J15A Joint Special Session: The Earth Prediction Innovation Center to Accelerate Community-Developed Scientific and Technological Enhancements into the Operational Applications for Numerical Weather Prediction

Thursday, 1 February 2024: 1:45 PM-3:00 PM
320 (The Baltimore Convention Center)
Hosts: (Joint between the 14th Conference on Transition of Research to Operations; and the Third Symposium on Community Modeling and Innovation )
Cochairs:
Vijay S. Tallapragada, NWS, NCEP/EMC/MDAB, College Park, MD and Jose-Henrique G.M. Alves

The Earth Prediction Innovation Center (EPIC) was created in response to the congressional charge to accelerate the development of the U.S. capacity to make early, accurate, and effectively communicated environmental predictions. It is designed to support, sustain, and foster the collaborative work being done by the participating members of the Unified Forecast System (UFS). EPIC is designed to be the catalyst for community research and modeling advances that continually inform and accelerate advances in our nation’s operational forecast modeling systems. Additionally, EPIC ensures that NOAA’s operational needs and the research and development community are supported by an effective research to operations to research (R2O2R) process resulting in improved numerical weather prediction (NWP) capacity and a more streamlined R2O2R process. EPIC will meet this goal by improving accessibility and usability of the UFS for community members.

This special session on the Earth Prediction Innovation Center to Accelerate Community-Developed Scientific and Technological Enhancements into the Operational Applications for Numerical Weather Prediction, Joint between the Second Symposium on Earth Prediction Innovation and Community Modeling and the 13th Conference on Transition of Research to Operations, is aimed at providing highlights on the accomplishments thus far, and how EPIC is enabling and extending infrastructure and user support for the UFS to fully coupled Earth system prediction, transforming the operational suite of models into one modeling system.
Conveners: Vijay S. Tallapragada, NOAA, and Jose-Henrique G. M. Alves, NOAA/OAR

Papers:
1:45 PM
J15A.1
Joint Technology Transfer Initiative: Building the Bridge to Transition Community-based Weather Research to the NWS Operations
Chandra R. Kondragunta, OAR, Silver Spring, MD; and A. Pratt, V. Kunkel, K. Garrett, N. P. Kurkowski, and W. M. Sellers

2:00 PM
J15A.2
NOAA Weather Program Office (WPO) Initiatives to advance UFS Data Assimilation Research, Education and Community Innovations
Krishna V. Kumar, NOAA, Silver Spring, MD; and M. Huang, D. M. Koch, J. E. Ten Hoeve III, J. C. Carman, J. H. G. M. Alves, and J. Vogt

2:15 PM
J15A.3
Activities and Preliminary Results from the 1st Hybrid NOAA/Hazardous Weather Testbed Spring Forecasting Experiment
Adam J. Clark, NSSL, Norman, OK; and I. L. Jirak, T. A. Supinie, J. Vancil, D. E. Jahn, K. H. Knopfmeier, Y. Wang, P. Heinselman, L. J. Reames, P. S. Skinner, P. C. Burke, K. A. Hoogewind, J. Martin, M. L. Flora, L. J. Wicker, B. C. Matilla, M. Krocak, D. Dowell, C. Schwartz, M. G. Duda, W. Skamarock, A. L. Brannan, C. Karstens, E. D. Loken, N. A. Dahl, D. R. Harrison, D. A. Imy, A. Wade, J. Picca, and J. Milne

2:30 PM
J15A.4
Alleviation of Low Humidity Biases in WRF-ARW and UFS-SRW Model Simulations over Complex Terrain
Max R. Marchand, Tomorrow.io, Naples, FL; and S. Davis, A. Pattantyus, P. P. Rama Durga Surya, and S. Flampouris

2:45 PM
J15A.5
The Impacts of the Grell-Freitas Scheme on Short-Range Forecasts of the April 19, 2023 Convective Event
Robby Michael Frost, NOAA, Boulder, CO; University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and J. Beck, G. Ketefian, M. A. Harrold, and L. Bernardet

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