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Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research
1315 East-West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-713-2458

noaa research in your state state name

NOAA Strategic Goal: Climate Variability and Change

Climate Observations and Services Program
Climate Reference Network

ID-1, 2 (Murphy, Arco)

NOAA is installing the U. S. Climate Reference Network across the country, to measure weather and climate. About 110 stations are envisioned for the network and more than 80 stations are presently operating in 40 states, including Idaho. The network is intended to operate for many decades, providing highly accurate and well-documented measurements of key variables such as air temperature and precipitation. Data is used operationally to put climate anomalies into historical perspective and to detect climate change. The effort is supported by the NOAA Research Climate Observation and Services Program and the Air Resources Laboratory, which designed the stations and has been assembling, calibrating, deploying, and maintaining the network sites in collaboration with NOAA’s National Environmental Satellite and Data Information Service. A list of the operational sites and links to their data are available at this URL: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/crn/hourly.

General website: www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/uscrn


Earth System Research Laboratory
Experimental Seasonal Fire Danger Outlook

ID-1, 2 (Boise and Statewide)

NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) contributes to the seasonal fire danger outlook, a new climate decision-support tool used by the National Interagency Coordination Center in Boise to make proactive short- and long-range decisions for strategy development and resource allocation, and to improve efficiency and firefighter safety. ESRL contributes to developing a consensus seasonal forecast and other products for the fire season which are used in the seasonal fire danger outlook for Idaho and other states.

General website: http://www.cdc.noaa.gov


NOAA Strategic Goal: Weather and Air Quality

Air Resources Laboratory
Air Research Laboratory Field Research Division

ID-2 (Idaho Falls)

The Field Research Division of the Air Resources Laboratory supports the Department of Energy Idaho Falls facility and conducts atmospheric transport and diffusion field programs around the country in support of federal, state, and local environmental air quality programs, and support for homeland security issues. For additional information on the Idaho Falls facility, please contact: http://www.noaa.inel.gov/




Earth System Research Laboratory
Operational Systems for Weather Forecasting

ID-2, 2 (Boise, Pocatello)

Computer systems developed by the NOAA Research Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) are in operation at all NOAA National Weather Service (NWS) field offices, two of which are located in Idaho. ESRL has been the prime developer of the data ingest and display components of the NWS weather display and text generation system known as AWIPS (Advanced Weather Information Processing System). This system integrates meteorological, hydrological, satellite, and radar data. ESRL also developed the Interactive Forecast Preparation System Graphical Forecast Editor, a system that allows forecasters to display and manipulate forecast depictions of sensible weather (temperature, wind, precipitation, etc.), and use these to generate text and graphical forecasts for the public and other customers. NWS field offices are using this system to produce gridded forecast products, which allows forecasters to convey more information to the customers than they did in the past.

General website: http://onestop.noaa3.awips.noaa.gov/onestop/what_is_awips.htm
General website: http://www-md.fsl.noaa.gov/eft/



NOAA building in Silver Spring