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Join us on April 21 at 12:00 PM in WWB Room 707 for the Science Forum, featuring experts Mark DeMaria, Kate Maclay, John Knaff, Ray Zehr, and Tom Cram from NOAA/NESDIS. Discover ongoing research by the STAR Regional and Mesoscale Meteorology Branch focused on enhancing satellite data utilization for analyzing and forecasting tropical cyclones. We'll present five studies covering cyclone intensity forecasting, annular hurricanes, cyclogenesis, and pressure-wind relationships. Three papers will be discussed in detail, with summaries of the remaining two.
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STAR Science ForumFriday, April 21 1200 pmWWB Room 707“Satellite Applications to Tropical Cyclone Analysis and Forecasting”Mark DeMaria, Kate Maclay, John Knaff, Ray Zehr and Tom CramNOAA/NESDISCenter for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Regional and Mesoscale Meteorology Branch (RAMM)and the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) The STAR Regional and Mesoscale Meteorology (RAMM) Branch has a number of on-going projects to better utilize satellite data for tropical cyclone analysis and forecasting. Five papers on this topic that will be presented at the upcoming AMS conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology. Applications include tropical cyclone intensity and wind structure forecasting, diagnosis of a special type of storm called an annular hurricane, tropical cyclone genesis studies and the impact of pressure wind relationships on the detection long term trends in tropical cyclone intensity. Three of these papers will be presented at the Science Forum, and the other two will be briefly summarized.