The Fronts and Atlantic Storm-Track Experiment (FASTEX): Scientific Objectives and Experimental Design

Alain Joly
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Dave Jorgensen
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Melvyn A. Shapiro
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Alan Thorpe
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Pierre Bessemoulin
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Keith A. Browning
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Jean-Pierre Cammas
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Jean-Pierre Chalon
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Sidney A. Clough
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Kerry A. Emanuel
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Laurence Eymard
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Robert Gall
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Peter H. Hildebrand
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Rolf H. Langland
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Yvon LemaƮtre
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Peter Lynch
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James A. Moore
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P. Ola G. Persson
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Chris Snyder
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Roger M. Wakimoto
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The Fronts and Atlantic Storm-Track Experiment (FASTEX) will address the life cycle of cyclones evolving over the North Atlantic Ocean in January and February 1997. The objectives of FASTEX are to improve the forecasts of end-of-storm-track cyclogenesis (primarily in the eastern Atlantic but with applicability to the Pacific) in the range 24 to 72 h, to enable the testing of theoretical ideas on cyclone formation and development, and to document the vertical and the mesoscale structure of cloud systems in mature cyclones and their relation to the dynamics. The observing system includes ships that will remain in the vicinity of the main baroclinic zone in the central Atlantic Ocean, jet aircraft that will fly and drop sondes off the east coast of North America or over the central Atlantic Ocean, turboprop aircraft that will survey mature cyclones off Ireland with dropsondes, and airborne Doppler radars, including ASTRAIA/ELDORA. Radiosounding frequency around the North Atlantic basin will be increased, as well as the number of drifting buoys. These facilities will be activated during multiple-day intensive observing periods in order to observe the same meteorological systems at several stages of their life cycle. A central archive will be developed in quasi-real time in Toulouse, France, thus allowing data to be made widely available to the scientific community.

aMƩtƩo-France, Toulouse, France.

bNOAA/ERL, National Severe Storms Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

cNOAA/ERL, Environmental Technology Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

dUniversity of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.

eJoint Centre for Mesoscale Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.

fLaboratoire d'AĆ©rologie, Toulouse, France.

gUnited Kingdom Meteorological Office, Bracknell, United Kingdom.

hMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

iCentre d'etude des Environnements Terrestre et PlanƩtaires, Velizy, France.

jNational Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

kNaval Research Laboratory, Monterey, California.

lMet Ɖireann, Dublin, Ireland.

mUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

nNOAA Environment Technology Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

oCIRES/University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

Corresponding author address: Dr. Alain Joly, MƩtƩo-France, CNRM/GMME, 42, av. G. Coriolis, 31057 Toulouse cedex, France. E-mail: alain.joly@meteo.fr

The Fronts and Atlantic Storm-Track Experiment (FASTEX) will address the life cycle of cyclones evolving over the North Atlantic Ocean in January and February 1997. The objectives of FASTEX are to improve the forecasts of end-of-storm-track cyclogenesis (primarily in the eastern Atlantic but with applicability to the Pacific) in the range 24 to 72 h, to enable the testing of theoretical ideas on cyclone formation and development, and to document the vertical and the mesoscale structure of cloud systems in mature cyclones and their relation to the dynamics. The observing system includes ships that will remain in the vicinity of the main baroclinic zone in the central Atlantic Ocean, jet aircraft that will fly and drop sondes off the east coast of North America or over the central Atlantic Ocean, turboprop aircraft that will survey mature cyclones off Ireland with dropsondes, and airborne Doppler radars, including ASTRAIA/ELDORA. Radiosounding frequency around the North Atlantic basin will be increased, as well as the number of drifting buoys. These facilities will be activated during multiple-day intensive observing periods in order to observe the same meteorological systems at several stages of their life cycle. A central archive will be developed in quasi-real time in Toulouse, France, thus allowing data to be made widely available to the scientific community.

aMƩtƩo-France, Toulouse, France.

bNOAA/ERL, National Severe Storms Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

cNOAA/ERL, Environmental Technology Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

dUniversity of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.

eJoint Centre for Mesoscale Meteorology, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom.

fLaboratoire d'AĆ©rologie, Toulouse, France.

gUnited Kingdom Meteorological Office, Bracknell, United Kingdom.

hMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

iCentre d'etude des Environnements Terrestre et PlanƩtaires, Velizy, France.

jNational Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

kNaval Research Laboratory, Monterey, California.

lMet Ɖireann, Dublin, Ireland.

mUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado.

nNOAA Environment Technology Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado.

oCIRES/University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

Corresponding author address: Dr. Alain Joly, MƩtƩo-France, CNRM/GMME, 42, av. G. Coriolis, 31057 Toulouse cedex, France. E-mail: alain.joly@meteo.fr
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