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Scientists measure snowpack with laser-equipped plane


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By David Bienick, KCRA

High above the Sierra Nevada mountains, scientists on board a propeller plane wear oxygen masks as they stare at computer screens.

When they pull a cord, a door in the belly of the plane slides open and reveals a large lens.

As the plane reaches a certain point above Yosemite National Park, mirrors behind the lens begin to spin and fire invisible laser beams at the snow-covered peaks below.

Every second 800,000 laser beams, a technology known as LIDAR, hit the snow’s surface then bounce back up to sensors on the plane.

“This is basically what’s measuring the distance from the plane to the ground,” explained Brandon Benjamin, an engineer from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

By comparing that distance when the mountains are bare to when they are covered in snow, Benjamin and other scientists are able to create 3-D maps that show snow depth to within about a half-inch.

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Comments (3)
  1. Dogula says - Posted: February 20, 2015

    Saw this on the news the other night.
    Yeah, I’m sure we could think of some way to spend MORE taxpayer funds. . . I mean, we’re in debt through the next 5 generations. . .

  2. Cranky Gerald says - Posted: February 21, 2015

    Seems to me you once said you are a cancer survivor?

    Was research not the likely creator of the treatment that saved your whiney butt?

    In any event, you should perhaps gain a better understanding of the benefits of research of all kinds, and not rue the bucks so much.

    Better off doing any research than spending billions trying to democratize (like ours works anyhow) the middle east etc.

  3. duke of prunes says - Posted: February 27, 2015

    Dawg, water is the most important resource in the West, please explain how it is a bad idea to invest in knowing more about it. You should have more respect for scientists who do things every day that you will never understand and will benefit from.