Title: NOAAs National Weather Service
1Colorado Wildfire Mitigation Conference April
13-15, 2007
NOAAs National Weather ServicePueblo, Colorado
2The Answer is Yes
3Organization Structure
President of the United States
Department of Commerce
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA)
National Weather Service (NWS)
4Â Although NOAA was formed in 1970, the agencies
that came together at that time are among the
oldest in the Federal Government. The agencies
included the United States Coast and Geodetic
Survey formed in 1807, the Weather Bureau formed
in 1870, and the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries
formed in 1871. Individually these organizations
were America's first physical science agency,
America's first agency dedicated specifically to
the atmospheric sciences, and America's first
conservation agency. Much of America's scientific
heritage resides in these agencies. They brought
their cultures of scientific accuracy and
precision, stewardship of resources, and
protection of life and property to the newly
formed agency.
5- NOAA is a federal agency focused on the
understanding and protecting our oceans and
atmosphere. - A Supplier of environmental information and
services that extend to weather, climate,
ecosystems and commerce as well. - A Provider of Environmental Stewardship Services.
- A Leader in Applied Scientific Research
- NOAAs Mission
- To understand and predict changes in the Earths
environment and conserve and manage coastal and
marine resources to meet our nations economic,
social and environmental needs
6NWS History
- A federal agency that has been in existence since
1870. - The "original" NWS began under the direction of
the Signal Corps until it was transferred to the
Department of Agriculture in 1890. This was part
of the "Organic Act" that defines the
responsibilities of the agency. - The Weather Bureau remained under the Department
of Agriculture until 1940 when it was transferred
to the Department of Commerce...where it remains
today. - Renamed the National Weather Service and, in
1970, was placed under the newly created National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
which remains under the Department of Commerce.
7NWS Mission
- Protecting Lives and Property
- Serving Americas need for weather information
- Enhance the Nations Economy
8NWS Responsibilities
- The NWS is the sole United States OFFICIAL voice
for issuing warnings during life-threatening
weather situations. - Provides weather, hydrologic, and climate
forecasts and warnings for the United States to
protect lives and property and enhance the
national economy. - NWS data and services form a national information
database and infrastructure used by other
governmental agencies, the private sector, the
public, and the global community.
9Weather Forecast Offices
- Around-the-clock service for their areas of
responsibility. - This includes weather forecasts and warnings. The
forecast areas typically consist of 20 to 50
counties. - Your local office forecasters are most familiar
with your local area and weather nuances. - The men and women that work at weather forecast
offices issue and provide a myriad of products
and services. - These include routine weather forecasts,
advisories, watches, and warnings. - Aviation, Fire Weather, Hydrology, Search and
Rescue, Incident Response, Damage Survey and
Recovery
10National Centers
- The National Centers for Environmental Prediction
(NCEP), is comprised of nine distinct Centers and
is a critical national resource in national and
global weather prediction providing a wide
variety of national and international weather
guidance products.
11Observing the AtmosphereSurface Observations -
Past
- In 1814 the US Surgeon General ordered surgeons
to keep weather diaries. These are the first
official weather observations in the U.S. - Smithsonian recruits 500 volunteer weather
observers to report via telegraph in 1860. - Weather Bureau begins observations at Post
Offices and other Federal Buildings in 1870 - Transitioned to Airport observations in the 1930s
and 40s as air travel increased
12Observing the AtmosphereSurface Observations
-Today
- Most airport observations transitioned to
automated sensors in the 1980s and 90s (ASOS). - Widespread development of mesonetworks began in
the 1990s (RAWS, Schoolnet, DOT AWOS, etc. ) - While human observers have been replaced at
airports, 1000s of volunteer COOP observers still
report weather every day
13Observing the AtmosphereSurface Observations -
Future
- Continued expansion of various, mainly non NWS
mesonetworks - Development of more portable/cheaper, disposable
sensors - Expansion of remote sensing
- Problems include bandwidth, siting, maintenance,
calibration, etc.
14Observing the AtmosphereUpper Air Observations -
Past
- In 1898 the Weather Bureau begins regular kite
observations for studying upper-air, last flight
made in 1933. - In 1909 balloon observations begin
- In 1931 regular 5 a.m. EST aircraft observations
at Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas and Omaha, at
altitudes reaching 16,000 feet begin. This
program spells the demise of "kite stations."
15Observing the AtmosphereUpper Air Observations -
Past
- In 1933 First Weather Bureau balloon carried
radio-meteorgraph, or radiosonde, sounding made
at East Boston, Mass. Ends the era of manned
aircraft soundings since balloons could be
launched in virtually all weather conditions and
could fly substantially higher than aircraft - Automated radar tracking of weather balloons
began in 1950s, eliminating time consuming manual
tracking
16Observing the AtmosphereUpper Air Observations -
Present
- Roughly 1000 stations release radiosondes twice
daily at 00z and 12z. - Program underway to replace U.S. radiosondes
(1950s tech) with GPS tracked balloons.
