P8.6
TAMDAR, the Rapid Update Cycle, and the Great Lakes Fleet Experiment
William R. Moninger, NOAA/ERL/FSL, Boulder, CO; and T. S. Daniels, R. Mamrosh, M. F. Barth, S. G. Benjamin, R. S. Collander, L. Ewy, B. D. Jamison, R. C. Lipschutz, P. A. Miller, B. E. Schwartz, T. L. Smith, and E. J. Szoke
More than 60 TAMDAR sensors (see accompanying paper by Daniels et al.) have recently been deployed on turboprop aircraft operated by Mesaba Airlines (d. b. a. Northwest Airlink). This fleet of aircraft provides high vertical resolution sounding data at regional airports in the Midwestern United States, and generally provides high temporal resolution data at lower altitudes than is the case with currently available automated weather data from commercial jetliners. The sensors, developed jointly by NASA and AirDat LLC of Raleigh, NC, measure temperature, relative humidity, winds aloft, turbulence, and icing, and report these to the ground in real-time. The sensors will remain on the aircraft for at least 6 months.
NOAA’s Forecast Systems Laboratory (FSL) and National Weather Service will evaluate these data by performing several tasks.
Because the Fleet Experiment started in late summer 2004, this will be a report on current, preliminary findings.
Poster Session 8, Sensors and Observing Systems, Poster Session
Wednesday, 6 October 2004, 3:00 PM-4:30 PM
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