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Low cloud and poor visibility FAOR South African Weather Service. Airports Management Centre. Developed by ACSA prior to 2010 Improve airport performance Collaborate service providers :SAWS SAWS : Physically present October 2018 Two formal briefings a day Numerous informal briefings.
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Low cloud and poor visibility FAOR South African Weather Service
Airports Management Centre Developed by ACSA prior to 2010 Improve airport performance Collaborate service providers :SAWS SAWS : Physically present October 2018 Two formal briefings a day Numerous informal briefings Templ ref: PPT-ISO-colour.001 Doc Ref no:
Most frequent between March and August. FAOR with high elevation is more prone to fog than surrounding Aerodromes/Airfields: *FAOR is a Category II airport. Not common in summer but still possible, depending on the general circulation pattern. Frequent between 04:00-07:00am in summer. Frequent between 05:00-08:00am in winter. Average occurrence is two or three days per month. Low Cloud and Poor Visibility
Types of Fog and Formation • Fog (FG) is defined as: vapor condensed to small water droplets in the lower atmosphere, reduced vis to below 1Km. • Mist (BR) defined as: Reduced visibility between 1 and 5 Km. • Reduced visibility, due to fog, is influenced by numerous factors. - Fog prone areas, can be divided into two categories namely; orography and meteorological. • Orographic factors: terrain, altitude, topography, slope and aspect. • Meteorological factors: pressure, wind speed, low level inversion, previous precipitationand climatology. • Limiting factors for fog formation are strong winds and warm surfaces.
Types of Fog and Formation • Common: Radiation and Advection fog. • Radiation fog: Overnight when air near the ground is cooled to saturation. Most common after it has rained and the weather clears, resulting in a cloud free sky. • * Advection fog: Moisture advected from the E/NE to FAOR. • * Up-Slope fog: Low cloud pushed from the SE and trapped by a low level inversion due to wind change from SW to E . • * Low cloud advected from the NW in the 2nd/3rd day of a ridging high pressure system (not easy to forecast). * Due to a ridging high pressure system
Figure 1: Conceptual model of a ridging high pressure system at 2100Z.
Figure 2: Conceptual model of a ridging high pressure system at 0100Z (the following morning).
Figure 3: Conceptual model of a ridging high pressure system at 0300/0400Z (time FAOR usually experiences fog).
Figure 4: Tephi-gram showing the inversion layer over Irene on 19th of February 2019.
Forecasting • Low cloud and poor visibility are small scale weather events. • Numerical Prediction Models along with observations used to forecast such as midnight Tephigram and METARs • Advection fog easier to forecast than the other types • Aviation forecasts need to be issued in a timely fashion . • (Not well predicted within a forecast period of 12 to 18 hours.) • TAF updated every 6 hours and validity of 36 hours. • Forecast difficulty is proportional to time.
Case: 4TH June 2018 Up-slope fog. Very light winds. Dew point depression was 0 at times Visibility 100m for 1hour.
Figure 6: Day Natural Colour Satellite Image, showing fog over FAOR on 4th of June 2018 at 06:00UCT.
Roof top view Figure 7: Good visibility viewed from FAOR roof (left) and poor visibility in fog (right).
Aviation Website Figure 8: FOG Satellite Image on Aviation Website.