOAA officially launched their fourth mission to collect data on hurricane conditions just days before Debby formed, launching 12 unmanned vehicles stationed in six areas likely to see storm activity. One, called SD-1057, dove directly into Debby soon after its launch, sending back amazing video footage from the rolling waves.
Debby tracker:See tropical storm's path as states brace for more rain, flooding
What conditions did the Saildrone measure in Debby?
As the storm made its way to Florida, the newly-launched SD-1057 sailed through the eye of what was then Hurricane Debby hours before the storm made landfall in Florida on Aug. 5.
Video shows the drone being tossed around in rough water, at which point it recorded wind gusts of over 60 knots, or roughly 69 mph, and waves over five meters, or 16 feet, high.
Drone captures Beryl:As Hurricane Beryl tears through Caribbean, a drone sends back stunning footage
What are Saildrones and how do they track storms?
Saildrone and the NOAA have been launching USVs into hurricanes for four years, hoping to gather data that will offer insight into how major storms form, track and intensify.
The Saildrone Explorer USVs are 23 feet long and built to withstand winds over 110mph and waves over 50 feet tall, according to the company. Equipped with sensors to measure air, surface and water temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, wind speed and direction salinity and wave height, the USVs are set to sail autonomously along a predetermined route.
This year, scientists are hoping to gather more data on how salinity, or the amount of salt in water, affects how hurricanes develop and intensify. They are also looking to measure how much carbon dioxide the ocean is absorbing from or releasing into the atmosphere during a storm.
"It’s not known how hurricanes affect the exchange of CO2 between the ocean and the atmosphere and how that impacts the global carbon budget," said Greg Foltz, a NOAA oceanographer and one of the mission’s principal investigators, in a statement. "If we can get one of these two USVs into a major storm, it would give us some of the first direct measurements of air-sea CO2 exchange inside a hurricane,”
The current mission will last until October, during which time the USVs will remain at sea. Powered entirely by renewable wind and solar energy, data collected from USVs will be paired with information recorded by overflights by a NOAA Hurricane Hunter aircraft and gliders below the surface
veryGood! (14474)
Related
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- American Idol Sneak Peek: See Katy Perry's Jaw-Dropping Reaction to Contestant's Adele Cover
- Motorists creep along 1 lane after part of California’s iconic Highway 1 collapses
- Google to destroy billions of data records to settle incognito lawsuit
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Florida Supreme Court upholds state’s 15-week ban on most abortions, paving way for 6-week ban
- Jennie Garth reunites with 'Beverly Hills, 90210' co-star Ian Ziering for Easter charity event
- 13-year-old Pennsylvania girl charged with her mom's murder after argument
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Amid Haiti’s spiraling violence, Florida residents worry about family, friends in the island nation
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- A Kansas paper and its publisher are suing over police raids. They say damages exceed $10M
- Why Caitlin Clark and Iowa will beat Angel Reese and LSU, advance to Final Four
- Judge expands Trump’s gag order after ex-president’s social media posts about judge’s daughter
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- As US traffic fatalities fall, distracted drivers told to 'put the phone away or pay'
- Convicted killer Alex Murdaugh sentenced to 40 years in federal prison for stealing from clients and his law firm
- Tucson police officer dies in car crash while responding to service call, department says
Recommendation
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
The total solar eclipse is now 1 week away: Here's your latest weather forecast
The Smashing Pumpkins announce additional shows for The World Is A Vampire concert tour
How a biased test kept thousands of Black patients from getting a new kidney
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
YMcoin Exchange: Current status of cryptocurrency development in Australia
Motorists creep along 1 lane after part of California’s iconic Highway 1 collapses
Bucknell University student found dead, unrelated to active shooter alert university says