Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 1 of 1 items for :

  • Author or Editor: Michael Istok x
  • Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society x
  • Refine by Access: All Content x
Clear All Modify Search
Mark Weber
,
Kurt Hondl
,
Nusrat Yussouf
,
Youngsun Jung
,
Derek Stratman
,
Bryan Putnam
,
Xuguang Wang
,
Terry Schuur
,
Charles Kuster
,
Yixin Wen
,
Juanzhen Sun
,
Jeff Keeler
,
Zhuming Ying
,
John Cho
,
James Kurdzo
,
Sebastian Torres
,
Chris Curtis
,
David Schvartzman
,
Jami Boettcher
,
Feng Nai
,
Henry Thomas
,
Dusan Zrnić
,
Igor Ivić
,
Djordje Mirković
,
Caleb Fulton
,
Jorge Salazar
,
Guifu Zhang
,
Robert Palmer
,
Mark Yeary
,
Kevin Cooley
,
Michael Istok
, and
Mark Vincent

Abstract

This article summarizes research and risk reduction that will inform acquisition decisions regarding NOAA’s future national operational weather radar network. A key alternative being evaluated is polarimetric phased-array radar (PAR). Research indicates PAR can plausibly achieve fast, adaptive volumetric scanning, with associated benefits for severe-weather warning performance. We assess these benefits using storm observations and analyses, observing system simulation experiments, and real radar-data assimilation studies. Changes in the number and/or locations of radars in the future network could improve coverage at low altitude. Analysis of benefits that might be so realized indicates the possibility for additional improvement in severe-weather and flash-flood warning performance, with associated reduction in casualties. Simulations are used to evaluate techniques for rapid volumetric scanning and assess data quality characteristics of PAR. Finally, we describe progress in developing methods to compensate for polarimetric variable estimate biases introduced by electronic beam-steering. A research-to-operations (R2O) strategy for the PAR alternative for the WSR-88D replacement network is presented.

Full access