Over the last eight years, the equipage of the sensors has expanded beyond CONUS to include Alaska, Mexico, Hawaii, Caribbean, UK, and Western Europe. Upon completion of the planned installations, more than 7000 daily sounding will be produced globally.
An update will be provided on the status of the TAMDAR sensor network deployment and data availability, as well as an update on data quality, error statistics, and operational forecasting utility, both from soundings and various data assimilation techniques.
During 2012, AirDat and NCAR have been optimizing the operational suite of CONUS-Scale Advanced Research WRF (ARW) models known as the NCAR-AirDat RTFDDA-WRF and the NCAR-AirDat 3D- and 4DVAR-WRF. These systems employ various assimilation frameworks and techniques. The temporal and spatial weighting of the various observations can be adjusted to allow optimal TAMDAR data characteristics, and dynamically evolve according to present weather flow regimes.
The TAMDAR sensor was originally deployed in December 2004 on a fleet of 63 Saab 340s operated by Mesaba Airlines in the Great Lakes region as a part of the NASA-sponsored Great Lakes Fleet Experiment (GLFE).