NWS Upgrades Could Improve Aviation Forecasts Within The Year | Aero-News Network
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

Airborne Unlimited -- Most Recent Daily Episodes

Episode Date

Airborne-Monday

Airborne-Tuesday

Airborne-Wednesday Airborne-Thursday

Airborne-Friday

Airborne On YouTube

Airborne-Unlimited-11.03.25

AirborneNextGen-
11.04.25

Airborne-Unlimited-11.05.25

Airborne-Unlimited-11.06.25

AirborneUnlimited-10.17.25

Affordable Flying Expo Tickets (Discount Code: AFE2025): CLICK HERE!
LIVE MOSAIC Town Hall, 1800ET, 11.07.25: www.airborne-live.net

Wed, Aug 28, 2013

NWS Upgrades Could Improve Aviation Forecasts Within The Year

Computing Power Increased To One-Thousand-Trillion Calculations Per Second

In less than a year, U.S. aviation weather forecasts could start improving significantly. In two or three years, today’s preflight weather planning products may be remembered as inefficient or sluggish.

The more timely, specific forecasts will be made possible by a more than 10-fold increase in National Weather Service (NWS) computing power, from today’s 80 teraflops (80 trillion calculations per second) to well over 1,000 teraflops. By comparison, a state-of-the-art desktop computer clocks about 0.01 teraflops.

“The supercomputer transition is already well underway,” said Bob Maxson, a former hurricane-hunting pilot on the weather service’s Gulfstream airplanes, and now director of the Aviation Weather Center in Kansas City, MO. “This huge increase in computing power will be revolutionary in predicting critical nuances of aviation weather vital to pilots and other aviation users.”

The upgrades will be installed in stages between now and 2015.

Thunderstorm forecasts will see the first improvements. Rather than describing the likelihood of convective activity in a general area, forecasts will name specific locations where thunderstorms will form, provide a realistic prediction where holes may be in lines of thunderstorms that haven’t yet formed, heights the storms will attain and more. Such warnings will be available before pilots reach that airspace.

“Speed is where our new computing power will show its strength for aviation users,” said Bruce Carmichael, director of the Aviation Applications Program at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and chair of the Weather Working Group of NBAA’s Access Committee. “It’s best for the short-term forecasts aviation users want.”

Aviation weather forecasts are based on grids of weather data that currently measure 13 kilometers (about 8 statute miles) square, with vertical resolutions of around 2,000 feet, at least close to the ground. Each atmospheric grid “chunk” has four dimensions: height, depth, width and time.

“Years ago, we could analyze only very large horizontal grids of atmosphere perhaps 160 kilometers (100 statute miles) square, with maybe only a dozen vertical sections,” Carmichael said. “That’s a very coarse net, so you only catch the biggest fish, or weather phenomena. If you want to catch smaller fish, you have to use a smaller mesh, and for really small fish, you have to use a very fine mesh net.”

The coming aviation weather forecasts will be using the very fine net. A recent program called the High Resolution Rapid Refresh model uses a 3 kilometer-square grid (about 2 statute miles) range and will eventually reach a size of just 1 kilometer, or 0.6 of a statute mile.

For each grid chunk the computer applies all known physical processes including air motion, how water changes state, how the air interacts with the ground and ocean and more. Better forecasts come from smaller chunks, but more chunks increase exponentially the number of calculations required, and the current 80 teraflops of the NWS computer system aren’t sufficient.

The upgrades are the result of congressional concern that European weather models quickly and correctly predicted Hurricane Sandy’s unusual westward turn last October while NWS computers were still grinding away. Congress set aside $25 million for computer upgrades as part of an overall $309.7 million NOAA appropriation for other Sandy-related forecasting improvements such as improved ocean observing and coastal monitoring.

“Even in times of thin budgets, Congress has recognized the importance of providing tools for producing excellent weather forecasts for every citizen of this country,” said Maxson.

FMI: www.weather.gov/

Advertisement

More News

Airborne 11.05.25: Tesla Flying Car?, Jepp/ForeFlight Sold, A220 Troubles

Also: AFE25 Tickets!, Jamaica Recovery, E-Aircraft at Boeing Fld, Diamond DA50 RG Cert Elon Musk is once again promising the impossible…this time, in the form of a Tesla tha>[...]

Airborne 11.07.25: Affordable Expo Starts!, Duffy Worries, Isaacman!

Also: Louisville UPS Crash Aftermath, Taiwan Boosts Pilot Pool, Spartan Acquires, DON’T MISS the MOSAIC Town Hall! This three-day Affordable Flying Expo brings together indoo>[...]

Aero-News: Quote of the Day (11.05.25)

“Our strategic partnership with AutoFlight, backed by their substantial technological expertise and tangible advancements in eVTOL airworthiness, represents a significant mil>[...]

ANN's Daily Aero-Linx (11.05.25)

Aero Linx: British Gliding Association (BGA) The British Gliding Association is the governing body for the sport of gliding in the UK and members are the 76 clubs that provide glid>[...]

NTSB Prelim: Cirrus Design Corp SR22

While Descending Toward ASN, He Advanced The Throttle, But The Engine Did Not Respond On October 2, 2025, at 1126 central daylight time, a Cirrus SR22, N812SE, was substantially da>[...]

blog comments powered by Disqus



Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

Advertisement

© 2007 - 2025 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC