88th Annual Meeting (20-24 January 2008)

Thursday, 24 January 2008: 3:45 PM
Real-time and recent historical weather data in Google Earth
207 (Ernest N. Morial Convention Center)
Travis M. Smith, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and V. Lakshmanan and K. L. Ortega
Poster PDF (1.9 MB)
The National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) utilizes Google Earth as one of several ways to share experimental severe weather products with other researchers and operational meteorologists for evaluation and feedback. A variety of multi-sensor severe weather products are generated by NSSL and shared to Google Earth users via the internet at http://wdssii.nssl.noaa.gov. These products include spatially gridded fields of Vertically Integrated Liquid, Maximum Expected Hail Size, tracks of circulations derived from Doppler velocity data, composite reflectivity, and 30-to-60 minute forecast reflectivity fields, among others. These products, which have a spatial resolution of approximately 1 km by 1 km, are generated every one to five minutes within the Warning Decision Support System – Integrated Information (WDSS-II). The WDSS-II system provides the images in GeoTIFF format which may be imported into most Geographic Information Systems software including virtual globes such as Google Earth.

During the first two years these data have been provided on the internet, they have been used to improve the verification of severe weather events as well as in disaster response and post-event damage assessments. This presentation focuses on the scientific and educational uses of virtual globes to interrogate real-time and archived severe weather products.

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