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A Case Study in Weather Forecasting:
Fog in the Gulf Coast Region
This case is told by Petty Officer Trisha Bednarczk, a forecaster at the NASP METOC. She has been forecasting since 1990, including service at NAS-Dallas, Crete and Baharain,. She has logged over 13,300 hours at forecasting and forecasting-related tasks.
Although this case involves a
typical scenario of advective fog in the Gulf Coast region, is shows how even
the "typical" scenario can involve variations on a theme. It also shows how forecasting can be
difficult, not just because the uncertainties inherent in the weather, but also
because of the many responsibilities of the METOC forecaster. This Case also serves as an excellent
illustration of local heuristic rules, rules that go beyond what is taught in
the Schoolhouse, including rules that may be of a kind that might be totally
unexpected.
Event and Comments
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Event type
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February
or early March, 1993.
NAS-Dallas
Daywatch,
6:00 AM
I
was AFDO.
We discussed when and whether
the fog would burn off.
There it usually burns off at
about 10:00 - 11:00 AM
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Observation or situation
assessment
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It
was foggy when I came on watch, zero ceiling and zero visibility.
I
couldn't see my car 25 feet away in the parking lot through the front door.
The
fog sets in from a nearby lake.
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Observation or situation
assessment,
Local rules
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Fog is tough to forecast there,
like here at NASP, but it tougher here at NASP.
It can be clear off the Base
and heavy fog here on the Base since it is closer to the water and at a lower
elevation.
What's difficult about NAS
Dallas is the question of when it will lift enough for flying.
I knew I'd be doing dash-1s,
TAFs, and answering the phone.
The Forecaster mainly handled
the fog situation.
I can't way what a less experienced
person might have done.
It takes experience with a full
season to get used to the local weather pattern.
Even if you study the typical
cases and the Forecaster's Handbook.
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Decision
Local rules
Local rules
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Southerly
flow off the Gulf, typical in the transitional regime for early Spring.
Typical
of a foggy day.
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Decision, Local rules
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It
is typical for fog to burn off.
It
depends on the thickness of the fog.
It
can burn off by 11:00 AM, other days you are socked in all day.
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Decision, Local rules
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If we were lucky it would get to 1000 feet by mid
afternoon, but at sunset it would come back down.
It depends on the fog thickness and the cloud cover that
blocks the sunlight that would otherwise burn it off even though the ceiling
might rise.
There are lots of variations on this scenario.
If it is thick and it burns off at 200 feet per hour even
that will not be enough.
The student pilots' attitude
sometimes makes things hectic.
They would only have a couple
of hours to do their stuff if they were to go out early in the day.
It is a rule learned at
C-school.
As temperature drops, ceiling
and visibility drop due to the loss of heating.
But lived experience helps.
You get to know when to put the knowledge to use.
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Decision
Mental workload
Local rules
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But
we stayed at 300 to 500 foot ceilings all day.
A
less experienced person or someone unaware of forecasting always knows to
call other places to ask more experienced people.
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Observation or situation
assessment,
Local knowledge
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By 11:00 AM I knew there was
no way it would burn off
It
hadn't gotten above 500 to 600 feet.
This was a measured
judgment--the tops were at about 3,000 feet.
I
was confident.
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Decision, action
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We knew because the Dallas
airport gets lots of PIREPS.
We
got plenty of PRIEPS from the Dallas-Fort Worth area airfields--7 or 8 of
them, from about 7:00 on
I
was envisioning that it would definitely not burn off.
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Observation or situation
assessment
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We
could tell that from the NWS charts (upper-air charts show the depth of the
cloud layer), and the data from regional soundings, and the climatology.
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Observation or situation
assessment
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A
cold air mass had settled in after frontal passage.
Then
the southerly flow returned from off the Gulf a day or so later.
That
brings up warm air and moisture from the Gulf.
This
is a typical scenario.
This
is covered in basic training in C-school as a case of fog.
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Decision
Local rules
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You
can see the stratus coming up on the GOES imagery.
It
is thick and dark in the infrared (i.e., it is warm because it is at a low
level).
This should be the first thing you look at.
It is taught in the satellite course in C-school.
