Van Straten's reports provided examples of how military forces were able to use weather conditions to their advantage, but they also provided examples in which the weather was ignored, to the detriment of the participants. The
battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942 was such an instance. The American fleet used the clouds and precipitation of a trailing frontal system to provide cover, slipping out to attack the exposed Japanese naval force and then disappearing again into the heavy weather. In this way they were able to sink the
Japanese aircraft carrier Shōhō, seriously damaged another carrier, and shoot down numerous enemy planes. But when they departed the frontal zone to operate in fair weather, they immediately lost the carrier . Van Straten helped develop methods of using weather phenomena, such as storms, in the planning of ship maneuvers and
carrier-based airplane flights. Her work also included development of a technique to modify clouds and produce rain by injecting carbon black into the atmosphere. As a weather trouble-shooter for the Navy, she dealt with problems ranging from fog to
radioactive fallout. She also developed a radar facsimile system and patented a sonic device for preventing ice buildup on planes. She was instrumental in the development of the
rocketsonde, which launched a data-collecting package, called a
radiosonde, into the upper atmosphere. It was at her suggestion that meteorological data be used in planning the trajectory of rocket launches. She also developed the constant-altitude
weather balloon. The deflated balloon was carried aloft by a bubble of
helium. The balloon inflated as the atmosphere became thinner until it was full, at which point its altitude remained constant. She also contributed to the development of the floating weather station the
Navy Oceanographic Meteorological Automatic Device (NOMAD). She also contributed to the development of the
weather instrument shelter, that protects sensitive instruments from the elements, and the
tipping bucket rain gauge which tipped with every 1/100 inch of precipitation and automatically recorded the action at the station. ==Selected works==