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The Convective Hazard Field depicts areas of aviation hazard due to
convective storms. The hazard field is based on WSR-88D National Radar
Mosaics and National Lightning Detection Network (cloud-to-ground) data.
The following pages document the methodology used to calculate the Convective
Hazard Field.
Quality Control - Thresholding radar data based on Echo Tops
The above image is the South-Central zoom of the national mosaic composed from the WSR-88D radars. Single
click on this image to toggle between the radar and echo tops data.
The echo tops data are used to threshold the Vertically Integrated Liquid
Water (VIL) radar data. The VIL data are provided in the NIDS WSR-88D
product stream and are mapped to a national mosaic by UNISYS. The VIL
field is calculated by using an empirical formula to derive liquid water content
from radar reflectivity at each elevation. The data are then integrated
with height to obtain VIL. The VIL data provides information about the
intensity of the storm throughout it's vertical extent as well as providing a
proxy for vertical development.
The
first step in creating the hazard field is to eliminate radar data where the echo tops
are less than 17,000 ft. This step removes ground and Anomalous Propagation (AP)
clutter. AP clutter looks and
moves like real weather but is an artifact of environmental conditions effecting
the radar beam. In addition to clutter removal, thresholding on echo tops
removes
regions of VIL that are not convective. Regions of level 3 (yellow) and higher
are considered an aviation hazard.
To see result of applying an echo tops filter click "Next".
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