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Improving convective weather operations in highly congested airspace with the Corridor Integrated Weather System (CIWS)

Published in:
11th Conf. on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, 4-8 October 2004.

Summary

Reducing thunderstorm-related air traffic delays in congested airspace has become a major objective of the FAA, especially given the recent growth in convective delays. In 2000 and 2001, the key new initiative for reducing these convective weather delays was "strategic" traffic flow management (TFM). Users were given 2-, 4-, and 6-hour collaborative convective weather forecasts, and collaborative traffic routing plans were established via telecons attended by Air Traffic Control (ATC) and airline traffic managers. This "strategic" approach led to difficulties during a large fraction of the weather events because it was not possible to generate forecasts of convective weather at time horizons between 2 and 6 hours that were accurate enough to assess impacts on routes and capacity, and thereby accomplish effective TFM. During convective weather events, traffic managers tend to focus on tactical TFM [Huberdeau, 2004], yet they had relatively inaccurate current weather information and tactical forecasts. The Corridor Integrated Weather System (CIWS) demonstration began in 2001. The objectives of the demonstration are to provide improved tactical air traffic management (ATM) decision support, via improved real time 3D products and accurate short-term convective weather forecasts, and to determine if this support is an operationally useful complement to "strategic" TFM. The current focus of the CIWS initiative is the highly congested airspace containing the Great Lakes and Northeast corridors, since that region offers the greatest potential for delay reduction benefits. In this paper, we describe the current status of CIWS, including initial operational results of Air Traffic Control (ATC) and airline use of the CIWS weather products. We begin with some CIWS background, describing the motivation for the program, the role of CIWS products in the overall convective weather planning process, and the functional domains in which CIWS products can provide operationally significant benefits. We then review the current CIWS capabilities, spatial coverage, sensors used, products, operational users, and integration with ATM systems. Next the detailed CIWS operational benefits study carried out in 2003 is summarized. Finally, we discuss the FAA plans for CIWS and near term enhancements to the system.
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Summary

Reducing thunderstorm-related air traffic delays in congested airspace has become a major objective of the FAA, especially given the recent growth in convective delays. In 2000 and 2001, the key new initiative for reducing these convective weather delays was "strategic" traffic flow management (TFM). Users were given 2-, 4-, and...

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Bias-corrected population, size distribution, and impact hazard for the near-Earth objects

Published in:
Icarus, Vol. 170, No. 2, August 2004, pp. 295-311.

Summary

Utilizing the largest available data sets for the observed taxonomic and albedo distributions of the near-Earth object population, we model the bias-corrected population. Diameter-limited fractional abundances of the taxonomic complexes are A-0.2%; C-10%, D-17%, O-0.5%, Q-14%, R-0.1%, S-22%, U-0.4%, V-1%, X-34%. In a diameter-limited sample, ~30% of the NEO population has jovian Tisserand parameter less than 3, where the D-types and X-types dominate. The large contribution from the X-types is surprising and highlights the need to better understand this group with more albedo measurements. Combining the C, D, and X complexes into a "dark" group and the others into a "bright" group yields a debiased darkto- bright ratio of ~1.6. Overall, the bias-corrected mean albedo for the NEO population is 0.14 +/-0.02, for which an H magnitude of 17.8 +/-0.1 translates to a diameter of 1 km, in close agreement with Morbidelli et al. Coupling this bias corrected taxonomic and albedo model with the H magnitude dependent size distribution of yields a diameter distribution with 1090 +/-180 NEOs with diameters larger than 1 km. As of 2004 June, the Spaceguard Survey has discovered 56% of the NEOs larger than 1 km. Using our size distribution model, and orbital distribution of we calculate the frequency of impacts into the Earth and the Moon. Globally destructive collisions (~10 ^21 J) of asteroids 1 km or larger strike the Earth once every 0.60 +/-0.1 Myr on average. Regionally destructive collisions with impact energy greater than 4 x 10 ^18 J (~200 m diameter) strike the Earth every 56,000 +/-6000 yr. Collisions in the range of the Tunguska event (4-8 x 10^16 J) occur every 2000-3000 yr. These values represent the average time between randomly spaced impacts; actual impacts could occur more or less closely spaced solely by chance. As a verification of these impact rates, the crater production function of Shoemaker et al. has been updated by combining this new population model with a crater formation model to find that the observed crater production function on both the Earth and Moon agrees with the rate of crater production expected from the current population of NEOs.
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Summary

Utilizing the largest available data sets for the observed taxonomic and albedo distributions of the near-Earth object population, we model the bias-corrected population. Diameter-limited fractional abundances of the taxonomic complexes are A-0.2%; C-10%, D-17%, O-0.5%, Q-14%, R-0.1%, S-22%, U-0.4%, V-1%, X-34%. In a diameter-limited sample, ~30% of the NEO population...