This takes a bit more experience beyond the coursework,
though, to reach the point where you can do the forecast off of satellite
imagery.
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Observation or situation
assessment
Local rules
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It
was a warm air over a cold air condition, which trapped the fog.
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Decision
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Gulf
moisture was coming up.
There
was southerly flow due to a High pressure center over the Gulf.
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Observation or situation
assessment,
Local rules
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The
base was just high enough to condense the moisture.
Someone
new to that Base wouldn't have known that though the foundation is laid in
C-school.
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Decision,
Local rules
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The
forecasting problem was if and when the ceiling would rise enough for
flights. (F-14s, A-4s.)
This is where experience with
the local pattern is necessary.
You
need to know the local rules.
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Action
Local rules
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Pilots
kept bugging me, the Forecaster, and the FDO, from as soon as the field
opened up, and especially for flights of smaller aircraft that go out later
after the C-9s go out.
"When
is the ceiling going to rise?"
We
kept saying "No way anyone would do air operations."
The
phones rang constantly from early AM when the field opens at 7:00 AM until
early afternoon.
It
gets tedious.
My options were to post a
"Go Away" sign on the door! (laughs), but you just continue
handling the calls.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Action
Mental workload
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Pilots
kept bugging me, the Forecaster, and the FDO, especially during the 8:00 AM-
9:00 Am time period.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Action,
Mental workload
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Guys needed to fly--Army, Air
Force.
And it was midweek so they
were busy.
Army
Reserves want to play for a day.
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Decision
Local knowledge
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At
about 1:00 PM it cleared enough for a while to see the downtown to the
southeast in the early afternoon.
The
downtown is 15 miles away.
If
you could not see the top of a certain building, you knew the ceiling was 800
feet.
You
could see the downtown but only for a little while
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Observation or situation assessment, Decision
Local rules
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We'd
look over the Base towards the downtown hotels, and use the hotels as ceiling
indicators.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Action,
Local rules
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We
knew from the visibility of the hotel
floors what the ceiling was, and when it got up to 800 feet.
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Decision, observation or
situation assessment,
Local rules
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There
were other rules of thumb--if you could not see the tower you knew the
visibility was less than 3/4 of a mile.
You
use what you can.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Decision,
Local rules
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They
kept bugging me so I had to keep monitoring the situation--GOES loop,
celiometer, every 5 to 10 minutes, observations out of the Dallas area
airfields.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Action,
Mental workload
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By
about 10:00 PM I knew no one would fly.
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Decision
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The
situation was difficult because everyone kept bugging us.
Every
day at NAS Dallas, you deal with the USAF, the Navy, Marines, transients,
Drug Interdiction, Reserves doing mid-week flight time, the Coast Guard.
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Decision
Local knowledge
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Takeoffs
needed a certain ceiling for different planes and for different airfields.
For
example, C-9s cannot take off in anything.
Flights
may be able to take off or may not, but they could land elsewhere.
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Local knowledge, Decision
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The Base Operations Officer
kept asking about it.
As soon as it would hit 700
feet he took off.
Then the ceiling came back
down.
Once he got above the mid-deck
and cirrus he was OK.
But
he had to divert to Love Field (about 20 miles north of Dallas) on his way
back.
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Observation or situation
assessment
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By 2:00 PM the situation was
over.
Stuff was shutting down.
Even if they took off they
couldn't fly back in or into other fields in the region.
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Observation or situation
assessment, Decision
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Analysis
You use what you can.
For
instance, in Suda Bay there were two mountain ranges in the distance at
different elevations.
You could tell from how far
down in elevation the snow was falling by using the mountain ranges as a
ruler.
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Decision Requirements
Cues and
Variables
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Fog forecasting involves
forecasting whether fog (ceiling and visibility) will lift and when. There are many variations on the basic fog
forecasting scenario in the Gulf region.
Key data are Pilot Reports, local soundings, upper-air analysis, and
GOES imagery.
·
"We knew because the Dallas airport gets lots of
PIREPS. We got plenty of PRIEPS from the Dallas-Fort Worth area airfields--7
or 8 of them."
