NASA is providing new technology and satellite data to
help forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) create the best possible forecasts of
severe springtime weather.
New NASA data gathered from satellites, a lightning ground-
tracking network and unmanned vehicles that fly into storms
are some of the many tools used by NOAA, the federal agency
charged with issuing weather forecasts. This data will help
make the severe weather season safer for everyone.
“It’s an evolutionary process and partnership between NOAA
and NASA,” said Bill Patzert, oceanographer at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. “NOAA is the
ultimate operational meteorological agency in the world, and
NASA is developing state-of-the-art operational and
fundamental research to make it better than ever. Together
we’re looking to the future to provide better and better
service to the American public,” he said.
NOAA’s National Weather Service (NWS) is responsible for
monitoring and forecasting severe weather events. They issue
watches and warnings for tornadoes, flash floods, non-
precipitation events (such as high wind warnings), severe
thunderstorms, and flooding, as well as daily weather
forecasts. They reach the public with these warnings mainly
through NOAA weather radio and the Internet.
NASA uses data from its Earth-observing satellites and
models to characterize and understand the way atmosphere,
oceans and land interact. “Adding NASA satellite data and
model output to NOAA forecasts could lead to more confident
seven-day severe local storm forecasts, better prediction of
thunderstorm occurrence by three hours, and an increase in
tornado warning lead times by 18 minutes,” said Dr. Marshall
Shepherd, research meteorologist at NASA’s Goddard Space
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
NASA satellite data that enhances NOAA’s weather model
forecasts include surface wind data from QuikScat and
rainfall data from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission
satellite. Launching in June 2004, NASA’s Aura satellite
will provide temperature and moisture information. That data
will provide a clearer atmospheric picture, and it will
improve forecast model prediction capabilities.
Better understanding of jet steam locations, temperature,
humidity fields and other atmospheric states are critical in
assessing the potential for severe weather. Balloon
observations taken twice daily at approximately 180
locations in the United States are the main source of this
type of information. New NASA satellite observations can
fill in the missing data spaces around the United States and
surrounding oceans. The NASA-NOAA Joint Center for Satellite
Data Assimilation was formed in 2002 to accelerate the use
of satellite data within global-scale weather forecast
models operated by NOAA.
NASA’s Short-term Prediction Research and Transition (SPoRT)
Center at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, Ala., is
working closely with NWS forecasters in the southern United
States to improve severe weather forecasting. NASA
scientists are using data obtained from the ground-based
Lightning Mapping Array in northern Alabama to better
understand the relationship between lightning flash rates
and tornado-producing thunderstorms.
The SPoRT Center provides lightning data to surrounding NWS
forecast offices in real time for use in severe weather
warning decision-making. “There has been one event where the
NASA lightning data prompted NWS forecasters in the
Huntsville, Alabama office to issue a tornado warning on a
strong convective cell earlier than they would have
otherwise,” said Dr. William Lapenta, SPoRT Center research
meteorologist. A weak tornado occurred after the warning was
issued. Research is also underway to improve flooding
forecasts by incorporating new satellite data from the NASA
Atmospheric InfraRed Sounder instrument into NWS weather
forecast models on a regional scale.
In February, NASA’s Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.,
flight-tested the Global Positioning System Reflectometer on
an unmanned aerial vehicle to collect data in severe weather
situations. In 2002, NASA, universities and industries
conducted the Altus Cumulus Electrification Study in
Florida, the first time a remotely piloted aircraft was used
to conduct lightning research.
NASA’s Earth Science Enterprise is dedicated to
understanding the Earth as an integrated system and applying
Earth System Science to improve prediction of climate,
weather, and natural hazards using the unique vantage point
of space.