Title of article :
The GOES-R Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM)
Author/Authors :
Goodman، نويسنده , , Steven J. and Blakeslee، نويسنده , , Richard J. and Koshak، نويسنده , , William J. and Mach، نويسنده , , Douglas A. Bailey، نويسنده , , Jeffrey and Buechler، نويسنده , , Dennis and Carey، نويسنده , , Larry and Schultz، نويسنده , , Chris and Bateman، نويسنده , , Monte and McCaul Jr.، نويسنده , , Eugene and Stano، نويسنده , , Geoffrey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
16
From page :
34
To page :
49
Abstract :
The Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite R-series (GOES-R) is the next block of four satellites to follow the existing GOES constellation currently operating over the Western Hemisphere. Advanced spacecraft and instrument technology will support expanded detection of environmental phenomena, resulting in more timely and accurate forecasts and warnings. Advancements over current GOES capabilities include a new capability for total lightning detection (cloud and cloud-to-ground flashes) from the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM), and improved cloud and moisture imagery with the 16-channel Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI). The GLM will map total lightning activity continuously day and night with near-uniform storm-scale spatial resolution of 8 km with a product refresh rate of less than 20 s over the Americas and adjacent oceanic regions in the western hemisphere. This will aid in forecasting severe storms and tornado activity, and convective weather impacts on aviation safety and efficiency. In parallel with the instrument development, an Algorithm Working Group (AWG) Lightning Detection Science and Applications Team developed the Level 2 (stroke and flash) algorithms from the Level 1 lightning event (pixel level) data. Proxy data sets used to develop the GLM operational algorithms as well as cal/val performance monitoring tools were derived from the NASA Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS) and Optical Transient Detector (OTD) instruments in low Earth orbit, and from ground-based lightning networks and intensive prelaunch field campaigns. The GLM will produce the same or similar lightning flash attributes provided by the LIS and OTD, and thus extend their combined climatology over the western hemisphere into the coming decades. Science and application development along with preoperational product demonstrations and evaluations at NWS forecast offices and NOAA testbeds will prepare the forecasters to use GLM as soon as possible after the planned launch and checkout of GOES-R in late 2015. New applications will use GLM alone, in combination with the ABI, or integrated (fused) with other available tools (weather radar and ground strike networks, nowcasting systems, mesoscale analysis, and numerical weather prediction models) in the hands of the forecaster responsible for issuing more timely and accurate forecasts and warnings.
Keywords :
lightning , thunderstorms , satellite meteorology , Nowcasting
Journal title :
Atmospheric Research
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Atmospheric Research
Record number :
2247687
Link To Document :
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