Live Blog – 11 May 2011 – 2108 UTC

Brian is noting a good relationship between the 3DVAR  vorticity field and low-level radial velocity data on the tornado-warned storm in NE Cleveland/Pott. Counties.

3DVAR vorticity contours and simulated reflectvity for a tornado-warned storm in NE Cleveland Co., OK
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Daily Summary: 10 May 2011

Forecasters remained in the MAF and SJT regions through the end of the forecast day focusing mostly on convection initiation products and short-range models. With an extend Cu field across the region and GOES in rapid scan operations, the forecasters observed a severe limitation of the UAH-CI product.  Every 5 to 8 min time step the UAH product would catch minimally growing Cu between the time steps exhibiting a high percentage of false alarms.

Overall, this was a minimal day in terms of testing all EWP experimental products limited by weather and technology with the floater domain unavailable due to a morning raid failure.

4-panel forecaster AWIPS display: UAH-CI and Visible satellite at 2144 UTC.

-K. Kuhlman (Weekly Coordinator)

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2011-05-10: Area Forecast Update

Update to previous discussion…

Biggest change resides in surface wind field already responding to upstream pressure falls, with backing winds across a large portion of the domain. In contrast, deeper moisture discontinuity gradient resides through Sweetwater to Dryden as of early this afternoon. Recent satellite imagery depicts high-based cu developing within dry air in proximity of weak surface convergence. Low probability of this initial activity persisting due to concerns with very high T/Td spreads, via cold pool dominance. Outside of this area, skies continue to clear, with the main clearing line stretching from CDS to DRT. At the present time, moisture will need to stream NWward in order to establish severe weather threat. Short range forecast guidance continues to indicate a rapid transport of surface moisture between 00-03z and likewise shows a weak signal of convective initiation upon retreating dryline approximately 23-02z, generally east of Midland, TX. Forecast consensus considers this scenario low-confidence. However, if convection does develop in this region, environment supports robust development with conditions favorable for initial mode of supercellular activity. Models trend for upscale growth as low-level jet increases early this evening as convection translates east or northeastward over the remainder of MAF and SJT CWAs.

Blair/Curran/Billings/Taylor/Vincent

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Week 1 Underway

After the typical culmination of late night hours and technology wrestling matches, the 2011 edition of the Experimental Warning Program’s spring experiment, or EWP2011, gets underway today.  We want to welcome our first set of visiting forecasters:  Jerilyn Billings (WFO Wichita, KS), Scott Blair (WFO Topeka, KS), Brian Curran (WFO Midland, TX), Andy Taylor (WFO Norman, OK), and Brandon Vincent (WFO, Raleigh, NC).

We are trying a few new things this year:

1)  Monday is our dedicated training and orientation day.  In the past, we’ve crammed in both training, orientation, and real-time operations on the first days of each operational week, and have felt rushed and in some cases, the forecasters felt unprepared.  So we’ve expanded our time dedicated toward our training sessions, and turned the last few hours of the shift into a hands-on get acquainted with the AWIPS software and experimental products session.  In addition, we’ve moved our Monday shift back 3 hours (10a-6p) so that our visitors can get started right away on their first day.

2)  Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday are our only real-time operational shifts.  The entire days will be devoted to real-time operations, instead of wrapping up unfinished training from Monday.

3)  Our real-time days now feature two overlapping shifts.  In an effort to a) emulate the forecast – nowcast – warning decision processes in a WFO, and b) start bridging the gap between the EWP and the Experimental Forecast Program (EFP) of the HWT, we’ve added an early shift.  We are splitting our visiting forecasters into two groups, and each group will have opportunities to work both shifts.  The early shift runs from 9a-5p and the late shift is our usual 1p-9p.  The early shift will issue a morning Area Forecast Discussion (AFD).  Between 1p-5p, both shifts will overlap and collaborate on an update to the AFD, as well as being the process of monitoring convective initiation (CI), issuing nowcasts, and eventually warnings, all weather dependent on the forecast/warning area chosen for the day.

4)  The EWP and EFP will conduct a joint map discussion at 1pm on the real-time operations days.  The EWP will inform the EFP about the previous day’s events, and the EFP and our morning EWP shift will help inform the EWP on the likely areas of warning operations for the afternoon and evening.

Watch here for daily outlooks, live blogging during operations, daily summaries, and an end-of-week summary for the next 5 weeks.  Note that we take a holiday the entire week of Memorial Day.

Greg Stumpf, EWP2011 Operations Coordinator

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EWP2011 Underway…

We are in the process of preparing for EWP2011.  There will be three primary projects geared toward WFO applications, 1) evaluation of 3DVAR multi-radar real-time data assimilation fields being developed for the Warn-On-Forecast initiative, 2)  evaluation of multiple CONUS GOES-R convective applications, including pseudo-geostationary lightning mapper products when operations are expected within the Lightning Mapping Array domains (OK, AL, DC, FL), and 3) evaluation of model performance and forecast utility of the OUN WRF when operations are expected in the Southern Plains.  We will be conducting EWP2011 for four weeks total (Monday – Friday), from 9 May through 10 June (Memorial Day week excluded).

