|
|
|
NOAA's NWS Focus July
14, 2003 |
 |
|
| |
 |
|
| Dan
Gudgel and son Joshua stand by the airplane
they flew cross country in support of a transcontinental
glider race called "Return to Kitty Hawk."
Read the story here.
|
|
|
|
| Editor's
Note: Keep In Focus With Just One Click
We're happy
you've told us you enjoy NOAA's NWS Focus. But you've
also told us that you have plenty of work to do, and that
you don't always get to read each issue on the day it comes
out.
We've come up with a way that we hope will make it easier
to keep up-to-date. Just bookmark or remember this one address:
http://www.weather.gov/focus/.
Now you'll
have all the issues of Focus available
to you whenever you have time to read them.
Thank you
for the feedback--keep those cards and
e-mails coming!
-The NOAA's NWS Focus Staff
Back
to Top |
|
| High-Resolution
NEXRAD Radar Data to Improve Forecasts and Warnings
Customers and
partners met recently with NWS staff to discuss agency
plans
to electronically collect and distribute high-resolution
NEXRAD radar data, referred to as Level II data, in near
real time.
NWS has been testing the feasibility of Level II data collection
and distribution at 62 NEXRAD sites.
"In
the past two years we added high-resolution reflectivity
radar data to the AWIPS data stream," said Tim Crum of the
Radar Operations Center in Norman, OK. "Forecasters have
frequently cited these high-resolution displays as keys
in identifying tornadoes and severe weather better and sooner.
As we put higher resolution data in the hands of forecasters
we give them more tools to produce better, more timely,
and more accurate forecasts. In addition, NCEP will use
the Level II data in operations and modeling."
Level II data
will be collected from 132 of the 159 radar sites by
the completion of Full Operating Capability in 2004.
In the
past,
because
of
limited data transmission capabilities, the NWS could not
effectively incorporate this high-resolution data into
operational
models or make the data available to customers and partners
in a timely manner. As new high-speed data transmission
capabilities have become available, the NWS has incorporated
more of the Level II data into operational products making
this additional information available in near real time
to customers and partners.
A June 18,
2003, meeting in Silver Spring, MD, attracted more than
30 external users of NEXRAD data. The meeting focused on
describing NWS plans to electronically collect and distribute
the high-resolution data. Representatives from the university/research
community and the private sector attended the meeting to
learn more about how they will be able to obtain near real-time
access to these data. Members of the private sector provided
the NWS with comments on how they would like the NWS to
make these data available to the private sector.
"Access to
these data by the university and research communities will
accelerate technology development that will benefit future
NWS technology," Crum said. "Several private sector companies
are interested in using these data to expand the products
they provide customers."
Crum added,
"The meeting had a good representation from several Level
II user groups -- government laboratories, universities,
and the private sector -- which demonstrates the high interest
in real time access to these high-resolution data. The
meeting was a huge success in that we were able to obtain
private
sector inputs as to their unique needs and make minor adjustments
in our program to better accommodate their needs as well
as ours."
To find more
about Level II data, click
here.
Back
to Top |
|
| NASA
Transfers Technology to NWS to Improve Upper Air Observations
The NWS is getting
some advanced temperature sensor technology from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) which will give
a truer picture of the atmosphere and help determine if sensors
are performing correctly.
The sensor technology, which has been under the exclusive
domain of NASA, is being transferred to the NWS for use
in radiosonde testing. Radiosonde instruments measure the
temperature, relative humidity, pressure, and winds aloft
up to 100,000 feet or more. The NWS launches radiosondes
twice daily and uses the data to calibrate numerical weather
prediction models, understand the state of the atmosphere
for severe weather forecasts and warnings, and for studying
the climate. "One
of the biggest problems with radiosondes is the difficulty
in determining how accurate the measurements are at high
altitudes," said Joe Facundo, Chief, Observing Systems Branch.
"The new temperature sensors allow the NWS to calculate
the true temperature and the moisture content of the atmosphere
with a high-degree of accuracy."
The radiosonde
under test is placed next to another radiosonde containing
the new sensor and flown side-by-side on a weather balloon
up to 100,000 feet. The data are then processed on the
ground
by NASA staff at the Sterling, VA, Research and Development
Center, who produce the final results for NWS use in
determining how accurate
the test
radiosondes
are
aloft.
These data will then be shared with the meteorological/climatological
communities for a better understanding of the upper
atmosphere.
Joe Facundo
adds, "Although this sensor technology has been around for
some time, the software to process the data was still in
development. With newer operating systems and techniques,
staff can now use simple personal computers to process the
data and calculate accurate profiles of the upper air atmosphere.
When the transfer is completed, NWS will have the capability
to evaluate new radiosondes using this technology."
Back
to Top |
|
| NWS
Directives Update
More than two
dozen new or updated NWS directives were posted to the
NWS
Directive System web site over the past few weeks. These
directives cover such topics as marine and coastal, fire
weather, and
tropical cyclone programs. For the full list of new directives,
follow
this link.
Back
to Top |
|
| On to
Kitty Hawk: Meteorologist Helps to Mark Historic Wright
Flight With Glider Group
By Marilu Trainor
NWS Western Region Public Affairs Officer
A father-son
vacation trip can be a memory maker. But when it includes
landing your airplane alongside 40 gliders on the shores of
Kitty Hawk, NC, on the Fourth of July, it's a once-in-a-lifetime
experience.
Dan Gudgel, Warning Coordination Meteorologist, San Joaquin
County Weather Forecast Office in Hanford, CA, took annual
leave to be the chief tow pilot for a recent transcontinental
glider race called
"Return to Kitty Hawk." It was one of many centennial celebrations
planned this year to commemorate the Wright brothers'
experiments
that eventually led to the first successful powered flight
by Orville Wright on December 17, 1903.
The Return to Kitty Hawk race was one centerpiece of the
National Park Service's powered
flight centennial celebration. The race started June
19, 2003, at Crystal Air Gliderport near Los Angeles, CA,
and ended July 4 on the famed sand dune shores of Kitty
Hawk. The father-son duo flew together in Kitty Hawk Air,
a 1976 Cessna 185F that followed the gliders after launch
and ensured no pilot landed without crew contact.
Gudgel knew only a few people could participate in a cross-country
glider race to the original North Carolina site and he wanted
to be part of this modern-day aviation event. He took his
10-year-old son, Joshua, along for the ride. Gudgel is a
commercial pilot in multiple FAA categories, and has been
an FAA Designated Pilot Examiner for 17 years. When not
recreational flying, he assists his father in the family
agricultural aviation business.
Gudgel had a safety role in the commemorative race, flying
Kitty Hawk Air to ensure the group didn't encounter inclement
weather. He said weather conditions became the main focus
for everyone participating in this race. They encountered
sun, rain, wind, low visibilities, and the impacts of a
hurricane on the 2,600-mile race. Bad weather forced the
gliders of champions and novices alike to be towed across
portions of the country, riding only a trailer tire's distance
above the surface of the earth on a few of the legs. However,
the self-launch gliders did fly all the way across the country
even if not on contest days.
Gliders and sailplanes have no engines and are towed by
an airplane to the height of 2,000 to 2,500 feet above airfield
elevation before being released to ride the wind currents.
During flight the gliders can attain average speeds up to
100 miles per hour on some of the strongest soaring days.
Gliders were launched from both surfaced and grass runways
at the end of Gudgel's 200-foot tow rope on the nationwide
trek. As the glider pilots release the rope, they begin
their search for thermals, the rising air that enables altitude
gain. "Glider
pilots have to understand the weather, the winds, and the
lift sources. It's their own knowledge of these dynamics
that gives a glider pilot an advantage. Every flight is
a challenge for a glider pilot," Gudgel said. "Sailplane
pilots are constantly evaluating the atmosphere for lift
that will enable them to minimize climb time and maximize
cruise flight whereby the average cross-country speed increases."
Gudgel ensured
every race pilot was aware of weather hazards for pilot-in-command
decisions and logistical planning. "My advice was especially
helpful to the group in regard to a couple of severe weather
outbreaks and the influence of moisture from Tropical Storm
Bill threatening the race legs in the Southeast United States,"
he said.
The race, sanctioned
by the Soaring Society of America, involved glider pilots
from Germany, Spain, France, Czechoslovakia, and throughout
the United States. The event had twelve scheduled stops
in Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Illinois, Indiana,
Ohio, Virginia, and North Carolina.
"It was an
unbelievable feeling as my son and I saw the gliders finally
reach the shores at Kitty Hawk," Gudgel said after returning
from his three weeks of leave for the race. "After the Fourth
of July celebration at Kitty Hawk, we ferried the aircraft
home to California. The winner received a trophy but we
all shared in the pride of completing the race, and the
comradery was priceless."
Click
here for a collage of some of Gudgel's photos from the event.
