A Review of High Impact Weather for Aviation Meteorology

被引:3
|
作者
Ismail Gultepe
R. Sharman
Paul D. Williams
Binbin Zhou
G. Ellrod
P. Minnis
S. Trier
S. Griffin
Seong. S. Yum
B. Gharabaghi
W. Feltz
M. Temimi
Zhaoxia Pu
L. N. Storer
P. Kneringer
M. J. Weston
Hui-ya Chuang
L. Thobois
A. P. Dimri
S. J. Dietz
Gutemberg B. França
M. V. Almeida
F. L. Albquerque Neto
机构
[1] MRD,Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science
[2] ECCC,Department of Meteorology
[3] Ontario Technical University,Department of Atmospheric Sciences
[4] National Center for Atmospheric Research,Water Resources Engineering, School of Engineering
[5] Research Applications Laboratory,Water and Environment Engineering Program, Masdar Institute
[6] University of Reading,Department of Atmospheric Sciences
[7] IMSG and EMC/NCEP/NOAA,Department of Civil Infrastructure and Environmental Engineering
[8] EWxC,School of Environmental Sciences
[9] LLC,Department of Meteorology
[10] Science Systems and Applications,undefined
[11] Inc.,undefined
[12] Space Science and Engineering Center,undefined
[13] Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies (CIMSS),undefined
[14] University of Wisconsin-Madison,undefined
[15] Yonsei Univeristy,undefined
[16] University of Guelph,undefined
[17] Khalifa University of Science and Technology,undefined
[18] University of Utah,undefined
[19] University Innsbruck,undefined
[20] Khalifa University,undefined
[21] NCEP Environmental Modeling Center,undefined
[22] Leosphere Inc.,undefined
[23] Jawaharlal Nehru University,undefined
[24] University of Innsbruck,undefined
[25] Federal University of Rio de Janeiro,undefined
来源
Pure and Applied Geophysics | 2019年 / 176卷
关键词
Fog and precipitation visibility; aviation meteorology; ice microphysics; wind shear and gust; nowcasting and forecasting;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This review paper summarizes current knowledge available for aviation operations related to meteorology and provides suggestions for necessary improvements in the measurement and prediction of weather-related parameters, new physical methods for numerical weather predictions (NWP), and next-generation integrated systems. Severe weather can disrupt aviation operations on the ground or in-flight. The most important parameters related to aviation meteorology are wind and turbulence, fog visibility, aerosol/ash loading, ceiling, rain and snow amount and rates, icing, ice microphysical parameters, convection and precipitation intensity, microbursts, hail, and lightning. Measurements of these parameters are functions of sensor response times and measurement thresholds in extreme weather conditions. In addition to these, airport environments can also play an important role leading to intensification of extreme weather conditions or high impact weather events, e.g., anthropogenic ice fog. To observe meteorological parameters, new remote sensing platforms, namely wind LIDAR, sodars, radars, and geostationary satellites, and in situ instruments at the surface and in the atmosphere, as well as aircraft and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles mounted sensors, are becoming more common. At smaller time and space scales (e.g., < 1 km), meteorological forecasts from NWP models need to be continuously improved for accurate physical parameterizations. Aviation weather forecasts also need to be developed to provide detailed information that represents both deterministic and statistical approaches. In this review, we present available resources and issues for aviation meteorology and evaluate them for required improvements related to measurements, nowcasting, forecasting, and climate change, and emphasize future challenges.
引用
收藏
页码:1869 / 1921
页数:52
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