·
"We could tell that from the NWS charts
(upper-air charts show the depth of the cloud layer), and the data from
regional soundings, and the climatology."
·
"You can see the stratus coming up on the GOES
imagery. It is thick and dark in the infrared (i.e., it is warm because it is
at a low level)."
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Needed
information
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Local
Heuristics. Local rules are often
critical, and represent a knowledge that comes only from experience and
learning from the local experts.
·
"It is typical for fog to burn off. It depends
on the thickness of the fog."
·
"Southerly flow off the Gulf is typical in the
transitional regime for early Spring."
·
"A cold air mass had settled in after frontal
passage. Then the southerly flow
returned from off the Gulf a day or so later. That brings up warm air and
moisture from the Gulf. This is a typical scenario."
·
"The base was just high enough to condense the
moisture."
·
"Someone new to that Base wouldn't have known
that, though the foundation is laid in C-school."
Rules
Of Thumb Sometimes Involve The
Unexpected.
·
"The downtown is 15 miles away. If you could not
see the top of a certain building, you knew the ceiling was 800 feet. You
could see the downtown but only for a little while in the early afternoon.
We'd look over the Base towards the downtown hotels, and use the hotels as
ceiling indicators. We knew from the
visibility of the hotel floors what the ceiling was, and when it got up to
800 feet. There were other rules of thumb--if you could not see the tower you
knew the visibility was less than 3/4 of a mile."
Training
for Fog Forecasting
·
"It is a rule learned at C-school. As
temperature drops, ceiling and visibility drop due to the loss of
heating."
·
"This is covered in basic training in C-school
as a case of fog."
·
[Stratus in GOES] should be the first thing you look
at. It is taught in the satellite course in C-school."
Experience
Beyond Training
·
"A less experienced person or someone unaware of
forecasting always knows to call other places to ask more experienced
people."
·
"Lived experience helps. You get to know when
to put the knowledge to use.
|
|
Local
Knowledge
·
"And it was midweek so they were busy. Army
Reserves want to play for a day."
·
"Every day at NAS Dallas, you deal with the
USAF, the Navy, Marines, transients, Drug Interdiction, Reserves doing
mid-week flight time, the Coast Guard."
·
"Takeoffs needed a certain ceiling for different
planes and for different airfields. For example, C-9s cannot take off in
anything. Flights may be able to take off or may not, but they could land
elsewhere."
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Hypotheticals
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Fog forecasting always involves hypothetical reasoning,
and requires the forecaster to be comfortable in uncertain situations.
·
"If we were lucky it would get to 1000 feet by
mid afternoon, but at sunset it would come back down. It depends on the fog
thickness and the cloud cover that blocks the sunlight that would otherwise
burn it off even though the ceiling might rise. There are lots of variations
on this scenario. If it is thick and it burns off at 200 feet per hour even
that will not be enough."
·
"I was envisioning that it would definitely not
burn off."
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Options
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The main option is just to
continue providing information to the clients (se Time/Effort, below).
·
"This was a measured judgment--the tops were at
about 3,000 feet. I was confident."
·
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Rationale
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·
"Fog at NAS-Dallas usually burns off at about
10:00 - 11:00 AM."
·
"Lived experience helps. You get to know when
to put the knowledge to use."
·
"This is where experience with the local pattern
is necessary. You need to know the local rules."
·
"You use what you can."
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Situation
Assessment
|
·
"This takes a bit more experience beyond the
coursework, though, to reach the point where you can do the forecast off of
satellite imagery."
|
Time/effort
|
·
"Fog is tough to forecast there, like here at
NASP, but it tougher here at NASP. It can be clear off the Base and heavy fog
here on the Base since it is closer to the water and at a lower elevation.
What's difficult about NAS Dallas is the question of when it will lift enough
for flying."
·
" The student pilots' attitude sometimes makes
things hectic. It gets tedious."
·
"My options were to post a "Go Away"
sign on the door! (laughs), but you just continue handling the calls."
·
"The situation was difficult because everyone
kept bugging us.
·
Every day at NAS Dallas, you deal with the USAF, the
Navy, Marines, transients, Drug Interdiction, Reserves doing mid-week flight
time, the Coast Guard."
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