NASA Invites Media to Learn About Mission Studying Thunderstorms

Scientists are using NASA's ER-2 high altitude research aircraft to study the atmospheric effects of powerful summer thunderstorms that erupt over the U.S.
Credits: NASA

NASA will host a media teleconference at 10 a.m. CDT Tuesday, June 7, to discuss research about intense summer thunderstorms over the central United States and their effects on Earths atmosphere and climate change. A replay of the call will be posted on the agencys website as soon as possible.

Media are also invited to speak with NASA mission members, who are studying these thunderstorms, at the missions base of operations at the Salina Regional Airport in Salina, Kansas, on Wednesday, June 8, from 8 a.m. noon.

NASA and university scientists are studying thunderstorms for the second year in row as part of the Dynamics and Chemistry of the Summer Stratosphere (DCOTSS) mission. Though the storms develop in the troposphere, the lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere where we live, intense thunderstorms can punch up into the next layer of the atmosphere, the stratosphere, and inject tiny atmospheric particles called aerosols, as well as water vapor. Mission scientists want to better understand how aerosols from tall, powerful storms affect the chemical makeup of the stratosphere, which is home to Earth's protective ozone layer. In addition, the water vapor these storms inject is a potent greenhouse gas that can affect our changing climate.

Teleconference participants include:

  • Kate Calvin, NASA chief scientist and senior climate advisor at NASA Headquarters in Washington
  • Ken Bowman, DCOTSS principal investigator and professor of atmospheric science, Texas A&M University
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