Inside Science
/
Article

Earlier Severe Weather Warnings

APR 18, 2016
Meteorologists using a group of mobile instruments to improve storm warnings.
Earlier Severe Weather Warnings

(Inside Science TV) -- Early warning is key in any severe weather forecast. Meteorologists at the NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) in collaboration with the University of Oklahoma School of Meteorology have developed the Collaborative Lower Atmosphere Mobile Profiling System (CLAMPS). CLAMPS is a trailer full of instruments that measure air temperature, humidity, and the wind.

According to David Turner, a meteorologist with the NSSL, the goal is to create rapid forecasts that can tell scientists and the public what the weather conditions will be like in the next 30 minutes to one hour. “We’d like to be able to issue a warning based on a forecast that would lengthen our ability to give warnings by 10-20 minutes that could be extremely beneficial in saving lives.

More Science News
FYI
/
Article
/
Press Release
AAS
/
Article
When supernovae explode, they send a fast-moving shock wave into the interstellar medium, changing the local landscape significantly. A recent publication hones in on one supernova remnant to determine how fast it’s expanding and where it may have come from.
/
Article
New approach bridges previous particle-scale and continuous material models of colloidal gels.
/
Article
Spacer modifications can prevent even the most stubborn biofilms.
/
Article
system combines deep learning and artificial potential fields to enable real-time, collision-free navigation in complex microfluidic environments.