Poster Session 1 | |||
Monday Poster Viewing | |||
P1.1 | On the col structure associated with winter traveling disturbances across the Caribbean and its effect over northern South America Gerardo de J. Montoya Gaviria, National University of Colombia, Bogota, Colombia | ||
P1.2 | Preliminary study on the causes and decay of severe drought in a century in the Sichuan Basin, China Fujun Huang Sr., NOAA/AL, Chengdu, Sichuan, China | ||
P1.3 | Assessing the Regional Model ETA-15km and Wind Anomalies to Forecast Central Andes Winter Snowstorms Maximiliano Viale, Instituto Argentino de Nivologia, Glaciologia y Ciencias Ambientales (IANIGLA - CONICET), 5500 Mendoza, Mendoza, Argentina; and F. A. Norte | ||
P1.4 | VISITView as a briefing tool for high impact weather events Jon W. Zeitler, NOAA/NWS, New Braunfels, TX; and M. Oliver, M. Fox, J. T. Bradshaw, and P. Kirkwood | ||
P1.5 | What's New in NWP Training at COMET? William R. Bua, UCAR/COMET, Camp Springs, MD; and S. D. Jascourt and D. A. Wesley | ||
P1.6 | Defining the impact of weather Patrick J. McCarthy, MSC, Winnipeg, MB, Canada | ||
P1.7 | Decision making by Austin, Texas, residents in hypothetical tornado scenarios David M. Schultz, University of Helsinki and Finnish Meteorological Institute, FI-00101, Helsinki, Finland; and E. Gruntfest, C. Benight, S. D. Drobot, L. R. Barnes, and M. H. Hayden | ||
Poster P1.8 has been moved. New Paper number 6A.1A | |||
P1.9 | Questions about applications of the ageostrophic wind and quasi-geostrophic theory in education and forecasting Paul Nutter, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO | ||
Poster P1.10 has been moved. New Paper number 6A.3A | |||
P1.11 | High impact gridded weather forecasts Steven A. Amburn, NWS, Tulsa, OK; and S. F. Piltz, J. B. McGavock, and J. M. Frederick | ||
P1.12 | Employing weather derivatives to assess the economic value of high-impact weather forecasts out to ten days - indicating a commercial application Harvey Stern, Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Vic., Australia | ||
P1.13 | Weather and Radar Processor (WARP) Optimal Mosaic Evaluation Jeffrey A. Weinrich, Dimensions International, Linwood, NJ; and M. Printy | ||
P1.14 | Forecast Issues Related to the Unprecedented Severe and High Wind Event of December 1, 2006 Gregory A. DeVoir, NOAA/NWS, State College, PA; and R. H. Grumm | ||
P1.15 | A nocturnal cold season mountain wave heavy precipitation event over the lee slopes of the Wind River Mountains of Wyoming Charles M. Baker, NOAA/NWSFO, Riverton, WY; and B. E. McDonald | ||
P1.16 | The Overton Marina Move – A Benign Weather High Impact Event Kim Runk, NOAA/NWSFO, Las Vegas, NV | ||
P1.17 | Investigating specific event types in the western U.S utilizing standardized anomalies Randy Graham, NOAA/NWS, Salt Lake City, UT; and R. Grumm | ||
P1.18 | Analysis of IC and CG Lightning with Winter Precipitation Brian Pettegrew, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO; and P. S. Market, R. L. Holle, and N. W. S. Demetriades | ||
P1.19 | New Years Eve wind event 2005: Radar analysis and damage assessment of relationship to slantwise convective circulations embedded along bent-back front mel K. Nordquist, NOAA/NSSL, Eureka, CA; and B. Lutz, M. Burger, E. Lau, and C. Ciliberti (Presenter) | ||
P1.20 | An analysis of synoptic patterns associated with strong north Texas cold fronts during the 2005-06 cold season Stacie Hanes, DOC/NOAA/NWS, Fort Worth, TX; and G. R. Patrick | ||
P1.21 | Analyzing low-level jets in their large-scale environment: Issues involving the combination of operational and research observations during IHOP Edward I. Tollerud, NOAA/ESRL/GSD, Boulder, CO; and F. Caracena | ||
P1.22 | The 24 February 2007 North Texas dust storm: an impact weather event Bernard N. Meisner, NWS Southern Region Headquarters, Fort Worth, TX; and J. A. Schultz | ||
P1.23 | Interactions between regional-scale circulations and local wind systems in the Owens Valley Gregory West, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; and S. Adamson, J. Andrews, S. Daines, N. Hosenfeld, R. Jackson, J. James, L. Jones, C. Kahler, L. Kowal, J. Krebs, S. Noble, M. Olson, N. Opperman, D. Otto, P. Staten, K. Tietze, D. Van Cleave, K. Van Peursem, L. Verzella, C. Wall, K. Westerman, Y. Zhao, S. Zhong, C. D. Whiteman, and W. J. Steenburgh | ||
P1.24 | Great Basin frontogenesis Gregory West, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; and W. J. Steenburgh and J. C. Shafer | ||
