Director: | Dr.Hendrik Tolman | (301) 683-3748 |
ABOUT EMC
We are the premiere Environmental Numerical Prediction System
Development Organization in the World. Our mission is to “Develop,
enhance and maintain numerical forecast systems for the atmosphere,
hydrosphere, and cryosphere in support of national and international
forecast requirements.”
We are one of nine National Centers in the National Centers for
Environmental Prediction (NCEP). NCEP, an arm of the NOAA's National
Weather Service (NWS), provides a wide variety of national and
international weather guidance products to NWS field offices,
government agencies, emergency managers, private sector meteorologists
and oceanographers, and meteorological/oceanographic organizations and
societies throughout the world. NCEP is a critical national resource in
national and global weather
prediction. NCEP is the starting point for nearly all weather forecasts
in the United States.
NWS NATIONAL CENTERS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PREDICTION
What we do
- We develop numerical forecast
systems for
- - Weather Prediction (domestic, global out to 15 days)
- - Ocean Prediction ( daily to annual; coastal to global)
- - Climate prediction (seasonal to inter-annual, coupled system).
- We enhance (test and improve) numerical
forecasts through advanced
- - Data assimilation techniques
- - Model physics (parameterization)
- - Numerical methods
- - Computational physics.
- We maintain the scientific
correctness and integrity of operational forecast systems by
- - Adapting to format changes and other changing operational requirements
- - Monitoring and ensuring the integrity of operational observing systems.
- We accomplish our objectives
through
- - in-house research and development
- - cooperative alliances with the outside research community
- - visiting scientists
- - participation in international experiments.
History
The story of operational Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) begins in 1954, when the Joint Numerical Weather Prediction Unit (JNWPU) was founded by the NWS and the military weather services. It was the ancestor of EMC, Air Force Global Weather Center and Fleet Numerical Meteorology and Oceanography Center (US Navy). JNWPU began by issuing manually-produced weather prediction products, but the Joint Meteorology Committee (made up of the heads of the weather services) directed JNWPU to pursue operational NWP forecast production. JNWPU installed an IBM 701 computer in March 1955, and chose Charney's Princeton 3-level quasi-geostrophic model to be the first operational NWP model. When the model began running operationally later in 1955, the results were very disappointing and not usable by forecasters. JNWPU didn't have an operational NWP model until 1958, when a one-level, improved barotropic version of the Princeton model (with improved numerics, automated objective analysis initial conditions, and octagonal NH domain) was developed. After a new, more powerful IBM 704 computer was installed, JNWPU began using the model operationally to produce useful numerical forecasts.
The JNWPU was co-located with the National Weather Analysis Center (NAWAC) at Suitland, MD from 1955 to 1958. In January 1958, JNWPU and NAWAC merged and formed the National Meteorological Center (NMC), the direct predecessor of NCEP, while the USAF and Navy formed their own global prediction centers (in Omaha and Monterey) to support military operations. NMC at once became the "nerve center" for weather data in the United States. NMC processed weather observations from around the globe and disseminated analyses and forecasts to customers throughout the U.S. and other countries. Research increased, with emphasis on developing faster and more accurate numerical techniques. It was the only such facility in the world at the time, and at least one publication described its creation as being "a milestone in the progress of meteorology." In January 1975 NMC (except for the supercomputer facility) moved to its present location in the World Weather Building (also known as the NOAA Science Center) in Camp Springs MD.
In October of 1995, NMC was reorganized into its current structure and renamed the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP). The Aviation Weather Center (AWC), Climate Prediction Center (CPC), Hydrometeorological Prediction Center (HPC), Ocean Prediction Center (OPC), Storm Prediction Center (SPC), and Tropical Prediction Center (TPC) are NCEP service centers. EMC and NCEP Central Operations (NCO) provide support to the service centers; EMC by developing and maintaining numerical prediction and data assimilation models, and NCO by running the models and maintaining NCEP's IT and comm systems. In 2005, the Space Environment Center (SEC) also became part of NCEP and was renamed the Space Weather Prediction Center in October 2007.