Author Topic: Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather  (Read 354 times)

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rangerrebew

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Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather

By Navy Seaman Jeanette Mullinax DoD News, Defense Media Activity

http://www.defense.gov/News-Article-View/Article/681691/face-of-defense-aerographers-duties-go-beyond-predicting-weather
 

ABOARD USS BONHOMME RICHARD, February 29, 2016 — Behind closed doors, hidden from plain view, sailors are performing important roles that may go unnoticed by many.

Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Shawn Mulholland is an aerographer’s mate aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard.

“We don’t only do weather. That’s a large misconception,” he said

The fields covered by the aerographer rating span far beyond just five-day forecasts of the weather.

Aerographer’s mates are meteorological and oceanographic experts. They provide the necessary data that help the ship's captain make important decisions on movements and tactics.

And, Mullholland said, the job is different depending on where a sailor is assigned. His experience has run the gamut from studying ice growth and decay in the northern and southern hemispheres to using bioluminescence to hunt down submarines.

On the Bonhomme Richard, Mulholland’s forecasts deal more with waves and winds. Information gathered from sea and air helps the ship’s meteorological and oceanographic, or METOC, team determine allowances for flight deck, landing craft and small boat operations.

Multiple Wind Effects

“The flight deck can only use a certain wind envelope, so we have to tell them which direction the wind’s going to be, so that we can point the ship in the correct direction to have planes actually take off and land,” Mulholland said.

The METOC team provides the information small boat and landing craft units need to know about the area’s sea conditions and wave height, he said.

“They need to know which direction the seas are coming from,” Mulholland said. “For them, a lot of the issue comes from swells, which are the big rollers that rock the ship back and forth. If they’re trying to fly on the water and they hit a swell, then they’ll just sort of launch off, and then when they come down, they may pop the cushion.”

This is why certain operations will sometimes get canceled in rough seas, he said.

Compared to land forecasters, shipboard aerographers more often encounter unstable factors, Mulholland added. “The ocean has more to do with what happens with the weather than people expect, so it’s significantly harder to forecast for what’s going on over water than to forecast what’s going on over land,” he said.

Despite knowing that it can be a thankless rate, he said he remains completely gratified with his role.
“I enjoy the science behind my work,” Mulholland said. “I enjoy being able to look at a screen and having a rough idea of how a battle will turn out before it even starts.”
« Last Edit: February 29, 2016, 05:28:50 pm by rangerrebew »

rangerrebew

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Re: Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather
« Reply #1 on: February 29, 2016, 05:36:29 pm »
Thank You, Thank You very much!  That is what I did aboard the U.S.S. Ranger.  We had to do all he mentioned plus give the bridge information on potential nuclear fallout data, upper air soundings, track satellites (back when I was in we had to figure out mathematically where to point the antenna as the ship moved), provide pressure altitude, altimeter settings, D values, etc.  It was interesting and fun.

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Re: Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather
« Reply #2 on: February 29, 2016, 05:47:30 pm »
Thank You, Thank You very much!  That is what I did aboard the U.S.S. Ranger.  We had to do all he mentioned plus give the bridge information on potential nuclear fallout data, upper air soundings, track satellites (back when I was in we had to figure out mathematically where to point the antenna as the ship moved), provide pressure altitude, altimeter settings, D values, etc.  It was interesting and fun.
Fascinating stuff. Thanks for your service. My father was an amphibious tank driver and landed on Okinawa in the first wave. Eisenhower placed his Normandy Landing bet on weather, based on the science of the day.

In college I took Geography to meet a science requirement, but the professor was a weather guy so he took us around the globe, so to speak, showing how weather impacted the face of the planet, people, commerce, etc.

Here on the Pacific coast there are a few world class surfing spots. Forecasting storms is a specialized industry for professional surfers, who go in search of huge breakers.

There is a big wave spot near Santa Cruz and Half Moon Bay, called Mavericks. One of the top local guys is an oncologist (medical doctor).

Aerographer, not meteorologist ?? Correct ??
"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln

rangerrebew

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Re: Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather
« Reply #3 on: February 29, 2016, 05:57:44 pm »
Fascinating stuff. Thanks for your service. My father was an amphibious tank driver and landed on Okinawa in the first wave. Eisenhower placed his Normandy Landing bet on weather, based on the science of the day.

In college I took Geography to meet a science requirement, but the professor was a weather guy so he took us around the globe, so to speak, showing how weather impacted the face of the planet, people, commerce, etc.

Here on the Pacific coast there are a few world class surfing spots. Forecasting storms is a specialized industry for professional surfers, who go in search of huge breakers.

There is a big wave spot near Santa Cruz and Half Moon Bay, called Mavericks. One of the top local guys is an oncologist (medical doctor).

Aerographer, not meteorologist ?? Correct ??

Thank you.  Here in on the west side of Michigan forecasters have a terrible time getting the forecasts correct.  Its blamed on the effect of Lake Michigan and the 60 some miles systems have to pass.  On my way home from my last deployment we sailed into a typhoon which was uncharted; Pearl Harbor didn't even know it.  To say it made a difference  the CO's plans would be an understatement.  40 years later I don't imagine that is likely to happen today.

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Re: Face of Defense: Aerographer’s Duties Go Beyond Predicting Weather
« Reply #4 on: February 29, 2016, 06:24:18 pm »
Thank you.  Here in on the west side of Michigan forecasters have a terrible time getting the forecasts correct.  Its blamed on the effect of Lake Michigan and the 60 some miles systems have to pass.  On my way home from my last deployment we sailed into a typhoon which was uncharted; Pearl Harbor didn't even know it.  To say it made a difference  the CO's plans would be an understatement.  40 years later I don't imagine that is likely to happen today.
More on surfing. In the 1960s teenagers in SoCal adopted surfing as a major fad. Previously it was mainly Hawaii and the California coast, that had ever heard of it. Maybe Australia.

Anyway that started the modern surfing era. Professional contests, product evolutions, etc.

Eventually huge waves were discovered in places that never had surfing, like the coast of France and Portugal. Modern wetsuits helped make suring in cold locales possible.

The waves get huge in certain storm conditions, and in some cases require a "tow in" to catch the ride. Here is a record size wave in Portugal. They predict the times and places with science and people on the ground. Big wave riders hop on planes to go where the biggest waves are breaking.

Hawaii, California, Mexico, Portugal, France, etc.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5g6I-FOguQ
"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln