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   You are at: NWS Home » SRH Home » WFO Tallahassee Home » Virtual Office Tour - Upper Air Program

Virtual Office Tour - Upper Air Program
While most folks care about what the weather will be like here near the ground, it would be very difficult for us forecasters to accurately predict that weather if we didn't also know what was happening at upper levels of the atmosphere. While satellite, radar and wind profiler technology can certainly provide us with valuable information, one tried and true method of gathering data has stood the test of time - weather balloons! Weather balloons are launched from hundreds of locations around the world twice a day, every day of the year. The launches occur nearly simultaneously worldwide! This gives meteorologists a snapshot of the earth's three-dimensional atmospheric conditions.

Photograph of the weather balloon before it is released through the rooftop launch tube.
Photograph of the weather balloon just after launch.
An exterior view of the launch facility during launch.

Weather balloons are launched from the roof of our building from the shelter pictured above. The balloons are filled with helium inside of the shelter, then released. The helium, which is a very light gas, allows the balloon to reach heights of 60,000 feet above the earth's surface in about an hour. As the balloon rises, the atmosphere thins and the pressure outside the balloon decreases allowing the balloon to expand and eventually break. This usually happens within two hours of the launch at elevations of 80,000 to 120,000 feet.

An instrument, called a radiosonde, is tethered to the balloon. As the balloon rises through the air, the radiosonde measures temperature, relative humidity, and pressure. A GPS transmitter within the radiosonde transmits this data back to a tracking unit located atop the building. This unit tracks the azimuth and range of the balloon as it ascends. From this information, the wind speed at various levels in the atmosphere can be calculated. After the balloon flight is complete, a technician ensures the data is accurate before it is disseminated at the workstation pictured below. Additional quality control checks are done at one of our national centers before the data is incorporated into computer models which meteorologists use to make their forecasts.

Photograph of the workstation that technicians use to quality control data received from the radiosonde.
Check out our most recent Tallahassee Upper Air Sounding Plot from the 0000 UTC or 1200 UTC (8:00 p.m. or 8:00 a.m. EDT) weather balloon launch.

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Tallahassee Weather Forecast Office
Love Building
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306-4509

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