New for this year, we will be attempting to do operations using the AWIPS2 platform.  We are still in the process of setting this up, and should know in the next few days whether or not it is going to be feasible for our specific requirements (experimental data set display and multi-WFO localization).

Finally, we are about to send out the official invitation to the NWS candidates we’ve selected to participate.  Now, we hope for no government shutdown, or a short shutdown if it happens.  Since most of the EWP scientists are not government employees, we can continue our work to prepare for EWP2011.  However, our NWS participants would not be able to travel in the event the government is shutdown during our test period.  Hopefully our elected officials do the right thing!

More details about EWP2011 will become available over the next few weeks.

Greg Stumpf, EWP2011 Operations Coordinator

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The EWP2010 Thank You Post

This is this year’s EWP Thank You post, expressing our gratitude to the many participants of the Experimental Warning Program’s 2010 spring experiment. This year’s experiment was just as successful as the previous experiments, and it could not have been carried out without the hard work and long hours of our team of participants.  EWP2010 ended on a real high note this year, with experimental warning operations for the 17 June 2010 Minnesota and North Dakota outbreak.  All told, we issued 230 warnings and follow up statements on that one day alone, a record for EWP real-time operations.  And the software worked better than ever – of course with most bugs finally being fixed by the end of the experiment.  It seems like a century ago that we began operations on 12 April with the PARISE and CASA experiments.  All told, we have nine weeks of operations, 3 more weeks than any previous years.

The biggest expression of thanks goes to our two AWIPS/WES gurus “on loan” from the NWS Warning Decision Training Branch, Ben Baranowski and Darrel Kingfield.   Their tireless efforts helped keep the ship running through thick and thin.  Without their expertise to set up our simulated real-time NWS forecast office warning environment, localizable to any WFO in the country, as well as our WES archive cases, we simply wouldn’t have had an EWP2010.  Major kudos!

These scientists brought their expertise to the experiment to help guide live operations and playback of archive cases for each of the experiments:

For the Phased-Array Radar Innovative Sensing Experiment (PARISE), we’d like to thank the the principle scientists, Pamela Heinselman (NSSL) and Daphne LaDue (CIMMS), as well as their support team of Ric Adams, Rick Hluchan, Heather Lazrus, Heather Moser, Jennifer Newman, Dave Preignitz, and Adam Smith (all OU, CIMMS, and/or NSSL).

For the Collaborative Adaptive Sensing of the Atmosphere (CASA) experiment was again led by Brenda Phillips (U. Mass.), Jerry Brotzge (OU), and Ellen Bass (U. VA). In addition, we had help from Don Rude (U. VA), David Westbrook (U. Mass.), Cedar League (Univ. Colorado – Colorado Springs), Rachel Butterworth (OU), Brendan Hogan (U. VA), and Kevin Kloesel (OU).

For the Multi-Radar/Multi-Sensor (MRMS) application experiment, they included principle investigators Greg Stumpf (CIMMS/NWS/MDL) and Travis Smith (CIMMS/NSSL), with additional help from CIMMS/NSSL folks Kevin Manross, Kristin Kuhlman, Sarah Stough, and Steve Irwin.

For the GOES-R Proving Ground experimental warning activities, including the Pseudo- Geostationary Lightning Mapping (pglm) array experiment, our thanks go to principle scientists Chris Siewert (CIMMS/SPC) and Kristin Kuhlman (CIMMS/NSSL), along with Geoffrey Stano (NASA-Huntsville), Eric Bruning (Univ. Maryland/NESDIS), Wayne Feltz (UWM), Justin Sieglaff (UWM), Kris Bedka (UWM), Jason Brunner (UWM), Lee Cronce (UWM), Sarah Monette (UWM), Jordan Gerth (UWM), and Lindsay Richardson (CIMMS/NSSL).

Next, we’d like to thank the Weekly Coordinators for keeping operations on track during the experiment’s second phase (MRMS, GOES-R): Travis Smith, Kristin Kuhlman, Kevin Manross, and Greg Stumpf.

We had much IT help from Kevin Manross, Jeff Brogden, Charles Kerr, Villiappa Lakshmanan, Vicki Farmer, Karen Cooper, Paul Griffin,Brad Sagowitz, and Greg Stumpf.

The EWP leadership team of Travis Smith and David Andra, along with the other HWT management committee members (Steve Weiss, Jack Kain, Mike Foster, Russ Schneider, and Jeff Kimpel), and Stephan Smith, chief of the MDL Decision Assistance Branch, were instrumental in providing the necessary resources to make the EWP spring experiment happen.

