. Solar Energy News .




.
WEATHER REPORT
Storm chasers of Utah
by Staff Writers
Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Nov 11, 2011

The Doppler on Wheels truck arrived in Salt Lake City on Oct. 21 and will be here until Nov. 21. During Oct. 22-23, a dozen University of Utah graduate students were trained to drive the truck and use the 6-foot-diameter radar dish transmitter and receiver.

A truck-mounted radar dish often used to chase Midwest tornadoes is getting a workout in Utah this month as University of Utah meteorologists use it to get an unprecedented look inside snow and rain storms over the Salt Lake Valley and the surrounding Wasatch and Oquirrh mountains.

"For students who love snow, it's every bit as thrilling as chasing tornadoes," says avid skier and atmospheric sciences Professor Jim Steenburgh. "That's why we call it storm chasing, Utah style."

The Storm Chasing Utah Style Study, SCHUSS - the term for a straight, downhill ski run - makes use of a Doppler on Wheels (DOW) radar truck operated by the Center for Severe Weather Research in Boulder, Colo., for the National Science Foundation.

"We have never been able to examine the 'guts' of Wasatch winter storms like we can with the Doppler on Wheels radar that is presently here in Salt Lake City," Steenburgh wrote recently in his Wasatch Weather Weenies blog.

"In particular, we can take a meteorological CAT scan of winter storms to see their inner workings."

The Doppler on Wheels truck arrived in Salt Lake City on Oct. 21 and will be here until Nov. 21. During Oct. 22-23, a dozen University of Utah graduate students were trained to drive the truck and use the 6-foot-diameter radar dish transmitter and receiver.

The portable "X-band polarimetric Doppler radar" system was developed originally for studying tornadoes, and Steenburgh says it "measured the strongest wind ever recorded during the Moore, Okla., tornado" in 1999 - clocked at 318 mph

The truck's radar emits and receives radio waves horizontally and vertically. This provides more information than radars used by the National Weather Service, which plans to upgrade to the new radars in the next few years.

Steenburgh says the DOW radar can distinguish the size and shape of snowflakes and raindrops in a storm, can collect data on lower-elevation valley locations and can park closer to storms and thus get more detail.

"Despite improvements in weather forecasting over the past few decades, winter storms in Utah remain a challenge to predict," Steenburgh says.

"Unlike radars used for weather forecasting, the Doppler on Wheels can be placed anywhere during a storm, enabling us to peer into storms and uncover their secrets. The information we collect can be used to better understand lake-effect, mountain and other Utah storms, and improve computer models used for weather prediction."

When the truck is used to chase tornadoes, "you are constantly driving," he says. "We don't move it around a lot. We let the storm come to us. ... But in a long-lived, multiday storm, we would probably move it as the storm characteristics change."

Steenburgh hopes the truck's radar can be used to study eight to 10 storms during its time in Utah, although there haven't been many so far. As of Nov. 10, the radar truck has been deployed for five weather events:

+ The radar truck was parked at Lake Point on Interstate-80 and used to look at the structure of a dry, cold front that moved across the Great Salt Lake Oct. 24-25.

+ From an observation point on State Route 111 on the west side of the Salt Lake Valley, the radar observed puffy cumulus clouds over the Wasatch Range on Oct. 26.

+ On Oct. 30, the radar was deployed to observe breezes blowing southward off the Great Salt Lake and into Rush Valley.

+ Parked again on SR-111, the radar truck watched as a cold front with rain and snow moved over the Salt Lake Valley on Nov. 1. The radar captured a burst of heavy snow over Twin Peaks in the Wasatch Range, and got unprecedented images of the "transition zone" where falling snowflakes turn to raindrops. The exact elevation of the transition zone is critical to forecasting if a city like Salt Lake will experience weather of 32 degrees Fahrenheit with heavy snow or 35 degrees with rain. "The truck is teaching our students with a new kind of radar to better determine where the snow level is and where precipitation is transitioning from rain to snow, which is a big piece of figuring out how much snow is going to fall at any particular location," Steenburgh says.

+ A big snowstorm, with some snow enhanced by the Great Salt Lake's "lake effect," was captured by the radar truck on Nov. 4 and 5 as it dumped several inches of snow on Salt Lake City and other Wasatch Front cities. University of Utah students pulled an all-nighter in the truck making measurements of the storm.

"We got an unprecedented data set on the lake effect snow that fell Saturday morning," Steenburgh says. "It was phenomenal."

Steenburgh's enthusiasm for bad weather comes across in his blog. During the Nov. 1 storm, he told his students: "Just ooh and ahh as you see precipitation bands moving across the mountains." And when the snow started flying Nov. 4, he wrote: "We now have data flowing in from this storm. So psyched."

A video showing radar images of a Nov. 5 lake-effect snowband (orange) moving from the southeastern Great Salt Lake to the Wasatch Range (red) can be downloaded here; A video showing the Nov. 5 lake-effect snowband (orange), first in birds-eye-view, and then moving to a horizontal view from the northeast, can be downloaded here.

Related Links
Jim Steenburgh's Wasatch Weather Weenies Blog
Center for Severe Weather Research
Weather News at TerraDaily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



WEATHER REPORT
Evacuations ordered as record storm blasts Alaska
Los Angeles (AFP) Nov 9, 2011
Residents were ordered to evacuate as a massive storm pounded the rural western coast of Alaska on Wednesday with hurricane-force gusts and severe coastal flooding, US meteorologists said. The storm, some 600-800 miles across, was "record or near record," said Bob Fisher, a spokesman for the National Weather Service in Fairbanks, adding that the storm threat had not yet reached its peak. ... read more


WEATHER REPORT
Generating Ethanol from Lignocellulose Possible, But Large Cost Reductions Still Needed

Solazyme Announces First US Commercial Passenger Flight on Advanced Biofuel

A Stable Renewable Fuel Standard Is Needed to Meet Biofuel Production Goals

Mission Increases Jatropha Oil Supply Completing the 2011 Planting Season

WEATHER REPORT
Mask-bot: A robot with a human face

NASA Robotic Lander Test Flight Will Aid in Future Lander Designs

Is that a robot in your suitcase?

Look, no hands -- robot uses gecko power to climb walls

WEATHER REPORT
Mortenson Construction Builds Its Fifth Wind Facility In Illinois

Chinese Wind Market To Overtake Germany by 2018, Second Only to the UK

Huhne slams green energy 'naysayers'

Wind farm development can be powerful, as long as proper design is implemented

WEATHER REPORT
Toyota, Mitsubishi to resume Thailand production

Toyota's domestic operation to return to normal

China auto sales down 1.1% in October

Toyota profits fall, scraps forecast on Thai floods

WEATHER REPORT
China's Sinopec to pay $3.5 bn for Brazil oil stake

Americans using more fossil fuels

US to study alternate route for US-Canada pipeline

US lawmakers eye oil spill payment from neighbors

WEATHER REPORT
Graphene grows better on certain copper crystals

New method of growing high-quality graphene promising for next-gen technology

Giant flakes make graphene oxide gel

Amorphous diamond, a new super-hard form of carbon created under ultrahigh pressure

WEATHER REPORT
US cyclist, energy firm guilty in French hacking scandal

Individual CO2 emissions decline in old age

Australia approves carbon tax

Greenpeace protests 'climate killer' coal plant in S.Africa

WEATHER REPORT
'Father of Mangroves' fights for Pakistan's forests

Holm oaks will gain ground in northern forests due to climate change

Climate change causing massive movement of tree species across the West

Tropical forests are fertilized by air pollution


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement