For Immediate Release
April 30, 1999
EARLY WARNING: RESEARCHERS TESTING STATE-OF-THE-ART
TECHNOLOGY FOR EARLY DETECTION OF TORNADOES IN GEORGIA
Testing
has begun on the next generation of tornado forecasting technology that
could increase warning time by as much as 50 percent in north Georgia.
Researchers
at the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) are testing and optimizing
the National Severe Storms Laboratory's (NSSL) Next Generation Warning
Decision Support System (NG-WDSS) during the 1999 and 2000 tornado seasons.
Though the test area is north Georgia, the study results will be applicable
throughout the state.
The
NG-WDSS was installed at the National Weather Service's Peachtree City
office earlier this month, and two more systems will be deployed in GTRI
laboratories by the end of June.
"We
will be optimizing the system to reflect Georgia. s environment," said
Gene Greneker, a research scientist who is heading GTRI's recently established
Severe Storms Research Center (SSRC). "Tornadoes in Georgia and elsewhere
in the Southeast are often short-lived events. They can come and go in
10 minutes, as opposed to an hour in Kansas. As a result, the radar signal
processing may need to be set slightly different from those that were
developed for the Great Plains states where the NG-WDSS was first developed
and tested."
Optimizing
the system will involve researchers in collecting storm data and determining
if changing parameters in the NG-WDSS algorithms will make it work better
in Georgia.
NG-WDSS
provides a set of tools that help forecasters make more efficient, effective
and timely decisions on warning the public of tornadoes, severe thunderstorms
and flash floods. The system includes advanced image processing, artificial
intelligence, neural network and other algorithms that use Doppler radar
data. The data is integrated with other weather sensor data to guide forecasters.
Another important part of the system is how it displays and presents information
to forecasters.
The
NSSL has successfully tested NG-WDSS in various parts of the country since
1996, when it operated as an advanced system at Peachtree City during
the Olympics. Because of the expense of deploying the NG-WDSS, it will
not be fully implemented across the country for another five to seven
years, Greneker said.
But
in Georgia, funding from the Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA),
the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Georgia General Assembly,
allowed the SSRC to contract with NSSL to deploy the NG-WDSS systems installed
in Peachtree City and at Georgia Tech. Bell South Business Systems is
also providing funds, which will pay for high speed data transmission
lines.
An
initial one year of funding for SSRC, a three-year project, followed recommendations
made last year by former Gov. Zell Miller's Task Force on Warning and
Communication. Miller formed the task force after severe storms claimed
23 lives in Georgia in 1998. Gov. Roy Barnes has pledged continued support
for the project.
Forecasters
and emergency management officials believe that better warning systems,
such as the NG-WDSS, could lower those death tolls. In addition to improving
warning time, NG-WDSS should result in fewer false alarms.
"False
alarms desensitize the public to valid warnings," Greneker said. "While
the NG-WDSS will not totally eliminate the false alarm problem, test data
shows that it can help the problem."
When
the NG-WDSS is installed in GTRI's laboratories, researchers will begin
to test the system, Greneker said. Part of that effort will include collecting
data in the aftermath of tornadoes. "This information will help us determine
how much warning the NG-WDSS provided before the tornado touched down,"
Greneker explained.
So
far this tornado season, researchers have not been able to conduct many
tests because of the few number of severe storms. "Other than the tornadoes
in Vienna and Metter, it. s been a very quiet tornado season (usually
January to May) this year," Greneker said. "So it's given us a breather
to get the equipment installed. By next spring, we will be ready to really
test the (NG-WDSS) system."
Meanwhile,
the SSRC is proceeding with other projects to improve severe weather forecasting
in Georgia. One study will be measuring electrical discharge from cloud-to-cloud
lightning strikes. Researchers believe that increasing amounts of electrical
discharge indicate that a tornado could be forming, Greneker explained.
When
GEMA chose GTRI as the site for the SSRC, it outlined its mission for
the center. That mission is to:
-
serve as a quick-response information resource for weather
and emergency management agencies.
-
become an advanced prototype facility.
-
develop and maintain a database of severe storms dynamics.
-
develop a plan for expanding Georgia's severe storm spotter
network with help from two-way radio-equipped public safety personnel.
-
provide real-time information regarding tornado development
or ground track coordinates to the National Weather Service.
-
determine whether tornadoes occur in certain areas of
the state more often than others. If so, forecasting resource improvements
would concentrate on these "tornado alleys."
-
work with agencies to educate Georgians about floods and
hurricanes; and develop methods to quickly transmit flood and hurricane
effects data to county-level emergency managers.
-
provide information on and evaluate advanced communications
techniques for GEMA. These efforts would improve the response and transmission
times for sending warning data to emergency managers.
- develop a library of the latest knowledge on severe
storms, including theories on their formation and trends in storm occurrence.
Availability of funding for the years 2000
and 2001 will determine whether the SSRC can fully meet these goals, Greneker
added.
RESEARCH
NEWS & PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 USA
MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS:
John Toon (404-894-6986);
E-mail: john.toon@edi.gatech.edu; FAX: (404-894-4545)
or
Jane Sanders (404-894-2214);
E-mail: jane.sanders@edi.gatech.edu.
TECHNICAL INFORMATION:
Technical Contacts:
1. Gene Greneker, GTRI, 770-528-7744 ;
E-mail: gene.greneker@gtri.gatech.edu
2. Pamela Swanson, GEMA, 404-635-7000
WRITER: Jane Sanders
PHOTO COPYRIGHT INFORMATION:
Photographs are copyrighted by the Georgia Tech Research Corporation and
may be freely used by the news media with credit to the Georgia Institute
of Technology.
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