1 / 6

2014 SPoRT Partners Virtual Workshop 13 February 2014

SPoRT Total Lightning Activities and Updates. Geoffrey Stano NASA SPoRT / ENSCO, Inc. 2014 SPoRT Partners Virtual Workshop 13 February 2014. Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations. SPoRT and Total Lightning. SPoRT Collaborations.

charo
Télécharger la présentation

2014 SPoRT Partners Virtual Workshop 13 February 2014

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. SPoRT Total Lightning Activities and Updates Geoffrey Stano NASA SPoRT / ENSCO, Inc. 2014 SPoRT Partners Virtual Workshop 13 February 2014 Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

  2. SPoRT and Total Lightning SPoRT Collaborations • Supporting real-time use since 2003 • Working with several data providers • Core SPoRT activity with the GOES-R Proving Ground Other existing or planned networks WFOs SPoRT supports Washington D.C. Dugway Proving Ground Colorado Oklahoma North Alabama Atlanta Langmuir Laboratory Kennedy Space Center White Sands West Texas Houston Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

  3. AWIPS II Availability • Successful transition in 2011 to Huntsville • Houston and SMG followed shortly thereafter • WFO Boulder successful yesterday • SPoRT working to baseline the plug-in • Discussing with NOAA on using plug-in to support Earth Networks data visualization • Will provide greater flexibility than current AWIPS I display • National Centers using the PGLM mosaic product • Merges all available LMAs into a single product • Includes range rings and network status bars • Demonstrating the demo product for the Geostationary Lightning Mapper as part of the GOES-R Proving Ground Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

  4. Shifting from Sources to Flashes Source Density ~200 sources • Flashes are used in scientific literature (e.g., lightning jump) • Now have capability to reassemble sources into flashes in real-time • Flashes are “normalized” and have less issues with detection efficiency, particularly at range • Flashes more intuitive than sources • Evaluating with WFO Huntsville the effort needed to shift from source density to flash extent density Flash Density ~55 sources Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

  5. Another Product Concept • Based on conversations with WFO Melbourne • Interest in keeping 1 min time resolution • Issue is that 1 min data can look noisey • Concept based on the previous 30 min maximum density product • 30 min max density displayed the largest value for each grid box over the past 30 min • Instead will use a 2 min summation updating every minute • Use the current observation with the previous observation • Need to evaluate if this provides the same level of information as other products Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

  6. Total Lightning in N-AWIPS • National Centers using the PGLM mosaic • Merges all available LMAs into one product • Includes range rings and network status bars • Demonstrates the demo product for the Geostationary Lightning Mapper as part of the GOES-R Proving Ground Range Ring Status Bars Transitioning unique NASA data and research technologies to operations

More Related