THERMAL SOARING FORECASTING SkewT Plots, Boundary Layers BLIPMAPS, Models and Methods RICHARD KELLERMAN SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2004.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By Rob Cox Overview Statistics Fog Types Ingredients for Radiation/Advection Fog Forecasting Techniques Summary.
Advertisements

Brian Resor Albuquerque Soaring Club - Moriarty, NM.
Accessing and Interpreting Web-based Weather Data Clinton Rockey National Weather Service Portland, Oregon.
Stratus. Outline  Formation –Moisture trapped under inversion –Contact layer heating of fog –Fog induced stratus –Lake effect stratus/strato cu  Dissipation.
Don Puttock1 Tephigrams for Dummies An introduction NEXT.
Climatology Lecture 5 Michael Palmer Room 119, Atmospheric Physics ‘Vertical Motion in the Atmosphere’ …Continued...
#4095. How much colder than standard temperature is the actual temperature at 9,000 feet, as indicated in the excerpt from the Winds and Temperature Aloft.
The Use of High Resolution Mesoscale Model Fields with the CALPUFF Dispersion Modelling System in Prince George BC Bryan McEwen Master’s project
THERMAL SOARING FORECASTING
Skew-T Thermodynamic Diagram Global distribution of weather balloon stations.
Thermal Soaring Forecasting Michael F. Stringfellow.
Stability & Movement Figure 7.1 A rock, like a parcel of air, that is in stable equilibrium will return to its original position when pushed. If the rock.
Moist Processes ENVI1400: Lecture 7. ENVI 1400 : Meteorology and Forecasting2 Water in the Atmosphere Almost all the water in the atmosphere is contained.
Tephigrams ENVI1400 : Lecture 8.
Chapter 1 Ways of Seeing. Ways of Seeing the Atmosphere The behavior of the atmosphere is very complex. Different ways of displaying the characteristics.
Chapter 3 Mesoscale Processes and Severe Convective Weather Meteorology 515/815 San Francisco State University Spring 2006 Christopher Meherin.
Stability & Skew-T Diagrams
Rapid Update Cycle Model William Sachman and Steven Earle ESC452 - Spring 2006.
AOS 100: Weather and Climate Instructor: Nick Bassill Class TA: Courtney Obergfell.
Supplemental Topic Weather Analysis and Forecasting.
My weather forecast funnel for soaring. Harry Fox NCSA / Bryon February 12, 2011 National Weather Service, Unisys maps, forecast soundings, Dr. Jack and.
Humidity, Saturation, and Stability
Lecture 12: Atmospheric moisture (Ch 5) Achieving saturation by mixing parcels of air cooling to the dewpoint the dry adiabatic and saturated adiabatic.
Visibility ATC Chapter 5.
Moisture and Atmospheric Stability
Ryan Ellis NOAA/NWS Raleigh, NC.  The development of orographically induced cirrus clouds east of the southern Appalachian Mountain chain can result.
MDSS Challenges, Research, and Managing User Expectations - Weather Issues - Bill Mahoney & Kevin Petty National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
Aviation Seminars1 #3410. At approximately what altitude above the surface would the pilot expect the base of the cumuliform clouds if the surface air.
How to get the most from the Internet briefings NWS Boise, Id.
Gliding and the Weather. Nothing makes as much difference as picking the right days to fly on. So: ● What is “good gliding weather”? ● How can we forecast.
5.03 Moisture References: FTGU pages ,
FLIGHT HAZARDS OF MOUNTAIN WAVES AND WIND EVENTS Stan Rose National Weather Service, Pueblo, Colorado.
BUFKIT for Balloonists Jay Trobec, Ph.D. KELOLAND TV Sioux Falls, SD jaytrobec.com.
