NOAA ESRL Physical Sciences Division  
PACJET Projects
HMT 2004
PACJET 2003
PACJET 2002
PACJET 2001
CALJET 1998
Publications
Snow Level Detection (pdf)
Orographic Precipitation (pdf)
ETL S-band Radar (pdf)
Data
GWINDEX
West Coast RUC
ETL Profiler Network
Background
About Pacjet
CALJET Summary
Societal Impacts and User Input
Linkages to National Priorities
USWRP
Data Assimilation Implementation Plan
NSSL Briefing
Press Release
Programs Documents
PACJET 2001 and a Long-term Effort to Improve 0-24h West Coast Forecasts
PACJET Community
NOAA Research: ETL, NSSL, FSL
National Weather Service Western Region: Eureka, Hanford, Medford, Monterey, Oxnard, Portland, Reno, Sacramento, San Diego, Seattle, CNRRC, NWRFC
Office of Marine and Aviation Operations: AOC
Naval Postgradute School
DRI CIASTA
CIRES
SUNY Stony Brook
National Centers for Environmental Prediction: EMC, HPC, MPC
National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service
CIMSS
CIRA
Operational Forecasting Components
COMET Precipitation Presentation
West Coast RUC
Aircraft Obs via AWIPS
GWINDEX Poster
Applications Development
Research Components
Modeling Research Components
Related Experiments
Winter Storm Reconnaissance (Central Pac.)
IMPROVE (Microphysics)
THORPEX (Synoptic Targeting)
Observing Systems
NOAA P-3
Wind Profiler Network
Satellite Products
NOAA S-band Radar
Contact
Marty Ralph
Planning Workshops
2001 - Monterey, CA

LINKAGES TO NATIONAL AND NOAA PRIORITIES

  • Creates a strategy for responding to seasonal-to-interannual forecasts of increased likelihood of severe coastal storms associated with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO).

  • Explores mesoscale physical processes that can locally amplify large-scale effects of climate variability.

  • Focuses on identifying an optimal observing system for short-term (0-24 h) mesoscale QPF, which addresses two of USWRP's three core areas: quantitative precipitation forecasting, and studies of optimal observing systems for weather prediction.

  • Accelerates development and field tests of new instruments and observing strategies for potential use during a large Pacific experiment (THORPEX) being considered by USWRP.

  • Links USWRP objectives to the problem of coastal weather impacts and end-user needs, the importance of which is highlighted by NOAA's COASTS Initiative NOAA (Fig. 5).

  • Addresses high priorities within the NWS strategic plan, including improved prediction of runoff through better QPF and NEXRAD quantitative precipitation estimation wind forecasts in the coastal zone, and prediction of orographic precipitation enhancement.
NOAA
Earth System Research Laboratory
Physical Science Division (PSD)
Formerly
Environmental Technology Laboratory

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