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Utilizing local terrain to determine targeted weather observation locations

Published in:
Conf. on Battlespace Atmospheric and Cloud Impacts on Military Operations, BACIMO, 9-11 September 2003.

Summary

Many of the recent conflicts where the United States (US) military forces have been deployed are regions that contain complex terrain (i.e. Korea, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and northern Iraq). Accurate weather forecasts are critical to the success of operations in these regions and are typically supplied by numerical weather prediction (NWP) models like the US Navy NOGAPS, CAOMPS, and US Airforce MM5. Unfortunately the weather observations required to generate accurate initial conditions needed by these models are often not available. In these cases it is desirable to deploy additional weather sensors. The question then becomes: Where should the military planners deploy their sensor resources? This study demonstrates that knowledge of just the terrain within the model domain may be a useful factor for military planners to consider. For NWP, model forecast errors in mountainous areas are typically thought to be due to poorly resolved terrain, or model physics not suited for use in a complex terrain environment. Recent advances in computational technology are making it possible to run these models at resolutions where many of the significant terrain features are now being well resolved. While terrain can be accurately specified, often the gradients in wind, temperature, and moisture fields associated with the higher resolution terrain are not. As a result, initial conditions in complex terrain environments are not be adequately specified. Since not all initial condition errors contribute significantly to model forecast error, knowledge of terrain induced NWP model forecast sensitivity may be important when developing and deploying a weather sensor network to support a regional scale NWP model. The terrain induced model sensitivity can provide an indication of which variables in the initial conditions have a significant influence on the forecast and where initial conditions need to be most accurate to minimize model forecast error. A sensor network can then be designed to minimize these errors by deploying critical sensors in sensitive locations, thereby reducing relevant initial condition error without the costly deployment of a high-density sensor network. This is similar to the targeted observation technique first suggested by Emanuel et al. (1995), except that in this example the targeted observations would be designed to reduce initial condition error associated with poorly resolved atmospheric features created by the terrain. This paper is organized as follows. Section 2 contains a brief description of the data collection effort designed to support this study. The experimental design and the specifics of the case used in this study are described in section 3. The analysis and results from both the forward and adjoint simulations are presented in section 4. Section 5 contains a summary of the results, and a brief discussion of their implications.
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Summary

Many of the recent conflicts where the United States (US) military forces have been deployed are regions that contain complex terrain (i.e. Korea, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and northern Iraq). Accurate weather forecasts are critical to the success of operations in these regions and are typically supplied by numerical weather prediction (NWP)...

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A web-based display and access point to the FAA's Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS)

Published in:
10th Conf. on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, 13-16 May 2002, pp. 206-209.

Summary

The Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) is a high-resolution weather information system designed to operate within the TRACONs surrounding the country's major airports. Targeted for those airports most often adversely affected by convective weather, the system was developed for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory (MIT/LL) Weather Sensing Group. The ITWS acquires data from Next Generation Radars (NEXRAD), Terminal Doppler Weather Radars (TDWR), Airport Surveillance Radars (ASR-9), Low Level Windshear Alert Systems (LLWAS), the National Lightning Detection Network (NLDN), Automated Weather Observing Stations (AWOS/ASOS), and aircraft in flight. The system integrates the data to provide consistent weather information in a form that is usable without further meteorological interpretation. This information includes six-level precipitation at a number of ranges, windshear and microburst detection and prediction, storm motion and extrapolated position, wind fields, gust fronts, lightning, and storm cell information (hail, mesocyclone notification, and echo tops). A set of direct users of ITWS (FAA users at TRACONs, Air Traffic Control Towers, and en-route centers) will receive ITWS weather products through FAA-provided Situation Displays (SDs) that are tied directly to the ITWS processor. In addition, the FAA has sponsored development of an ITWS External Users Data Distribution System to provide real-time ITWS products to those users who do not have access to a dedicated SD. The data distribution system is being developed in conjunction with the upcoming deployment of the ITWS (2002-2004) as an operational FAA system serving 47 major airports. The need for a remotely accessible display is strongly supported by draft recommendations recently released by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) that call for U.S. air carriers and all air traffic control facilities to have access to data from FAA terminal weather information systems. In addition, the Collaborative Decision Making program (CDM) has highlighted the need to make the information widely available to airlines. MIT/LL has operated demonstration ITWS systems since 1994, and a demonstration website since 1997. Most major airlines have successfully accessed the ITWS demonstration products in real time via Web browsers and have used this information to improve safety and reduce delays (Maloney, 2000). Benefits specific to airline dispatch include support for decisions made during diversion situations and improvements in hub operations . By sharing a common view of the same operational environment, controllers, dispatchers and other aviation decision makers and stakeholders have been better able to understand and coordinate the decisions that affect air traffic in the terminal area and surrounding en route airspace (Evans 2000). This paper describes the goals of the ITWS External Users Data Distribution System development project, including a discussion of the system architecture, data distribution and access methods, and the web-based interface.
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Summary

The Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) is a high-resolution weather information system designed to operate within the TRACONs surrounding the country's major airports. Targeted for those airports most often adversely affected by convective weather, the system was developed for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's...

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An evaluation of the Medium-Intensity Airport Weather System (MIAWS) products at the Memphis, TN and Jackson, MS International Airports

Published in:
10th Conf. on Aviation, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology (13th Conf. on Applied Climatology), 13-16 May 2002, pp. J118-J122.

Summary

The FAA is procuring aviation weather systems, which are designed to enhance safety/capacity and reduce delays at U.S. airports. The two most widely publicized systems currently being installed are the Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) at airports equipped with a Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) and the Weather System Processor (WSP) at those terminal areas covered by an Airport Surveillance Radar, Model 9 (ASR-9). At airports not slated to receive either an ITWS or WSP, an emerging system coined the Medium Intensity Airport Weather System (MIAWS) will be installed. Currently, either an ASR-7 or 8 provides terminal aircraft surveillance at these airports. Unfortunately, these platforms do not output calibrated precipitation intensity or storm motion information. Quantitative six-level weather reflectivity data will be available once the digitally enhanced ASR-11 radar system is operational at MIAWS supported sites. The Low Level Wind Shear Alert System - Relocation/Sustainment (LLWAS-RS) anemometer network will provide MIAWS with surface-based winds and wind shear alerts. The rationale for MIAWS evolved from the ITWS and WSP prototype testing. The premise is that the calibrated reflectivity and velocity data from state-of-the-art radar platforms can be utilized to produce a suite of current and forecasted storm positions to aid air traffic control decision making. The forecasted location is a critical issue if the storms are moving rapidly. This can lead to a scenario where the weather conditions deteriorate significantly within a matter of minutes. Once implemented, MIAWS will be an essential component of the National Airspace System by providing this evolving technology to airports whose traffic counts are not sufficient to warrant either an ITWS or WSP, but where commercial carriers could reap the benefits of a high-quality weather radar system. The FAA has contracted the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory (MIT/LL) to undertake a proof-of-concept evaluation of MIAWS. To this end, MIT/LL installed two prototype systems at the Jackson, MS (JAN) and Memphis, TN (MEM) International Airports. The system at MEM is used solely for product evaluation and refinement, while the FAA is operationally evaluating the JAN MIAWS. The focus of this report is a preliminary assessment of the capabilities and limitations of MIAWS in its current implementation, i.e. precipitation based solely on NEXRAD data. Potential enhancements to the NEXRAD product data and MIAWS algorithms will also be discussed.
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Summary

The FAA is procuring aviation weather systems, which are designed to enhance safety/capacity and reduce delays at U.S. airports. The two most widely publicized systems currently being installed are the Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) at airports equipped with a Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) and the Weather System Processor...

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Time domain processing of frequency domain GPR signatures for buried land mine detection

Published in:
SPIE, Vol. 4742, Part One, Detection and Remediation Technologies for Mines and Minelike Targets VII, 1-5 April 2002, pp. 339-348.

Summary

This paper investigates the feasibility of detecting plastic antipersonnel land mines buried in lossy, dispersive, rough soils using a stepped-frequency ultra wideband (WB) ground-penetrating radar (GPR). Realistic land mine scenarios were modeled using a two-dimensional (2D) finite difference firequency domain (FDFD) technique. Assuming normal incidence plane wave excitation, the scattered fields were generated over a large frequency bandwidth (.5 to 5 GHz) for a variety of mine-like shapes, different soil types, and multiple receiver locations. The simulation results showed that for a ground penetration sensor located just above the soil surface, the strong reflection signals received from the rough ground surface obscured the buried target's fiquency response signal. The simulated GPR WB frequency response data at each receiver location was transformed to the time domain using the fast fourier transform. Time domain processing permits high resolution measurement of target features that are invariant to the ground roughness and also that are dependent on the soil characteristics as well as the burial depth and size of the mine, Specifically, two or more characteristic timing peaks are observed in the simulation results suggesting that the ultra-wideband spectral radar response may yield particular advantages not exploited by currently employed detection systems. It is also shown that by using time-gating to remove the strong ground reflection signals, the target signals are selectively enhanced (as expected), but more surprisingly, the target frequency response signature is almost completely recovered.
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Summary

