Burpee, R. W., S. J. Lord, J. L. Franklin, R. E. Tuleya, and S. D. Aberson,
1997: The impact of Omega dropwindsondes on operational hurricane track
forecast models. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society,
77(5), 925-933.
Abstract: Since 1982, the Hurricane Research Division (HRD) has
conducted a series of experiments with research aircraft to enhance the
number of observations in the environment and the core of hurricanes threatening
the United States. During these experiments, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration WP-3D aircraft crews release Omega dropwindsondes (ODWs)
at 15-20 min. intervals along the flight track to obtain profiles of wind,
temperature, and humidity between flight level and the sea surface. Data
from the ODWs are transmitted back to the aircraft and then sent via satellite
to the Tropical Prediction Center and the National Centers for Environmental
Prediction (NCEP), where the observations become part of the operational
database.
This paper tests the hypothesis that additional observations improve the
objective track forecast models that provide operational guidance to the
hurricane forecasters. The testing evaluates differences in forecast tracks
from models run with and without the ODW data in a research mode at HRD,
NCEP, and the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. The middle- and lower-tropospheric
ODW data produce statistically significant reductions in 12-60-h mean forecast
errors. The error reductions, which range from 16% to 30%, are at least
as large as the accumulated improvement in operational forecasts achieved
over the last 20-25 years. This breakthrough provides strong experimental
evidence that more comprehensive observations in the hurricane environment
and core will lead to immediate improvements in operational forecast guidance.