Publications
A study of dry microburst detection with airport surveillance radars
Summary
Summary
This report evaluates the capability of Airport Surveillance Radars (ASRs) for the detection of low altitude wind shear associated with the outflows of dry microbursts. It describes results of simulations of dry microburst observations by an ASR. These simulations incorporated weather and clutter data collected by the FL-2 pencil-beam Doppler...
Automated flight strip management system functional description
Summary
Summary
This document gives a high level functional overview of an automated flight strip management system. The current manual flight strip system at Boston's Logan Airport is reviewed and described in detail for both the Tower Cab and TRACON with emphasis on the information flow as an aircraft progresses through the...
A prototype microburst prediction product for the terminal doppler weather radar
Summary
Summary
This paper describes a prototype microburst prediction product for the Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR). The prediction product was evaluated for microbursts observed during the spring and summer of 1989 at Kansas City. Results are presented demonstrating reliable prediction of high reflectivity microbursts of at least 15 m/s outflow intensity...
A comparison of anemometer and Doppler radar winds during wind shear events
Summary
Summary
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) currently uses the anemometer-based Low Level Wind Shear Alert System (LLWAS) as the primary method of wind shear detection at major U.S. airports. With the upcoming deployment of the Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) system, potential methods for integrating the two systems are being investigated...
A case study of the Claycomo, Missouri microburst on July 30, 1989
Summary
Summary
The Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) testbed collected thunderstorm measurements in the Kansas City area from March 27 through October 6, 1989. Of the 393 microbursts detected by the radar, 21 were classified as severe, with a differential velocity > 24 m/s. None of the severe events impacted terminal operations...
Aspect angle dependence of outflow strength in Denver microbursts: spatial and temporal variations
Summary
Summary
MIT Lincoln Laboratory is being sponsored by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to develop and test the Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) wind shear surveillance system. As part of this program Lincoln has developed algorithms for automatically detecting microbursts, or thunderstorm outflows using the radial velocity data gathered from a...
Observed differences between Denver and Kansas City gust fronts and their impact upon the performance of the gust front detection algorithm
Summary
Summary
The Terminal Doppler Weather Radar (TDWR) testbed radar (known as FL-2) collected data near Denver's Stapleton Airport during 1988 and near the Kansas City International Airport (MCI) during 1989. One objective of the TDWR Program is to detect gust fronts and their associated wind shifts. This information can be used...
Predicting summer microburst hazard from thunderstorm day statistics
Summary
Summary
Low-altitude wind shear, specifically, the aviation-hazardous form of wind shear known as the microburst, has been cited as the cause of several aviation disasters over the past two decades. Microbursts are strong, small-scale convective storm downdrafts that impact the ground and cause a violent divergent outflow of wind. The Federal...
Beam filling loss adjustments for ASR-9 weather channel reflectivity estimates
Summary
Summary
The FAA is deploying over 100 new ariport surveillance radars (ASR-9) across the country. In contrast to earlier ASRs, the ASR-9 utilized a separate digital weather processing channel to provide air traffic controllers with timely, calibrated displays of precipitation intensity. The ASR-9 utilizes dual selectable fan-shaped elevation beams designed to...
Vertical reflectivity profiles: averaged storm structures and applications to fan-beam radar weather detection in the U.S.
Summary
Summary
The FAA is deploying over 100 next generation airport surveillance radars (ASR-9) at selected major airports across the country. Like previous ASRs, the ASR-9 utilizes dual broad elevation fan beams Figure 1) along with a rapid scan rate (12.5 RPM to exercise its primary function of detecting aircraft over a...