1 / 26

Scope of Meteo/GIS in the International Context

Scope of Meteo/GIS in the International Context. Olga Wilhelmi NCAR ADAGUC Workshop KNMI October 3-4 2006. Outline. Current state in integration of GIS and Atmospheric Sciences Progress Challenges Usability of atmospheric data in GIS

Télécharger la présentation

Scope of Meteo/GIS in the International Context

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. Scope of Meteo/GIS in the International Context Olga Wilhelmi NCAR ADAGUC Workshop KNMI October 3-4 2006

  2. Outline • Current state in integration of GIS and Atmospheric Sciences • Progress • Challenges • Usability of atmospheric data in GIS • Usability and uses of GIS for meteorological and climatological applications • Future directions

  3. The Purpose • Challenges of earth system science research community include: • integration of complex physical processes into weather forecast and climate system models • understanding interactions between climate, environment, and society • integrating social and environmental information with weather and climate • It is important to make atmospheric science usable and data accessible to a wide community of users, including researchers, educators, practitioners and policy-makers

  4. The Challenge

  5. The Challenge (cont.) • Methods and concepts • Limited knowledge of GIS concepts and data models among atmospheric scientists • GIS community is making faster progress in adopting atmospheric concepts than atmospheric community adopting GIS concepts • Technology • Dimensions • Interoperability between applications • Data • Formats • Semantics • People • Learning curve • Adoption of standards and data management practices

  6. International Activities • COST 719 (2001-2006) • NCAR GIS Initiative (2001- present) • Professional societies (EGU, AMS) • University Consortium for Geographic Information Science • Open Geospatial Consortium • ESRI Atmospheric User Group • Others

  7. Uses of GIS • Visualization of information • Spatial analysis (exploration of spatial patterns, relationships, networks; spatial statistics) • Data distribution (web portals; web services) • Data integration (interoperability; coupled systems, interdisciplinary research) • First, need to resolve issues related to data usability and interoperability

  8. Usability of Atmospheric Data • Atmospheric Data Modeling working group categorized atmospheric data for usability in GIS as • GIS Ready (fully described, point and click) • GIS Friendly (some effort to transform into GIS-Ready; “not so friendly” if heavy processing needed) • GIS Alien (cannot be fully described)

  9. GIS Ready:Existing GIS Data Structures Shipley et al.

  10. GIS Friendly:Images require additional info 500 hPa chart on ArcGlobe World File QTUA11.tif QTUA11.tfw 14861.3 -36.775 -5.697 -14922.7 -12838043.0 10927734.5 QTUA11.aux Projection Shipley et al.

  11. GIS Friendly: Data Processing Required Lidar cross section over Cincinnati, OH Shipley et al.

  12. GIS Alien (at least for now)Meteogram P (x,y,z,t), attributes {p,q,u,v,…} Time Series weather forecast (Meteogram) for Washington DC, starting 21 June 2006 Shipley et al.

  13. Potential GIS Data Structures Shipley et al.

  14. NetCDF in ArcGIS (now GIS-Ready) • In ArcGIS 9.2 NetCDF data is accessed as Raster Feature Table • Direct read • Exports GIS data to netCDF

  15. NetCDF Tools • Toolbox: Multidimension Tools • Make NetCDF Raster Layer • Make NetCDF Feature Layer • Make NetCDF Table View • Raster to NetCDF • Feature to NetCDF • Table to NetCDF • Select by Dimension

  16. Using NetCDF Data • Display • Same display tools for raster and feature layers will work on netCDF raster and netCDF feature layers. • Graphing • Driven by the table just like any other chart. • Animation • Multidimensional data can be animated through a dimension (e.g. time, pressure, elevation) • Analysis Tools • A netCDF layer or table will work just like any other raster layer, feature layer, or table. (e.g. create buffers around netCDF points, re-project rasters, query tables, etc.) • Python

  17. Data Visualization • Symbology • Identifying common symbols and creating defaults for weather and climate variables • Integrating ESRI layer file and OGC style files • Developing 3-D symbols for weather phenomena • Use naming standards from CF convention

  18. Spatial Analysis • Interpolation methods • More progress in interpolating climate data than weather data • Challenges • Temporal analysis (e.g., time series statistics, temporal interpolation, analysis and modeling of transitions, raster time series) • Working across scales (upscaling, downscaling) • Many suitable existing geoprocessing tools for • Model verification • Impact and risk assessment (interdisciplinary) • Spatial patterns and suitability analysis

  19. Example: Impacts of Climate Change

  20. Data Integration GIS Client AIS Client • Coordinate Systems – • Many atmospheric models are based on a sphere – much GIS data is based on an ellipsoid • Temporal coordinate systems • Interoperability • Data • Applications

  21. Web portals Data Discovery Data Distribution

  22. Example: GIS Climate Change Data Portal • Distributing outputs from NCAR’s Global Climate Model (CCSM) in a GIS format (shapefile, text file) • Ongoing work: downscaling http://www.gisClimateChange.org

  23. Users of GIS Climate Change Data Portal Resource management Biomass potential Salmon conservation • Since February 2005: 127K hits, 15K files downloaded, more than 1200 registered users from 95 countries • Many non-traditional users • Challenge: education about appropriate use of data Climate Change Education Water Resources Agriculture Energy Human Health

  24. Future Direction • Distributed collaboratories for geosciences • Increased computing capacity and capability • Increased focus on multidisciplinary research • Web services • Self-contained, modular applications that can be described, published, and accessed over the Internet • promote interoperability by minimizing the requirements for understanding between client and service and between services • Extensible, interoperable web services for data discovery, access and transformation • Data services (e.g., WMS, WFC, WCS, ArcGIS server) • Geoprocessing services (web GIS, ArcGIS server) • Catalog services (e.g., THREDDS, CS-W)

  25. Summary • We are seeing progress in integration of GIS with atmospheric sciences, however many challenges remain • Ongoing work with international data standards, web services, and integration of atmospheric and geospatial data make steps towards better understanding of the Earth System and solving societally relevant problems • ADAGUC is on the right track for addressing challenging questions of data distribution and interoperability

  26. Thank You! For more information: http://www.gis.ucar.edu E-mail: olgaw@ucar.edu

More Related