High-resolution, real time radar data
now available from NOAA
High-resolution radar data from the national network of
Next Generation Radar (NEXRAD) is now available in real time to government,
university and private sector users, the Commerce Department's National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced today.
This data represents the highest resolution picture of what
the radar system is "seeing" in real time - as the antenna spins. As a
result, faster, higher resolution and more detailed weather products will
be developed. Researchers have already proven the value of this data in
various applications. Now it will be available to everyone.
The National Weather Service (NWS) will distribute the data
from the Next Generation Radar, also known as the WSR-88D, through four
top-tier sites, said Tim Crum, NWS NEXRAD Operations Focal Point with
the Radar Operations Center in Norman, Okla. Three of these sites -- Purdue
University, University of Oklahoma, and The Education and Research Consortium
of the Western Carolinas - have agreed to make Level II data available
to all private sector users equally on a cost-recovery basis without restriction
on redistribution or use. The fourth site, the NWS Telecommunication Operations
Center, will make data available through a Family of Services approach
if there is interest from the commercial community.
Users are free to determine their source of Level II data,
either from these four sites or from private companies and universities
that will receive the data from the top-tier sites, according to Crum.
"The National Weather Service is committed to working together
with academia and the private sector to develop products and services
that enhance the shared goal of protecting lives and property," said retired
Air Force Brig. General David L. Johnson, director of NOAA's National
Weather Service. "Moreover, this action supports the National Research
Council's 'Fair Weather' recommendations to enhance the availability and
dissemination of National Weather Service data."
"Making this critical data available in real time is an
important step in enhancing that partnership, and we should see a new
era in weather forecasting as a result of new products and services yet
to be developed using this enhanced, real time information," Johnson added.
"The NWS is using the Unidata public domain Local
Data Manager technology to collect and redistribute Level II data," Crum
explained. The NWS will send copies of the Level II data to the top-tier
sites, and Unidata will coordinate the further redistribution of data
through the university community. The NWS will redistribute Level II data
to other federal government users from an NWS server located at the Mid
Atlantic Crossroad Gigapop at the University of Maryland.
"High-performance networking capabilities and other recent
technological advances have made it possible for the NOAA National Weather
Service to archive and deliver valuable Level II data from multiple radars,"
Crum said. "This new system will facilitate ground-breaking advances by
a variety of radar data users."
To make Level II data available, the NWS expanded on an
experiment known as CRAFT, the Collaborative Radar Acquisition Field Test
Project, which was implemented by a coalition of researchers working with
NOAA during the past few years. The new system offers a viable alternative
to using 8mm tapes for archiving the nation's high-resolution radar data,
cutting delivery time from months to seconds, increasing the amount of
information saved and decreasing processing costs. Data will be electronically
collected and transmitted in real time to NOAA's National Climatic Data
Center for archiving.
In addition, the use of the Internet2 network infrastructure,
including the high-performance Abilene backbone network, allows the NWS
to deliver significantly greater amounts of high quality data to a geographically
diverse group of users. "Data will be available from the 121 NWS WSR-88D
radars and some of the Department of Defense's WSR-88D radars in the contiguous
United States," Crum said. The data are sent to the NWS regional headquarters
and then to the Internet2 network via the Gigapops located at North Texas,
Utah Education Network, and Great Plains Network. The Level II base data
includes high-resolution reflectivity, velocity and spectrum width.
More information about receiving Level II data is available
from each of the four top-tier sites:
- Education and Research Consortium of the Western Carolinas, Dr. Max
Lennon, (828) 281-1954, maxlennon@ercwc.org
- Purdue University, Professor Matthew Huber, (765) 494-3258, huberm@purdue.edu
- University of Oklahoma, Professor Kelvin K. Droegemeier, (405) 325-0453,
kkd@ou.edu
- NWS Telecommunications Operations Center, Julie Hayes, (301) 713-0864
x 120, Julie.Hayes@noaa.gov
NOAA is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national
safety through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related
events and providing environmental stewardship of our Nation's coastal
and marine resources.
On the Web:
NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov
National Weather Service: http://www.nws.noaa.gov
National Climatic Data Center: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov
Radar Operations Center: http://www.roc.noaa.gov
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