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US Navy's High-Resolution Radar Can See Individual Raindrops In a Storm

coondoggie writes "The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) researchers said recently that a Navy very high-resolution Doppler radar can actually spot individual raindrops in a cloudburst, possibly paving the way for new weather monitoring applications that could better track or monitor weather and severe storms. According to an NRL release, the very high-resolution 'Mid-Course Radar' was used to retrieve information on the internal cloud flow and precipitation structure. The radar was previously used to track small debris shed from the NASA space shuttle missions during launch. 'Similar to the traces left behind on film by sub-atomic particles, researchers observed larger cloud particles leaving well-defined, nearly linear, radar reflectivity "streaks" which could be analyzed to infer their underlying properties,' NRL stated."

4 of 161 comments (clear)

  1. useful.... by ushere · · Score: 5, Funny

    means you can avoid individual rain drops and keep your battleship dry.....

  2. An obvious BOFH bonus by sunwukong · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Boss, I'll need some special equipment to see our data in the cloud ..."

  3. How many raindrops are there in a storm? by evilsofa · · Score: 5, Funny

    How many raindrops are there in a storm?

  4. So much for stealth by Melkman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you can detect indvidual raindrops, I suspect detecting a marble sized radar target flying near or over the speed of sound is no problem whatsoever. While this radar is probably too big to put in a fighter a datalink from a ground based version to the fighter will solve that problem quite nicely.