P1.25 | Frontal interaction with the Sierra Nevada as a precursor to intense frontogenesis over the Great Basin Colby Neuman, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; and W. J. Steenburgh and G. L. West | ||
P1.26 | Microburst Events in a Mountain Desert Environment Elford G. Astling, West Desert Test Center, Salt Lake City, UT; and S. Krippner and K. Sutkevich | ||
P1.27 | Forecasting Minimum Temperatures for Dugway Proving Ground Carissa L. Klemmer, US Army Dugway Proving Ground, Dugway, UT | ||
P1.28 | Identification of side-door/back-door cold fronts for fire weather forecasting applications Joseph J. Charney, USDA Forest Service, East Lansing, MI; and R. P. Shadbolt and D. Keyser | ||
Poster P1.29 has been moved. New Paper number 3A.7A | |||
P1.29A | Assessing the predictability of band formation and evolution during three recent northeast U.S. snowstorms David R. Novak, NOAA/NWS, Bohemia, NY; and B. A. Colle | ||
P1.30 | Mesoscale Elements of the December 14, 2006 West Palm Beach Flash Flood Gordon Strassberg, NOAA/NWS, Miami, FL; and P. Santos | ||
P1.31 | Heat waves in a hot place: Examination of intense heat episodes in the Phoenix Arizona metropolitan area during July 2003-2005-2006 G. Douglas Green, NOAA/NWS, Phoenix, AZ | ||
P1.32 | The Real Time Mesoscale Analysis System. On-going system improvements and challenges Manuel De Pondeca, SAIC and NOAA/NWS/NCEP/EMC, Camp Springs, MD; and R. J. Purser, S. Y. Park, G. S. Manikin, D. F. Parrish, and G. DiMego | ||
P1.33 | Mesonet wind quality monitoring allowing assimilation in the RUC and other NCEP models Stan Benjamin, NOAA/ESRL, Boulder, CO; and W. R. Moninger, S. R. Sahm, and T. L. Smith | ||
P1.34 | The NWS Southern Region grid preparation policy: making a difference G. Clay Anderson, NOAA/NWS, New Braunfels, TX; and J. W. Zeitler | ||
P1.35 | Applications of the NWS' Real-Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA) Lee Anderson, NOAA/NWS, Silver Spring, MD; and B. Colman, G. DiMego, G. E. Mann, and J. D. Horel | ||
P1.36 | Evaluation of the Real-Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA) over complex terrain Chad Kahler, NOAA/NWS, Western Region, Scientific Services Division, Salt Lake City, UT; and D. Myrick | ||
P1.37 | Sensitivity of Surface Analyses to Temporal Observational Constraints Brian Olsen, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; and J. Horel | ||
P1.38 | Evaluation of Real-Time High-Resolution Forecasts for Monterey Bay Hao Jin, SAIC, Monterey, CA; and J. D. Doyle and Q. Jiang | ||
P1.39 | Monitoring High Impact Weather Events Using MesoWest John D. Horel, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; and B. Olsen, J. Pechmann, and C. Galli | ||
P1.40 | Winter storm simulations using a local mesoscale model Andrew R. Kimball, NOAA/NWSFO, Wakefield, VA; and J. A. Billet | ||
P1.41 | Improvement of LAPS wind analysis by including background error statistics Ok-Yeon Kim, Pukyung National University, Busan, Korea; and C. Lu, S. Albers, J. A. McGinley, and J. H. Oh | ||
P1.42 | The Impact of High-Resolution Surface Observations on Convective Storm Analysis with Ensemble Kalman Filter Jili Dong, CAPS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and M. Xue and K. Droegemeier | ||
P1.43 | Impact of abridged atmospheric data in mesoscale modeling Christopher L. Franks, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid City, SD; and W. J. Capehart and M. R. Hjelmfelt | ||
P1.44 | The Issue of Data Density and Frequency with EnKF Radar Data Assimilation in a Compressible Nonhydrostatic NWP Model Jidong Gao, CAPS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma; and M. Xue | ||
P1.45 | Demonstration of Navy's operational dust storm forecasting for Southwest Asia Ming Liu, NRL, Monterey, CA; and D. L. Westphal and A. L. Walker | ||
P1.46 | The value of Distributed Collaborative Adaptive Sensing (DCAS) for observing high impact weather: Preliminary results from CASA J. A. Brotzge, CAPS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and K. Hondl | ||
P1.47 | Sensitivity of short range numerical weather prediction to data availability during NAME John R. Wetenkamp Jr., South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid City, SD; and W. J. Capehart and M. R. Hjelmfelt | ||
P1.48 | Asynoptic high resolution upper-air data for high impact weather events Jon W. Zeitler, NOAA/NWS, New Braunfels, TX; and P. G. Witsaman, S. Foster, W. C. Hoffmann, and B. K. Fritz |
Monday, 25 June 2007: 4:35 PM-6:30 PM, Summit C
* - Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting