Winter Icing and Storms Project, 2004
The 2004 Winter Icing and Storms Project, or WISP-04, sought to understand how
hazardous in-flight icing conditions form within clouds, and how we can remotely
detect those conditions. In-flight icing occurs when an aircraft flies through
super-cooled liquid cloud drops. WISP-04 ran from February 15th through March 31st, 2004.
The NOAA Environmental Technology Laboratory (ETL) deployed its
Ground-based Remote Icing Detection System
(GRIDS) at a field site near Erie, Colorado, which is approximately
35 km northwest of Denver. GRIDS combines a very sensitive, polarimetric
Doppler cloud radar with a microwave radiometer and temperature
profile information from the NOAA Rapid Update Cycle analysis, to find
liquid within clouds and determine if it is super-cooled liquid.
NOAA-ETL collaborated with the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and
the
University of North Dakota. NCAR employed a dual-frequency radar system, balloons
and computerized icing forecast tools, whereas UND flew their Citation aircraft to provide
in-situ confirmation of cloud conditions.
WISP-04 followed closely on the heals of the second Alliance Icing
Research Study (AIRS-II), which was held from November 3 through
December 12th, 2003 in Montreal Canada. Though larger in scope than WISP-04,
AIRS-II shared similar objectives. More information can be found at the
AIRS-II site.
The Environmental Technology Laboratory's participation in WISP-04 is
sponsored by the
FAA Aviation Weather Research Program.
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