This paper investigates the feasibility of detecting plastic antipersonnel land mines buried in lossy, dispersive, rough soils using a stepped-frequency ultra wideband (WB) ground-penetrating radar (GPR). Realistic land mine scenarios were modeled using a two-dimensional (2D) finite difference firequency domain (FDFD) technique. Assuming normal incidence plane wave excitation, the scattered...

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Designing a terminal area bird detection and monitoring system based on ASR-9 data

Published in:
3rd Joint Annual Meeting Bird Strike Committee, 27-30 August 2001.

Summary

Conflicts between birds and commercial aircraft are a noteworthy problem at both large and small airports [Cleary, 1999]. The risk factor for United States airports continues to increase due to the steady rise in take-off/landings and bird populations. There is a significant bird strike problem in the terminal area as shown by the incidents reported in the National Bird Strike Database [Cleary and Dolbeer, 1999]. The focus of bird strike mitigation in the past has centered primarily on wildlife management techniques. Recently, an Avian Hazard Advisory System (AHAS) has been developed to reduce the risks of bird strikes to military operations [Kelly, 1999]. This system uses a mosaic of data obtained from the Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD). This sensor serves as an excellent tool for enroute bird advisories due to the radar coverage provided across the majority of the United States. However, its utility in the airport terminal environment is limited due to the slow update rate and the fact that the distance of most NEXRADs from the airport results in beam heights that are too high to detect low-altitude birds over the airport. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) operates two radar systems – the Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR), and the Airport Surveillance Radar (ASR-9) -- that could be used to help monitor bird activity at an airport in order to: 1. Provide continuously updated information on locations and approximate numbers of birds in flocks roosting or feeding on or near an airfield; 2. Generate real-time warnings of bird activity for dissemination to pilots of landing or departing aircraft by air traffic controllers or by direct data link. The TDWR provides wind shear warnings in the terminal area to enhance safety, while the ASR-9’s primary function is air traffic control. Both of these systems have been shown to detect biological echoes as well. Characteristics of the two radar systems have been examined and compared to determine capabilities for bird detection. Amongst other favorable factors, the high update rate and on-airport locale makes the ASR-9 a highly desirable platform for a bird detection and warning system for the terminal area. Data from an ASR-9 at Austin TX (AUS) equipped with a Weather Systems Processor (WSP) have been analyzed to assess the ASR-9's capability to detect and monitor bird activity. The WSP add-on provides a variety of radar base data products similar to those that would be available on all ASR-9s as part of an ASR-9 Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) currently underway. The Austin airport area is subject to large flocks of wintering migratory birds as well as a resident population of bats in close proximity to the airport. Radar data, visual observations and bird strike information during periods of active bird/bat movements have been collected for this study. An automated processing algorithm called the Terminal Avian Hazard Advisory System (TAHAS) is being developed to detect and track roosting and migratory birds using ASR-9 data. A key challenge will be the ability to discriminate biological from non-biological targets based on variables such as vertical continuity, variance or spectral width, and horizontal velocity distribution.
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Summary

Conflicts between birds and commercial aircraft are a noteworthy problem at both large and small airports [Cleary, 1999]. The risk factor for United States airports continues to increase due to the steady rise in take-off/landings and bird populations. There is a significant bird strike problem in the terminal area as...

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Developing a mosiacked gust front detection algorithm for TRACONS with multiple TDWRS

Published in:
Proc. Ninth Conf. on Aviation, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology, 11-15 September 2000, pp. 494-498.

Summary

Gust front detection is an important Initial Operational Capability (IOC) of the Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS). The Machine Intelligent Gust Front Algorithm (MIGFA) being deployed for ITWS uses multi-dimensional, knowledge-based signal processing techniques to detect and track gust fronts in Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) data. Versions of MIGFA have also been developed for the ASR-9 Weather Systems Processor (WSP) and NEXRAD, and within the past year MIGFA was installed as the primary gust front detection algorithm for operational TDWRs throughout the United States. (Not complete.)
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Summary

Gust front detection is an important Initial Operational Capability (IOC) of the Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS). The Machine Intelligent Gust Front Algorithm (MIGFA) being deployed for ITWS uses multi-dimensional, knowledge-based signal processing techniques to detect and track gust fronts in Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) data. Versions of MIGFA...

