Rain Man
Snow, sleet, hail or volcanic eruption cloud physicist Peter Hobbs will find a way to fly into it
- By David Laskin
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Frustrated by having to conduct weather research from a subbasement lab on the University of Washington campus, Hobbs wangled a trip for himself and a team of graduate students to fly to a glacier on 7,965-foot-high Mount Olympus, where they could study clouds up close. That experience hooked him on the idea of using airplanes as mobile laboratories. By 1970 he had secured the use of a Douglas B-23 Dragon, a World War II-era patrol-and-training aircraft that had been owned by Howard Hughes and had seen action in war movies. The plane, bought by the university and supported by federal grants, gave Hobbs the freedom to investigate whatever weather phenomena piqued his curiosity, from the sulfur content of Arctic haze and the structure of ice crystals in Pacific winter storms, to the meteorological fallout of the more than 600 oil wells burning in Kuwait after the Gulf War.
Over the past 32 years Hobbs has circled the globe on three different aircraft he’s outfitted with a raft of meteorological instrumentation, attempting to learn why precipitation arrives in distinct rainbands, how pollution affects rainfall, and the nature of the relationship between cloud processes and rainfall intensity.
Hobbs' customary reserve cracks again when he recounts a mad dash into the scalding plume of Mount Saint Helens as it spewed ashes several miles into the atmosphere on the morning of May 18, 1980. The volcano blew at 8:20 A.M. on a Sunday, and by 11 A.M. Hobbs and his crew were in the air and flying toward it.
"As we approached this monster, I could see that the huge plume looked like a cauliflower with each part heaving and turning," he recalls. As they flew 20 miles downwind, a volley of explosions suddenly rattled the plane. "I remember thinking we’re being hit by rocks and we’re dead," he says. "But it turned out to be volcanic hailstones—highly charged conglomerations of dust that fell apart when they hit the plane."
The noise was terrifying, but the aircraft sustained no significant damage. As the plume drifted into Idaho, Hobbs recorded some of the first quantitative measurements ever made of the carbon dioxide, water vapor and sulfur dioxide emitted by an erupting volcano.
Given his passion for flying into billows of smoke, volleys of volcanic hail and torrents of microscopic ice crystals, I was surprised to learn that the Convair had recently been sold. "I’ll miss the excitement of doing fieldwork all around the world," he says. But he won’t miss having to raise $2 million each year, most of it in grants, which he needs to fund his aerial projects.
Even so, Hobbs is adamant that he has no intention of coming in out of the rain. After all, he has accumulated enough data to keep him and his department squeezing secrets out of the clouds for at least the next ten years.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments