Inside Science
/
Article

Tracking Weather Near The Ground

APR 06, 2016
A new app lets people report weather conditions to help meteorologists.
Tracking Weather Near the Ground

(Inside Science TV) – The rain falling outside your window could look more like ice if you were looking at it higher up in the atmosphere. Researchers at NOAA’s National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) and the University of Oklahoma’s Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies (CIMMS) have developed an app called meteorological Phenomena Identification Near the Ground or mPING. Anyone can install and use the free mPING app to submit their weather observation report anonymously.

What does NOAA do with the reports that users send? The NOAA National Weather Service uses the reports to localize their weather forecasts and to develop new radar and forecasting technologies in order to have a better idea of what the weather looks like outside your window and at the altitude of your next airplane flight.

Kim Elmore, a research scientist at NSSL who works with the CIMMS, said that while the observations that the public submits helps research, he has been surprised by how much he has enjoyed engaging with the public.

More Science News
/
Article
Moving toward the development of next-generation radiation detection technologies.
/
Article
Improving airflow for server cooling has major implications on the energy needed for thermal management.
/
Article
When combined with QCM experimental data, Virtual-QCM yields measurements of protein configuration and viscoelasticity.
/
Article
Testing showed the photodetector could be used for daytime LIDAR and free-space optical communications.
/
Article
Freedman performed crucial work as an experimentalist. But his mentorship was an equally important contribution.
/
Article
Understanding how ingredients interact can help cooks consistently achieve delicious results.
/
Article
Strong and tunable long-range dipolar interactions could help probe the behavior of supersolids and other quantum phases of matter.
/
Article
Inside certain quantum systems, where randomness was thought to lurk, researchers—after a 40-year journey—have found order and unique wave patterns that stubbornly survive.