Poster Session 4 Forecasting Techniques and Warning Decision Making Posters I

Tuesday, 12 October 2010: 3:00 PM-4:30 PM
Grand Mesa Ballroom ABC (Hyatt Regency Tech Center)
Host: 25th Conference on Severe Local Storms

Papers:
P4.1
Using artificial intelligence to predict Mississippi lightning
Andrew Edward Mercer, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS; and M. E. Brown and C. Babineaux

P4.2
Use and Evaluation of Lightning Data within 2010 Experimental Warning Program and GOES-R Proving Ground
Kristin M. Kuhlman, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and D. M. Kingfield, G. T. Stano, E. C. Bruning, B. C. Baranowski, and C. W. Siewert

Handout (1.7 MB)

P4.3
Application of WRF-based forecasts of total lightning threat to the CONUS
Eugene W. McCaul Jr., USRA, Huntsville, AL ; and J. L. Case and S. J. Goodman

Handout (274.0 kB)

P4.4
A multi-tiered verification of SPC tornado watches
Aaron Christenberry, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and A. L. Lamers, B. A. Mejia, A. R. Dean, and S. J. Weiss

Handout (234.3 kB)

P4.5
Tornado warning services for misoscale circulations in quasilinear convective systems
Kevin A. Scharfenberg, NOAA/NWS, Norman, OK ; and D. L. Andra Jr., P. Marsh, K. L. Ortega, and J. A. Brotzge

Handout (304.0 kB)

P4.6
Numerical modeling of maximum hail in deep convection
Gerhard W. Reuter, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada; and F. Jia

P4.7
A statistical hail prediction product
Daniel T. Lindsey, NOAA/NESDIS, Fort Collins, CO

P4.8
WSR-88D Signatures associated with One Inch Hail in the Southern Plains
Dennis E. Cavanaugh, NOAA/NWS, Fort Worth, TX; and J. A. Schultz

Handout (392.1 kB)

P4.9
Severe hail impacts and preparedness
Jari-Petteri Tuovinen, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland; and J. Rauhala

Handout (495.9 kB)

P4.10
P4.12
Examining radar 'side-lobe spikes' for severe hail identification
Kevin L. Manross, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and K. L. Ortega and A. E. Pietrycha

Handout (1017.7 kB)

P4.13
Evaluating the use of reflectivity heights for hail detection with high-resolution hail reports
Kiel L. Ortega, Univ. of Oklahoma/CIMMS and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK

P4.16
Observations of haboobs associated with mesoscale convective vortices
Joseph W. Jurecka, NOAA/NWSFO, Lubbock, TX; and T. T. Lindley

Handout (594.4 kB)

P4.17
Severe Thunderstorm Wind Damage Societal Impacts and Preparedness
Jenni Rauhala, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland

Handout (652.2 kB)

P4.18
Evaluation of CAPS multi-model storm-scale ensemble forecast for the NOAA HWT 2010 Spring Experiment
Fanyou Kong, CAPS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; and M. Xue, K. W. Thomas, Y. Wang, K. Brewster, X. Wang, J. Gao, S. J. Weiss, A. Clark, J. S. Kain, M. C. Coniglio, and J. Du

P4.19
GEM LAM Convective Forecasts: How Can they be used in an Operational Forecast Environment?
Heather Rombough, EC, Edmonton, AB, Canada; and H. Greene, B. Niska-Aro, B. Power, D. Schmidt, O. Stachowiak, C. Wielki, and A. Yun

Handout (1.9 MB)

- Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting
- Indicates an Award Winner
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