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[Dr. Gail Skofronick-Jackson] Understanding how much snow is falling is important for many different areas

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including transportation, safety, how much
freshwater falls in a stored in snowpack

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and is used later for freshwater resources.

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[Walt Peterson] The aircraft provide us with direct
measurements of particle types and sizes

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as the aircraft is flying through the
clouds. They're actually looking at the

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individual precipitation particles with
probes on the airplanes. And we can

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relate those measurements to what we see
with the radar on the ground and it

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helps us interpret everything about that
column of water that the satellite is

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going to be looking at.

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[Dr. Gail Skofronick-Jackson]  Measuring precipitation globally is important because it provides a complete

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picture of the global water cycle. GPM is
going to be able to do that but it's

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also going to be able to provide the
local regional, regional scale. So that we

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can get better information for oncoming
droughts, potential landslides, potential

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floods.

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[Walt Peterson] So the science benefit is that we're
going to make these great accurate

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measurements of precipitation.
Essentially GPM will track water that

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exists in the reservoir in the sky to
the reservoir on the grounds. Okay so

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that enables to, enables us to basically
monitor the water resource as it

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originates in the atmosphere and falls
to the ground. That's a very important

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scientific thing to be able to do
because that information is used in all

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kinds of different applications weather
forecasting, climate studies. From a

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scientific perspective making those
measurements frequently and accurately

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is really important.

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[Dr. Gail Skofronick-Jackson] The GPM core with its ability to detect falling snows, it's one of the very first

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times that we've put sensors in space to
specifically look at falling snow. And

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we're we're at that edge where rain was
50 years ago.

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So we're, we're still figuring out how to
measure snow. Snow is it's much more

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difficult than rain. Rain tends to be
spherical like drops, but if you've ever

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been out in a snow fall event and you've
looked at your shirt you see that snow

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comes in all different forms. And the
sensors in space are actually sensitive

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to those shapes. And we're still trying
to figure out all of that. And the GPM

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core with its additional frequencies and
information on the sensors is going to

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be able to provide us for the first time
a lot more information about falling

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snow.