Atmospheric Stability
Review for Final Exam. Final Exam Tuesday December 17 th, 5pm-7:30pm Room CC301 (this room) 25% of final grade Combination of quick general questions.
An Analysis of Eta Model Forecast Soundings in Radiation Fog Forecasting Steve Amburn National Weather Service, Tulsa, OK.
Chapter 4 Moisture and Atmospheric Stability. Steam Fog over a Lake.
BlipMap for Dummies SOARING WEATHER FORECAST SIMPLIFIED Ramy Yanetz Feb 2013.
Simulating Supercell Thunderstorms in a Horizontally-Heterogeneous Convective Boundary Layer Christopher Nowotarski, Paul Markowski, Yvette Richardson.
MDSS Lab Prototype: Program Update and Highlights Bill Mahoney National Center For Atmospheric Research (NCAR) MDSS Stakeholder Meeting Boulder, CO 20.
Chapter 13 Weather Forecasting and Analysis. Weather forecasting by the U.S. government began in the 1870s when Congress established a National Weather.
Xin Xi Aspects of the early morning atmospheric thermodynamic structure which affect the surface fluxes and BL growth through convection:
Météo-France / CNRM – T. Bergot 1) Introduction 2) The methodology of the inter-comparison 3) Phase 1 : cases study Inter-comparison of numerical models.
Section 04 Adiabatic Processes and Stability Lessons 12 & 13.
Humidity Under what conditions do you see the above?
P1.7 The Real-Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA) An operational objective surface analysis for the continental United States at 5-km resolution developed by.
Key Terms and Concepts ELR--Environmental Lapse Rate 5°C-6.5°C/1000 m – temperature of the STILL air as you ascend through the troposphere. ALR--Adiabatic.
Soundings and Adiabatic Diagrams for Severe Weather Prediction and Analysis.
Stability and Thunderstorms ESS 111 – Climate and Global Change.
Overview The FSU 1-Dimensional Planetary Boundary Layer Model was utilized courtesy of Dr. Paul Ruscher, to examine the changes that in soil moisture content.
AOS 100: Weather and Climate Instructor: Nick Bassill Class TA: Courtney Obergfell.
INTERPRETING A SKEW-T LOG-P AEROLOGICAL DIAGRAM
Doppler Lidar Winds & Tropical Cyclones Frank D. Marks AOML/Hurricane Research Division 7 February 2007.
Stratiform Precipitation Fred Carr COMAP NWP Symposium Monday, 13 December 1999.
Météo-France / CNRM – T. Bergot 1) Methodology 2) The assimilation procedures at local scale 3) Results for the winter season Improved Site-Specific.
Cirrus anvil cumulonimbus T (skewed) LCL (Lifting Condensation Level) LFC (Level of Free Convection) EL (Equilibrium level) p overshooting CAPE Sounding.
Atmospheric Stability The resistance of the atmosphere to vertical motion. Stable air resists vertical motion Unstable air encourages vertical motion.
Skew T Log P Diagram AOS 330 LAB 10 Outline Static (local) Stability Review Critical Levels on Thermodynamic Diagram Severe Weather and Thermodynamic.
Meteorology for the Soaring Pilot Joerg Stieber Canadian Advanced Soaring.
1 Introduction John Boyce (2V) – From San Jose, CA Air Sailing Nut / Devotee / Disciple Commercial Glider Pilot # I am not a meteorologist!
Cloud Formation  Ten Basic Types of Clouds (Genera): l High: Ci, Cs, Cc l Middle: As, Ac l Low: St, Ns, Sc l Clouds of Great Vertical Extent: Cu, Cb 
Teaching Soaring Weather
Stability and Thunderstorms
Grid Point Models Surface Data.
Better Forecasting Bureau
Soaring Weather.
YOU DON’T NEED TO BE A WEATHERMAN 1
Thermal Soaring Forecasting
Soaring Weather Forecasting for Dummies
Forecast Verification time!
Presentation transcript:

