Transcript Slide 1

Process of Issuing Forecasts and Warnings
NWS Office Locations
Salt Lake City WFO
The Datasets We Use
Observation Tools - Ground Level
Automated Surface Observation System (ASOS)
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Rainfall
Temperature/Dewpoint
Weather
Wind
Sky Cover
Freezing Rain
Thunderstorm
Visibility
Pressure
Mesonets
• Cooperative projects between researchers at
Universities, National Weather Service, Land
Management Agencies, Departments of
Transportation, and private/commercial firms
• Provides access to current weather observations
• Observing networks are managed by federal, state,
and local agencies and private firms
• Weather observations of temperature, relative
humidity, wind speed and direction, precipitation,
and other weather parameters are available at
thousands of locations
• Used operationally by National Weather Service
forecasters and used extensively by researchers
Doppler Radar Network
Observation Tools – Upper-air
Radiosonde
• Network of 92 Radiosonde stations in North America
and the Pacific islands and 10 stations in the
Caribbean
• 6 feet diameter balloon…expands to 20 feet as it
rises to over 100,000 feet in the atmosphere
• Radiosonde sensors measure pressure,
temperature, dewpoint, and wind
• Radio transmitter sends measurements to a ground
receiver
Satellite Network
Composed of Polar Orbiting and Geostationary
Satellites
• Monitoring and forecasting of weather, water, and climate
• Search and rescue applications
GOES M Launch
River Gage Networks
Marine Buoys
Numerical Weather Prediction
AWIPS
The Forecast Process
Forecasters analyze / interpret varied datasets to
develop a 4-dimensional picture of the atmosphere
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Observations
Analysis
Diagnosis
Prognosis
Communication
What We Produce
Zion National Park
Convective Warnings
• Tornado Warnings
• Severe Thunderstorm
Warnings
• Flash Flood Warnings
• Salt Lake City Tornado – 8/11/99
Nonconvective Watches, Warnings, and
Advisories
Heavy Snow, Wind Chill, High Wind, Dense Fog
Public Forecast Products
Text, Digital, and Graphical
Zone Forecasts
Tabular State Forecast For Utah
Area Forecast Discussion
Flash Flood Potential Rating
Air Stagnation Index
Coded Cities Forecast
Mountain Weather
Point Forecast Matrices
Hazardous Weather Outlooks, Short Term Forecasts, and Special Weather
Statements
Fire Weather Forecasts
• Fire Weather Planning
Forecast for Utah
• Red Flag Watches and
Warnings
• Spot Forecasts
• Trend Forecasts
• Smoke Management
Forecasts
Aviation Forecasts
• 8 Terminal Aerodrome Forecasts (TAFs)
– ENV, LGU, OGD, SLC, PVU, CDC, BCE,
SGU)
• 9 Transcribed Weather Broadcasts
(TWEBS), plus a Synopsis
• Aviation Weather Warnings (AWWs)
River Forecasts and Warnings
• Flood Warnings for 23
Forecast Points
• Areal Flood Warnings
Climate
• WFO SLC Climate Products
– Daily Climate Report
– Monthly Climate Summary for Salt Lake City/Utah
– Preliminary Climatology Data (F6)
– Record Event Report
– Storm Data reports
Marine
Forecast and Warning Dissemination
NOAA Weather Radio All Hazards Emergency Alert System (EAS) Media
Internet – Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds
Public
NWR EAS
Amateur Radio
A.R.E.S.
WFO
SLC
Media
Family of Services
NWR EAS
Internet
County
Officials
NAWAS
EMWIN
Pager - EWARN
State circuits
Watch/Warning Decision Making
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Office-based criteria (customer-driven?)
Time of day or season (impact driven)
Likelihood of occurrence (forecaster confidence)
Magnitude of event
Potential impact
Local knowledge
Collaboration
Dissemination Considerations
• Product Wording
– Use of uncertainty?
– Potential impact
• Timing (e.g. news casts)
• Single voice (both internal and external)
Challenges and Frustrations
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Being wrong
Lack of verification
Misinterpretation of forecasts
Local variations in observed weather information not
“fitting” forecast, though forecast as a whole was
excellent
Maintaining high level of performance/productivity,
despite shiftwork environment
Collaboration (internal and external)
Different forecasts from different sources
Software issues
Time constraints
WFO Roles
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Public Service (4-5)
Forecasters (8-12)
Service Hydrologist
Warning Coordination Meteorologist
Science and Operations Officer
Technical Support (3-4)
Admin Assistant
Meteorologist-in-Charge