Finally, we express a multitude of thanks to our National Weather Service and international operational meteorologists who traveled to Norman to participate as evaluators in this experiment (and we also thank their local and regional management for providing the personnel). They are:

Mark Bacon (WFO Wilmington, NC)

Jim Caruso (WFO Wichita, KS)

Jeff Cupo (FAA Training Center, Oklahoma City, OK)

Mike Scotten (WFO Memphis, TN)

Doug Cain (WFO Midland/Odessa, TX)

John Cockrell (WFO Amarillo, TX)

Andrea Lammers (WFO Louisville, KY)

Brian Montgomery (WFO Albany, NY)

Ernie Ostuno (WFO Grand Rapids, MI)

Jennifer Palucki (WFO Albuquerque, NM)

Ryan Sharp (WFO Louisville, KY)

Kathy Torgerson (WFO Pueblo, CO)

Les Lemon (WDTB, Norman, OK)

Steve Hodanish (WFO Pueblo, CO)

Ron Przybylinski (WFO St. Louis, MO)

Bill Martin (WFO Glasgow, MT)

Steve Nelson (WFO Peachtree City/Atlanta, GA)

David Blanchard (WFO Flagstaff, AZ)

Matthew Kramar (WFO Sterling, VA)

Ken Pomeroy (NWS Western Region HQ, Salt Lake City, UT)

Darren Van Cleave (WFO Rapid City, SD)

Rod Donavon (WFO Des Moines, IA)

John Murray (WFO New York, NY)

James Sieveking (WFO St. Louis, MO)

David Zaff (WFO, Buffalo, NY)

Frank Alsheimer (WFO Charleston, SC)

Dan Darbe (WFO Peachtree City/Atlanta, GA)

Daniel Nietfeld (WFO Omaha, NE)

Pat Spoden (WFO Paducah, KY)

Andy Taylor (WFO Norman, OK)

Angela Lese (WFO Lousiville, KY)

Melissa Kreller (NWS Southern Region HQ, Fort Worth, TX)

Marcus Austin (WFO Tallahassee, FL)

David Sharp (WFO Melbourne, FL)

Many thanks to everyone, including those we may have inadvertently left off this list. Please let us know if we missed anyone. We can certainly edit this post and include their names later.

Greg Stumpf (EWP2010 Operations Coordinator)

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Monday Kickoff – 2010 Week 3 PARISE

Week 3 of EWP2010 commences on Monday April 26.  Our National Weather Service participants will be:

CASA:  Ron Przybylinski (WFO St. Louis, MO)

PARISE:  Ernie Ostuno (WFO Grand Rapids, MI), Jennifer Palucki (WFO Albuquerque, NM), Ryan Sharp (WFO Louisville, KY), Kathy Torgerson (WFO Pueblo, CO)

The long range outlook suggests that we should finally see some severe weather activity in Central Oklahoma this week, particularly toward the end of the week.  Crossing fingers!

Greg Stumpf, EWP2010 Operations Coordinator

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EWP2010 Week 1 Underway

Week 1 of the EWP is underway. PARISE is chugging along with their four forecasters and collecting data on archive cases. Because each week the participants will be reviewing the same cases, we won’t be providing any case information here (or will spoil the secrets!). The CASA project has been in a shakedown this week, and the PIs have been adding a few new details to the project, which will soon be revealed in the CASA prject plan and briefing to be posted soon on the EWP2010 page. Les Lemon has been very helpful during the week, and will probably carry over into Week 2 to serve as additional help.

Weather wise in Central Oklahoma has been very quiet, although some convection is anticipated this afternoon and evening. Severe weather is unlikely. Due to PARISE’s unique schedule and experiment requirements, they will not be observing real-time data this evening. However, the CASA folks will be observing the data in a “low key” sense and using the opportunity to continue to shakedown the technology and concept of operations.

We will post end-of-week summaries for both PARISE and CASA on Friday or Saturday.

Greg Stumpf, EWP2010 Operations Coordinator

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Almost ready for EWP2010 “Phase I”

We are only 4 days away from beginning “Phase I” of the EWP2010 spring experiment. Phase I consists of our PAR and CASA experiments. We’ve had some successes over the past 2 weeks:

1. The PARISE shakedown on 4/6 went well with guest evaluators from the WFO OUN and the WDTB.
2. The WDSSII version of WarnGen is almost ready to go. It looks and feels a lot like AWIPS WarnGen.
3. The HWT AWIPS and ORPG have been upgraded. Bonus: CASA data are now displayable in AWIPS in the HWT!
4. The participant selections for all 9 weeks have been made and will be entered into the EWP Google Calendar.

We will be welcoming our first set of evaluators next week. They are:

CASA: Les Lemon (WDTB)
PAR: Mark Bacon (ILM); Jim Caruso (ICT); Jeff Cupo (FAATC-OKC); Mike Scotten (MEG)

One note:  do not expect to see many details on the blog during Phase I of EWP2010, unless there are real-time events in Central Oklahoma.  The evaluators will be going through a number of archive cases, and we don’t want to reveal details about those cases to participants who will be coming in future weeks.  In addition, the PAR experiment is being conducted as a social science experiment, and much of the data are considered confidential.

Greg Stumpf, EWP2010 Operations Coordinator

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