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Achieving higher integrity in NEXRAD products through multi-sensor integration

Author:
Published in:
8th Conf. on Aviation, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology (ARAM), 10-15 January 1999.

Summary

The initial operational concept for the NEXRAD focused on support for the operational forecaster based on longstanding practice in use of weather radars by the National Weather Service (NWS) and Air Force as well as difficulties in developing reliable, fully automated phenomena detection algorithms [Crum, 1998]. By contrast, achieving high integrity in the narrow band products provided by NEXRAD to external users has received much less attention in the NEXRAD product development process thus far. However, other government weather information systems [especially the FAA's Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) and the Weather and Radar Processor (WARP)] and non-meteorologist external users of the NEXRAD products through the NEXRAD Information Distribution System (NIDS) vendors need very high integrity NEXRAD products. In the NWS context, the direct utilization of NEXRAD products into numerical weather prediction models will also create much more stringent requirements for integrity of the NEXRAD base data. Achieving very high integrity through automated analysis of only the data from a single NEXRAD is very difficult. In this paper, we consider the use of a much wider range of contextual information to create high integrity external user products. For instance, with the NEXRAD Open RPG and connectivity to AWIPS and ITWS, a system architecture will exist that will facilitate the implementation of NEXRAD product quality control algorithms that utilize information from other sensors. In the following sections, we present some examples of how information from various other sources might be used to improve the quality of the data from a NEXRAD. We first show an example of how data from adjacent NEXRADs can be used to help edit out the anomalous propagation (AP) ground clutter which currently is corrupting a number of the NEXRAD reflectivity products intended for air traffic controller use. In cases where the NEXRAD is near a major metropolitan area, data from the FAA's TDWR can be used to improve the integrity of the NEXRAD reflectivity products used for hydrology. Similarly, gridded wind fields estimated from multiple Doppler analyses, aircraft reports, and numerical models can be used to help address difficult challenges in Doppler ambiguity resolution for a single NEXRAD radar. The paper concludes with suggestions for near term demonstration and evaluation of multi sensor approaches to achieving high integrity in the NEXRAD products.
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Summary

The initial operational concept for the NEXRAD focused on support for the operational forecaster based on longstanding practice in use of weather radars by the National Weather Service (NWS) and Air Force as well as difficulties in developing reliable, fully automated phenomena detection algorithms [Crum, 1998]. By contrast, achieving high...

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Study of Network Expansion LLWAS (LLWAS-NE) fault identification and system warning optimization through joint use of LLWAS-NE and TDWR data

Published in:
8th Conf. on Aviation, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology (ARAM), 10-15 January 1999.

Summary

Low level wind shear has been identified as an aviation hazard which has caused or contributed to a significant number of aircraft accidents (Soffer, 1990). To protect aircraft from hazardous wind shear, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) developed a system called the Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS), containing a collection of anemometers as well as data processing logic (Wilson and Gramzow, 1991). The LLWAS has undergone several advancements in both design and algorithmic computation. The latest deployment, known as the Network Expansion Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS-NE), consists of additional sensors to the original LLWAS network, providing better coverage of the airfield. In addition, the LLWAS-NE is capable of providing runway-oriented wind shear and microburst alerts with loss and gain values. The alerts from LLWAS-NE will be integrated with those from the Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) and the Integrated Terminal Weather System (ITWS) at locations where all systems are available (Cole, 1992; Cole and Todd, 1994). An analysis was undertaken at Orlando (MCO) and Dallas/Ft. Worth (DFW) International Airports to assess the accuracy of wind shear alerts produced by LLWAS-NE and the TDWR/LLWASNE integration algorithm. Identifying improvements that can be made to either system is important, as LLWAS-NE alert information is anticipated to be integrated with ITWS in an ITWS/LLWAS-NE integration algorithm. As currently specified, the ITWS/LLWAS-NE integration algorithm will work the same as the TDWR/LLWAS-NE version. The ITWS/LLWAS-NE algorithm is an area where additional work is necessary to ascertain if the integration parameters should be modified to account for performance differences between the ITWS and TDWR algorithms. We suggest that ongoing assessment of the LLWAS-NE should use both LLWAS-NE data and TDWR base data, when possible. Comparing both data sets also will facilitate optimization of LLWAS-NE parameters used in the computation of the alerts.
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Summary

Low level wind shear has been identified as an aviation hazard which has caused or contributed to a significant number of aircraft accidents (Soffer, 1990). To protect aircraft from hazardous wind shear, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) developed a system called the Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS), containing...

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