1 / 37

WFO Huntsville, AL

WFO Huntsville, AL. Two years of LMA in operations. Tennessee. Alabama. Who are we?. WFO Huntsville Office started in January 14 th , 2003 Co-located with NASA, UAH North Alabama Lightning Mapping Array. + OHX. HUN. + BMX. North Alabama LMA. History of LMA data @HUN.

argus
Download Presentation

WFO Huntsville, AL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WFO Huntsville, AL Two years of LMA in operations

  2. Tennessee Alabama Who are we? • WFO Huntsville • Office started in January 14th, 2003 • Co-located with NASA, UAH • North Alabama Lightning Mapping Array

  3. + OHX HUN + BMX North Alabama LMA

  4. History of LMA data @HUN • First started ingesting LMA data into AWIPS in May 2003 • First case where used to warn: May 6th,2003 • First case used not to warn: August 27,2003 • Building cases for training on WES ~27 cases archived so far • Helped install LMA data at BMX and OHX • Also helped in the ingest of Vaisala LDAR II data at FWD

  5. How do we display in AWIPS? • 1-17km Sources within a grid box • 2km x 2km • 2 minute interval • Most people look at total of sources in a grid box, from 1-17km. (Source density) • Looking for trends in the total. • Usually displayed as a grid image.

  6. Ingest into AWIPS

  7. Alternate LISDAD II display • Along with AWIPS forecasters can interrogate data using LISDAD II software • Provides location and number of LMA/NLDN samples • Alternate to the AWIPS display if needed

  8. Case #1 • May 6, 2003 • First time LMA used in warning-decision • Line with revealing embedded supercell • History of producing tornadoes(F0-F1) • Broad mid-level rotational couplet • LMA indicated updraft rapidly intensifying

  9. 0.5 º SRM 1.5º SRM Ill-defined Rotational Couplet 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density May 6, 2003 Case 1236 UTC

  10. 0.5 º SRM 1.5º SRM Broad Rotational Couplet 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Lightning Jump May 6, 2003 Case 1246 UTC

  11. 0.5 º SRM 1.5º SRM Tightening Rotational Couplet 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Inflow Notches Fairly Intense Electrical Activity May 6, 2003 Case 1256 UTC

  12. 0.5 º SRM 1.5º SRM Tornado on the Ground 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Embedded Supercell Decrease in Sources May 6, 2003 Case 1306 UTC

  13. Radar Coverage KHTX KGWX o 0.5 Elevation Heights FROM KHTX 10889 ft MSL FROM KGWX 7559 ft MSL

  14. LMA Source Density vs. Time Jump Source Density F1 12 min 10/18/04 Case #2 • October 18, 2004 • Rotating storm near edges of radar coverage • LMA provided forecaster extra confidence in tornado warning

  15. October 18, 2004 Case 0.5 º SRM 1.5 º SRM Developing Mesocyclone/Hook 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Minimal Electrical Activity 2234 UTC

  16. October 18, 2004 Case 0.5 º SRM 1.5 º SRM Persistent Couplet 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Lightning Jump 2240 UTC

  17. October 18, 2004 Case 0.5 º SRM 1.5 º SRM Stengthening Couplet 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Slight decrease in source count 2244 UTC

  18. October 18, 2004 Case 0.5 º SRM 1.5 º SRM Minutes before tornado touchdown 0.5 º Refl LMA Source Density Continued decrease in sources 2250 UTC

  19. Case #3 • July 2, 2005 • A null case event • Significant lightning jump with eastern most storm and elevated core…prompt severe thunderstorm warning • No severe weather reported with this cell

  20. July 2, 2005 Background Info • Moist and unstable airmass in place across the region • 12z BMX sounding showed potential for wet microbursts (next slide) • Earlier storms during the day produced microbursts and wind damage • Morning HWO product mentioned isolated storms with wind gusts to 50 mph…frequent lightning and very heavy rain

