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IBM Research
  Current Deep Thunder Forecasts

Welcome to the IBM Deep Thunder Operational Weather Forecasting Sites

The goal of this project is to enable reliable, affordable, high-resolution numerical weather prediction for a variety of applications.  One part of this effort is to generate such forecasts on both an operational and experimental basis and evaluate the results.  In particular, forecasts are regularly produced for several metropolitan areas in the United States (e.g., New York, Chicago, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Orlando, Miami, San Diego, San Francisco, Albany, Austin, San Antonio, Baltimore and Washington).  The results are available via a number of web pages, focused on different aspects of how they may be used.  You can see these forecast products by visiting the sites as outlined below.


Main page for New York


Generic images and animations

Prototype applications for ConEd

Operational applications for ConEd Bronx-Westchester

Products oriented toward airport terminal operations

Westchester County, NY

IBM Yorktown site operations

IBM Somers site operations

Prototype road weather applications for New York State

Products oriented toward meteorological analysis


Surface and upper air wind forecast products oriented toward homeland security applications

New York, NY and Newark, NJ

New York Stock Exchange

Downtown Newark, NJ

Westchester County, NY

Indian Point Energy Center, Buchanan, NY


Main page for Philadelphia, PA


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering most of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York, and all of Delaware and New Jersey

Prototype applications for Exelon/PECO


Main page for expanded Chicago, IL area


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering all of Illinois and parts of Iowa, Missouri, Indiana and Michigan

Prototype applications for Exelon/ComEd

Prototype applications for the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District for Greater Chicago


Main page for Chicago, IL



Main page for Kansas City, MO


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering eastern Kansas, western Missouri, and parts of Nebraska, Iowa and Oklahoma


Main page for Washington, DC and Baltimore, MD


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering all of Maryland and Delaware, most of Pennsylvania, Virginia, and New Jersey, and part of West Virginia

Intermediate and high-resolution forecast products oriented toward meteorological analysis


Main page for Atlanta, GA


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina and North Carolina


Main page for Miami/Fort Lauderdale, FL


Intermediate resolution forecast page covering southern Florida


Main page for Orlando, FL



Main page for western Massachusetts, eastern New York, southwestern Vermont and southwestern New Hampshire



Main page for Austin and San Antonio, TX



The image below places many of these forecasts in a geographic context, which shows a map of the eastern two-thirds of the continental United States.  On the map are two regions associated with many of the aforementioned metropolitan areas.  They correspond to the two, innermost of the triply nested, multiple resolution forecasting domains used to produce each high-resolution weather forecast.  The intermediate nests are in red and the inner nests are in white.  The areas within the red borders are covered at 8 km resolution for Kansas City, Chicago, Atlanta and Baltimore/Washington; 7 km for Orlando; 6 km for eastern New York and western Massachusetts, and Austin/San Antonio and Miami-Fort Lauderdale; and 4 km resolution for New York.  The areas within the white borders are covered at 2.33 km for Orlando; 2 km resolution for Kansas City, Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore/Washington, eastern New York and western Massachusetts, and Austin/San Antonio; 1.5 km for Miami-Fort Lauderdale and 1 km resolution for New York. 


Main page for San Diego, CA (occasional, experimental forecasts at 1 km resolution)


Main page for San Francisco, CA (occasional, experimental forecasts at 1.25 km resolution)


You can learn more about this technology, relevant data and weather forecasting, at the following sites:

Learn More about These Forecasts
 

Learn More about Deep Thunder
 

Learn More about how Deep Thunder Visualizes the Data Generated by the Weather Model
 


This web site provides visual representations of these forecasts on an experimental near-real-time basis.  These visualizations are provided as-is with no guarantee as to their quality or reliability.  IBM bears no responsibility or liability concerning the accuracy or availability of these visualizations as their production depends on many external factors.  Although they are provided without direct interpretation, the underlying forecasts and the visualizations will continue to evolve in an effort to refine the technology, usability and the science as well as to understand their potential value for both businesses and consumers.

lloydt@us.ibm.com


  
 
  

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