FLASH — short for the Flooded Locations and Simulated Hydrographs Project — is now in the hands of NWS forecasters!
Author: Emily Jeffries
mPING awarded for help in operational meteorology
The National Weather Association recently awarded the mPING development team for help the application has provided in meteorology.
NSSL research project gathered information about tornadoes in new way
NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory researcher had a different view of tornadoes this spring — flying high above them in a NOAA P-3.
NOAA welcomes Hollings student participants
This summer the National Weather Center has four visiting Hollings students and six REU students working with NOAA entities in the building.
NOAA HWT Hosts Annual Spring Forecasting Experiment
For for the next five weeks NOAA’s Hazardous Weather Testbed Experimental Forecast Program is focused on using cutting-edge computer models.
April 12th Reddit AMA: What’s On the Radar? | Talk Weather Research with NOAA
When severe weather strikes anywhere in the United States, weather radar is one of the most important tools forecasters use to track storms and warn the public. The current system, known as the WSR-88D radar…
Women of NSSL: Kodi Berry
To celebrate Women’s History Month, NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory is publishing a series of stories highlighting women working at the lab. Kodi Berry is a research scientist and Sea Grant liaison for the Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies working at NSSL, and serves as the executive officer of the NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed.
Collaboration with Taiwanese agency foundational to NSSL’s MRMS system
Collaboration is a fundamental aspect of research at NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory and recently a group from Taiwan’s Central Weather Bureau and Soil and Water Conservation Bureau visited the lab in Norman, Oklahoma. The…
Women of NSSL: Linda McGuckin
To celebrate Women’s History Month in March NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory is publishing a series of stories highlighting some women working at the lab. One Q&A segment will be published each Monday in March.…
NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed starts with HS-PHI experiment
The NOAA Hazardous Weather Testbed is once again busy buzzing with activity as researchers kick off the year’s first research activities. From March 12-16, participants will assess a new tool using rapid-updating, high-resolution Probabilistic Hazard Information, known as PHI. HS-PHI is testing an experimental concept for delivering information to the public in a way that simulates how National Weather Service forecasters would use it within their software.