THERMAL SOARING FORECASTING SkewT Plots, Boundary Layers BLIPMAPS, Models and Methods RICHARD KELLERMAN SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2004

YOU DON’T NEED TO BE A WEATHERMAN 1

YOU DON’T NEED TO BE A WEATHERMAN 2

CONTENT WHY BOTHER? WHAT I CAN DO WHAT I CAN’T DO

CONTENT (CONT’D) SKEWT’S BASIC BL PHYSICS BLIPMAPS AND THE RUC20 MODEL MAKING THE FORECAST EXAMPLES GETTING THE DATA

WHY BOTHER? BLIPMAPS DO IT ALL SOMETIMES BLIPMAPS EXEMPLIFY THE POWER OF COMPUTER GRAPHICS BLIPMAPS EXEMPLIFY THE LIMITATIONS ALSO WHAT’S UNDER THE HOOD? NOT DEPENDENT ON A SINGLE SOURCE

WHAT I CAN DO (WITHOUT BLIPMAPS) ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS: WHEN LIFT WILL START AND END? HOW HIGH? HOW STRONG? WILL THERE BE CU? WILL THERE BE SPREADOUT? WILL THERE BE CONVECTIVE O.D?

WHAT I CAN’T DO (WITH OR WITHOUT BLIPMAPS) HANDLE CIRRUS WELL LOOK GOOD IN THE VICINITY OF FRONTS ACCOUNT FOR MICRO-SCALE EVENTS DEAL WITH WAVE SUPPRESSION PREDICT STREETING BE PRECISE ABOUT LIFT STRENGTH QUANTIFY TERRAIN EFFECTS

WHAT ONLY BLIPMAPS CAN DO PROVIDE USEFUL INFORMATION OVER A LARGE AREA DEPICT BETTER AND WORSE CONDITIONS PROVIDE DETERMINISTIC LIFT STRENGTH PREDICTIONS DITTO FOR THE BUOYANCY/SHEAR RATIO

WHAT’S THIS?

SKEWT’S COMPACT DATA DISPLAY (GRAPHS) BALLOON SOUNDINGS MODEL SOUNDINGS CALCULATORS IDEAL FOR THERMAL SOARING FORECASTS RECAP

TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE AXES

ADD DRY ADIABATS

ADD CONSTANT MIXING RATIO LINES “8 GM/KG” DETAILS (SLIDE 1) DETAILS (SLIDE 1)

MAKING CLOUDS

TEMPERATURE AND DEWPOINT LAPSE RATES TEMPERATURE LAPSE RATE ~5.3 F o /1,000 FT. DEWPOINT LAPSE RATE ~0.9 F o /1,000 FT CLOUDBASE = ((T – DP) / 4.4) * 1,000 FT

LAPSE RATES AND ADIABATS TEMPERATURE LAPSE RATE DEWPOINT LAPSE RATE DRY ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE SATURATED ADIABATIC LAPSE RATE T AND DP LAPSE RATES ARE DATA DALR’S AND SALR’S ARE CALCULATED THEY ARE RESPECTIVELY ~3C/1,000 FT AND ~2C/1,000 FT THE “SURFACE ADIABAT” IS THE (DRY) ADIABAT PASSING THROUGH THE SURFACE TEMPERATURE IN THE CONVECTIVELY MIXED BL: T LAPSE RATE = DALR

TEMPERATURE AND DP ALOFT

GOOD DAY WITH CU FORECASTS PM SOUNDING METHOD FORECASTS PM SOUNDING METHOD

GOOD DAY – NO CU SOARING FORECASTS PM SOUNDING METHOD SOARING FORECASTS PM SOUNDING METHOD

BAD DAY (MIFFLIN, /19)

SOARING FORECASTS “THERMAL INDEX/AM SOUNDING METHOD” (SLIDE 1) GET AM SOUNDING GET FORECAST SURFACE TEMPS CONSTRUCT SURFACE ADIABAT FOR TRIGGER CONSTRUCT OTHER SURFACE ADIABATS AS DESIRED

SOARING FORECASTS “THERMAL INDEX/AM SOUNDING METHOD” (SLIDE 2) TEMPERATURE EVOLUTION TEMPERATURE EVOLUTION

A DAY IN THE LIFE OF THE CONVECTIVE BL THE FOLLOWING SEQUENCE SHOWS WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED ON SEPTEMBER AT ABE IT ALSO MAKES VERY CLEAR ONE OF TWO FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS WITH THE AM SOUNDING/TI METHOD