Back
to Top |
|
| WFOs
in Blacksburg and Pittsburgh Host High School/High Tech
Students
This summer
the NWS welcomes two students to local forecast offices in
Pittsburgh, PA, and Blacksburg, VA, through a program for
high school students with disabilities. The High School/High
Tech Program offers students with disabilities an opportunity
to pursue their interests in high technology through a paid
internship. The program is designed to develop career opportunities
and provide activities that encourage students with disabilities
to pursue high technology careers through early exposure to
professions in science, math, engineering, and technology-related
fields. Interns can work up to 40 hours a week for 8 weeks
through the program. The program also encourages the students
to pursue post-secondary education and helps them in that
transition. "The real value is in taking the opportunity to
support the diversity goals of the organization in such a
profound way. It's a very important thing to do and makes
us feel good doing it," said Theresa Rossi, Meteorologist-In-Charge
at the Weather Forecast Office (WFO) in Pittsburgh. "Daniel
Klein, our intern this summer, will be working with our Information
Technology Officer and getting important hands-on experience
to enhance his career opportunities." The High School/High
Tech Program, developed in the early 1980s by a task force
of executives from high tech companies and adopted by the
President's Committee on Employment of People With Disabilities
in 1995, was introduced to the NWS through the efforts of
NOAA Disability Ambassador John Wright who works at the Blacksburg
WFO. "This
is a win-win situation for everyone involved," notes John
Wright. "Through conference calls, workshops, and networking,
I've worked with NWS offices to spread the word about the
real value in taking this opportunity to fill a demand for
high-quality candidates in the sciences." Through Wright's
efforts and the NWS's Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO)
Office, the program will increase the diversity of the NWS
workforce.
According to
Rufus Caruthers, NWS EEO Director, "The High School/High
Tech Program is a tremendous tool to identify and recruit
people with disabilities into the math and science fields.
The NWS is committed to reaching out to those with disabilities
and being a diverse, employee-friendly environment. We would
love to see more of these promising young people train in
NWS offices throughout the country. To accomplish that,
we need to forge more relationships with the corporate players
in other cities." Wright founded the Montgomery County,
VA, High School/High Tech Program in 1998. As a result,
WFO Blacksburg was the first field office to employee a
student from the program. This is WFO Blacksburg's fifth
year participating in the program.
This year WFO
Blacksburg welcomed Taylor Walls into their ranks from the
program. More than 40 companies of the Virginia Tech Corporate
Research Center have participated in the program. According
to Wright, more than 130 students have participated in the
Montgomery County program since 1998, including nine at
the WFO. This program is gaining support nationwide and
the NWS was one of the first corporate participants. For
more information about the program, click
here, or contact Rufus Caruthers of NWS's EEO Office,
or John Wright, NOAA's Disability Ambassador.
Back
to Top |
|
| Volunteers
Help with Local 'Day of Caring'
NWS
volunteers from the Kansas City, MO, area recently helped
beautify the grounds of a local day care center for children
with special needs.
The effort was part of a community service activity in
the Kansas City metropolitan area coordinated by the Combined
Federal Campaign and the Heart of America United Way known
as "Day of Caring" on June 21, 2003. "The
idea behind Day of Caring is to involve Kansas City
area
employees and their family members in first-hand experience
with area non-profits to raise awareness of community
needs
and services, as well as to better understand the impact
of their donated dollars," said Elaine Wilbur, Central
Region Equal Employment Opportunity Manager. "These
activities give employees a great opportunity to
get to know each other
outside the workplace, and it's a way for us to touch the
lives of others."
Wilbur said
volunteers from the NWS Central Region Headquarters,
the
National Reconditioning Center (NRC), and the NWS Training
Center have made grounds-keeping their Day of Caring
activity
for the past few years. The Northland Early Education Center
(NEEC) in Kansas City was the site for this year's
volunteer
work.
The NEEC
provides quality education and therapy services to
children with
special needs, from birth to age five, to help them reach
their full potential. The NEEC staff and parents joined
the NWS group. Together they gathered more than 30 large
lawn bags of weeds and garbage, planted a new flower
bed,
and added new mulch to the work area.
"The feeling
of accomplishment and gratitude is overwhelming," Wilbur
said. "You feel great and know that the few hours
you donated were truly worthwhile. This is a day
when the community
comes together. Next year, we'll participate again."
NWS volunteers
included Marvin Orndoff, Arnold Colores, and Ruby Pippenger
from the NRC; John Vogel, Donna
Layton, Clayton James, Sondra Young-Wick, Art Wick, Dave
Rowell, and Bob Hamilton from the NWS Training Center;
and
Dennis McCarthy, Gary Foltz, Janie Foltz, Dan Bloom, Gail
Bloom, and Elaine Wilbur from Central Region Headquarters.
Back
to Top |
|
| Also
On the Web...Golf Results Posted
Results from
this year's annual Central Region/NWS Golf Association
Golf
Tournament held June 16-20, 2003, at Loma Linda Golf Resort
near Joplin, MO, are available on the NWS Golf web page
at http://www.weatherconsultant.com/Golf/Golf.html.
Back
to Top |
| Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report
|
Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted
in the latest issue of AccessNOAA
|
|
|
| Have news you'd like to spread using
NOAA's NWS Focus? Have feedback on how we can improve NOAA's NWS Focus and employee communications? We want to hear from
you! E-mail us at NWS.Focus@noaa.gov. |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| Send
questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov
or mail to:
National Weather
Service
Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
1325 East West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3283
|
|
|
|
|
|
|