  21. July 2, 2005 Background Info Thermodynamic profile somewhat favorable for microbursts; MDPI calculation of 0.94 and high CAPE also indicative of the potential for microbursts Steep low level lapse rates Moist low levels; dry mid layers conducive to microburst development 12z BMX Sounding

  22. 2 July 2005 0.5°Refl, NLDN 0.5° SRM Source Density, NLDN VIL 0100 UTC

  23. 2 July 2005 0.5°Refl, NLDN 0.5° SRM Source Density, NLDN VIL Slight increase 0110 UTC

  24. 2 July 2005 0.5°Refl, NLDN 0.5° SRM VIL increase Source Density, NLDN VIL Lightning Jump 0120 UTC

  25. 2 July 2005 25-30 kts outflow at 4 kft AGL 0.5°Refl, NLDN 0.5° SRM Decrease in sources Source Density, NLDN VIL 0127 UTC No Severe Weather Reported…Just Heavy Rain.

  26. Summary of when LMA makes largest impact in operations • Low to moderate severe events • At greater distances from the radar • Sub radar interval cell information • Detecting initial cloud to ground strikes • Local case studies have shown lead times on the order of several (3-5) minutes • Increased lead times for TAF updates and Airport Weather Warnings

  27. How we have infused LMA into operations • WES scenarios • Forecaster awareness • AWIPS procedures • Overlays: Radar/NLDN/LMA • 4 Panels: Refl,SRM,NLDN,LMA • Data Advocate

  28. Building confidence • Ensuring data reliability • Providing adequate training • Encouraging use of available datasets during events • Identifying a point of contact (program leader) at each office *Advocate • The SOO can’t do everything • Completing event reviews and case studies

  29. WES Training Archive • Number of LMA cases for training • Approximately 27 cases archived so far • Manual retrieval of LMA archive • LMA data archived on NSSTC server at the end of each day • Data retrieved for selected dates • Currently have to manually add LMA data to existing WES cases

  30. Operational Evaluations • On-line LMA survey developed for the WFO • Completed after an event in which the LMA data was used • Survey also available at Nashville and Birmingham • Case studies also completed on LMA dataset (as shown previously)

  31. Future trends of LMA in WFO HUN • Integrate total lightning information with other projects… • Convective Initiation studies • Lightning Threat Index product for EMAs • UAH Dual-Polarimetric Doppler Radar • Detection efficiency mapping • Local training/refresher • Inclusion in forecaster development plan • Blind studies to determine effectiveness of LMA data during WDM situations? • Formal publication of case studies

  32. Lightning Threat Index • Provide to Emergency Managers • Simplified illustration of lightning data • Collaborative effort with NASA • Still in developmental stages

  33. Real-time Mapping of Detection Efficiency • Useful for storms near the edges of grid • More important for offices like BMX and OHX with the North Alabama LMA • Awareness of drop off rate

  34. Team up with Convective Initiation • Dr. Mecikalski at UAH • Use together to highlight threat areas • Illustrates possible thunderstorm development next 0-2 hours

  35. Satellite-Lightning Relationships • Current Work: Develop relationships between IR TB/TBand lightning source counts/flash densities toward nowcasting (0-2 hr) future lightning occurrence • * Supported by the NASA New Investigator Program Award #:NAG5-12536 North Alabama LMA Lightning Source Counts 2040-2050 UTC 2047 UTC 2147 UTC 2140-2150 UTC kkoooooooookkkkkkkkkkk

  36. Cross Sections • Provide indication of updraft strength • Better serve aviation needs • Interpretation still uncertain • Future research

  37. Questions? • Contacts: Jason.Burks@noaa.gov (IT/AWIPS) Chris.Darden@noaa.gov (Training/Operational) Patrick.Gatlin@noaa.gov (Program Lead) Background Photo: Lake Guntersville, AL (B. Blakenship)

More Related