8:00 AM

11:00 AM

2:00 PM

5:00 PM

TEMPERATURE EVOLUTION SOARING FORECASTS, “TI” METHOD (SLIDE 2) SOARING FORECASTS, “TI” METHOD (SLIDE 2)

DEWPOINT EVOLUTION

WHEN GOOD CLOUDS GO BAD, SLIDE 1

WHEN GOOD CLOUDS GO BAD, SLIDE 2

NUMERICAL MODELS RUC20/MAPS BLIPMAPS RUC VERSIONS

SOME OF WHAT THE RUC20 MODELS TERRAIN SOIL MOISTURE LAND USE INCLUDING VEGETATION COVER CLOUD PHYSICS RADIATIONAL FLUXES CONVECTION ADVECTION 3D PRESSURE

RUC20 VEGETATION CANOPY AND SOIL PHYSICS NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

RUC20 DATA INPUTS NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

SOME RUC20 ASSUMPTIONS 20 KM GRID 50 LAYER ATMOSPHERE

RUC20 TERRAIN RESOLUTION NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

RUC20 2M TEMPERATURE PERFORMANCE NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

RUC20 WIND FORECAST ERRORS NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

RUC20 RAOB VERIFICATION NOAA Forecast Systems Laboratory, RUC Development Group

RUC20 SCHEDULE

SOARING FORECASTS PM SOUNDING METHOD GET THE RUC20 PM SOUNDINGS CONSTRUCT THE SURFACE ADIABAT PASSING THROUGH THE (2M) SURFACE VIRTUAL TEMPERATURE DETERMINE HEIGHT OF LIFT ESTIMATE STRENGTH OF LIFT DETERMINE CLOUDBASE ASSESS THE CHANCE OF LATERAL OR VERTICAL OD ASSESS THE SENSITIVITY OF THE FORECAST TO DP AND/OR T ERRORS GOOD DAY – NO CU GOOD DAY – NO CU GOOD DAY WITH CU GOOD DAY WITH CU

MIFFLIN 2001 P2: FORECAST

MIFFLIN 2001 P2: WHAT HAPPENED (SLIDE 1) STRONG LIFT WITH CU AT 7,000 FT QV’S AND X’S DAY

MIFFLIN 2001 P2: WHAT HAPPENED (SLIDE 2) EVERYONE ELSE’S DAY HEAVY RAIN SHOWERS BROTHER UNABLE TO LAND 60 MPH GUST AT THE FIELD SPREADOUT DISGRUNTLED PILOTS

BLIPMAPS SUPPLEMENTS COMPLEMENTS PAINTS THE SOUNDING GRID DATA THERMAL STRENGTH IS DETERMINISTIC (NOT EMPIRICAL)

PREPARING THE FORECAST (SLIDE 1) 1. SURFACE ANALYSIS 2. FORECAST DISCUSSIONS 3. SATELLITE IMAGERY 4. SURFACE OBSERVATION

PREPARING THE FORECAST (SLIDE 2) 1. SKEWT PLOTS 2. BLIPMAP

DETAILS (SLIDE 1) VIRTUAL TEMPERATURE T V = T + W/6 VISIBILITY WIND SHEAR CIRRUS ADD CONSTANT MIXING RATIO LINES ADD CONSTANT MIXING RATIO LINES

SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS PRE-EMPTIVE EXCUSES HIGH INVERSION SURFACE DEWPOINT CLOSE TO CU/BLUE POINT SMALL T/DP SPREAD AT CLOUDBASE LITTLE OR NO INVERSION

SMALL T.I. – LOW INVERSION

SMALL T.I. – HIGH INVERSION

GLIDER PILOTS ARE A BIG PART OF THE PROBLEM FORECASTS DEAL IN AVERAGES GLIDER PILOTS FLY FROM ONE MICRO SCALE ANOMALY TO ANOTHER HOW TO FIND LIFT

SUMMARY WEATHER IS BASIC TO GLIDING UNDERSTANDING IT IS REWARDING UNDERSTANDING FORECAST LIMITATIONS HELPS YOU CAN AND SHOULD DO YOUR OWN FORECASTS