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WMO/TECO 20051 Functional Testing of Surface Weather Instruments and Systems - Rodica Nitu Meteorological Service of Canada
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WMO/TECO 20052 Summary Principles Test facilities Current projects
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WMO/TECO 20053 Quality Meteorological Data performance of measurement of the instruments (accuracy, resolution, response time, etc); variability of measurement within a network; changes in the data sets when using sensors with different operating principles to measure the same weather element; how well a sensor operates in the specific environmental and climatological conditions, across the network?
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WMO/TECO 20054 Functional testing The testing in the outdoor, natural environment where instruments are expected to operate over a wide variety of meteorological conditions and climatic regimes. (WMO, Guide#8) Goals: Data quality System reliability
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WMO/TECO 20055 Challenges Canadian territory: vast size; Canadian climate: variable and diverse; Meteorological equipment – rarely approaches a commodity definition.
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WMO/TECO 20056 Challenges Monitoring programs are major capital expenditures and the procurement decisions require sound information. Purchases take place within the Government of Canada procurement system which is highly structured, process-bound.
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WMO/TECO 20057 Canadian Weather Monitoring Networks In Canada the meteorological sensors and systems operate in a set of observing networks organized according to the primary purpose of the data collected: Public weather, Aviation, Reference climate, Marine, Upper air.
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WMO/TECO 20058 Reference Climate Network
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WMO/TECO 20059 Canadian Marine Weather Network
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WMO/TECO 200510 Testing Program Fulfills two critical functions: determining the best mix of instruments and methods of observation that will meet data quality needs with optimal cost/performance ratios. developing the knowledge base needed to support an effective life cycle management program – identifying and managing potential risks.
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WMO/TECO 200511 MSC Test Sites St. John’s, Newfoundland: heavy precipitation, high wind speeds, fog, and freezing rain. Iqaluit, Nunavut: arctic conditions such as extreme cold, ice crystals. Egbert, Ontario: continental climate regime. Wiarton, Ontario: heavy snowfall conditions. Bratt’s Lake, Saskatchewan: continental climate. Stony Plain, Alberta: operational testing of upper air systems and radiosondes. Burlington, Ontario: testing marine weather instruments
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WMO/TECO 200512
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WMO/TECO 200513 St. John’s Newfoundland Site of the 1994 WMo intercomparisons of present weather sensors. very active weather; ideal conditions for testing the performance and the performance limits of any meteorological instrument; fog; freezing rainstorms.
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WMO/TECO 200514 After the freezing rainstorm… St. John’s, February 2005
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WMO/TECO 200516 Iqaluit, Nunavut Established in 2004 South-eastern arctic, on Baffin Island. Strong arctic storms with harsh temperatures, strong winds, heavy precipitation, blowing snow, low visibility, freezing rain. Has potential to become a base for major research projects. 2007-2008: Storm Studies in the Arctic project.
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WMO/TECO 200517 Iqaluit 2004
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WMO/TECO 200518 Current Projects reference climate and surface weather networks: wind, pressure, temperature, and humidity sensors; marine weather network: wind and pressure sensors; evaluation of automated systems for Nav Canada and Department of Defense. development of an algorithm for deriving snowfall amount data from snow depth measurements.
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WMO/TECO 200519 Summary Meteorological Service of Canada functional testing program: A quality management system: Data quality System reliability Pragmatic approach to managing users’ expectations.
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WMO/TECO 200520 Questions?
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