17Observing the AtmosphereUpper Air Observations -
Present
- Other sources of upper air data include
- ACARS data from commercial aircraft (4000
aircraft/100,000 obs per day - Wind Profilers vertically pointed doppler radar
which measures winds speeds - Satellite wind and temperature profiles also used
18Observing the AtmosphereUpper Air Observations -
Future
- Research into the use of umanned aerial vehicles
(UAVs) for upper air observations is ongoing
within NOAA. - UAVs can loiter for 24 hours or more, at
altitudes of 45000 feet - UAVs can used for dull, dirty and dangerous
work including fire perimeter monitoring, air
sampling for smoke and hazardous materials
releases and basic atmospheric observations - Could be especially helpful over data
sparse areas of the Northern Pacific
19Observing the AtmosphereRadar
- First widespread use of radar was for military
applications during World War 2 - After the war, surplus military radars were given
to the Weather Bureau for research purposes - First dedicated weather radar, the WSR-57, began
nationwide deployment in 1959 - Research into Doppler radar technology began in
the 1960s at the National Severe Storms
Laboratory in Norman Oklahoma
20Observing the AtmosphereRadar
- Doppler radar research continues at NSSL through
the 1970s - First networked operational Dopple radar
(WSR-88D) developed in the 1980s, deployed
throughout the nation in the 1990s - Last WSR-57 radar replaced in 1999
21Observing the AtmosphereRadar
- Research is underway at the National Severe
Storms Lab on the next generation of weather
radar, using AEGIS phased array technology
developed by the Navy - Phased array radar has the potential to reduce
radar volume scan time from 4-5 minutes to 20-30
seconds - Large improvement in tornado warning
lead times is possible - Deployment of Phased Array technology
possible sometime
after 2015
22Observing the AtmosphereSatellites
- Worlds first Meteorological Satellite was
TIROS-1, launched on April 1, 1960 - First satellites were polar orbiting, passing
over the same point on the Earth twice a day - Geostationary satellites, which rotate at the
same speed as the Earth and remain over the same
point on the surface, were developed in the early
1970s - The first operational geostationary satellite was
SMS-1, launched on May 17 1974.
23Observing the AtmosphereSatellites
- Currently 2 GOES geostationary satellites are in
operation - GOES-11 (135W) covers the western portion of
North America and the eastern Pacific Ocean - GOES-12 (75W) covers eastern North America and
the Atlantic Ocean - A spare GOES satellite is in on-orbit storage in
case of failure of either primary satellites
24What do we do with all this Data?
- Data from around the world is collected by NCEP
in Maryland, then fed into a supercomputer for
analysis and modeling - The NCEP supercomputer runs several weather
forecast computer model programs to help us
predict the weather in Colorado - Can perform over 2 trillion calculations per
second - If you used a pocket calculator, it would take
you 5,000 years to do the same number of
calculations
25 Forecasting Process
- National Centers (NCEP) and Model Guidance
- Event Driven
- Always current
High Resolution Grids
- Interactive
- Collaborative
- Information Oriented
Local Digital Forecast Database
National Centers
Field Offices
Collaborate
Data and Science Focus
TODAY...RAIN LIKELY. SNOW LIKELY ABOVE 2500 FEET.
SNOW ACCUMULATION BY LATE AFTERNOON 1 TO 2 INCHES
ABOVE 2500 FEET. COLDER WITH HIGHS 35 TO 40.
SOUTHEAST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH SHIFTING TO THE
SOUTHWESTEARLY THIS AFTERNOON. CHANCE OF
PRECIPITATION 70.
National Digital Forecast Database
26Where Can I Find It?
- Weather Systems and National Data
- www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov
- Cold Fronts and Warm Fronts
- High and Low Pressure
- Jet stream
- Upper level Winds
- Day 1-7 Surface Maps
- Water Vapor Satellite Imagery
- adds.aviationweather.gov
- WFO Pueblo Graphical Forecast
- Weather.gov/pub click on Forecast/Graphical
- WFO Pueblo Activity Planner
- Weather.gov/pub click on Activity Planner
- WFO Pueblo Fire Weather Info
- Weather.gov/pub click on Fire Weather
Photo courtesy Pam Evenson
27- Prediction is very difficult, especially about
the future.
- Niels Bohr (Danish
physicist, who worked on the Manhattan
Project in World War 2
Email eric.petersen_at_noaa.gov