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Second Wind: Extending the official wind gust records with citizen science observations
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<p>Extreme wind gusts have severe socio-economic impacts, so any source of extra information on this variable is invaluable for mitigating associated damages and<br />protecting vulnerable communities. Unfortunately, networks of ocial measurement stations are limited in their ability to observe wind gusts. Official stations<br />are separated by vast distances, so extreme wind gusts often go unobserved due to the highly localised nature of these events. A wealth of additional observa-<br />tions is available from personal weather stations (PWSs) and could be used in combination with official observations to observe extreme gust events. However,<br />concerns about underlying data quality have to date prevented the usage of gust data from PWSs.</p>
<p>Research for other meteorological variables has demonstrated that with appropriate quality control PWSs can contribute high-quality observations that complement ocial measurements. It is well known that PWSs can provide useful and reliable temperature and precipitation observations. For crowd-sourced wind variables, the situation is more dicult. Crowd-sourced wind observations have di erent sources of error that pose signi cant challenges to quality control. For example, instrumentation is non-standard which results in di erent sensor sensitivities, and non-standard station placements introduce severe spatial in-consistencies and result in censoring of low wind speeds. Chen et al. (2021) recently developed a&#160; exible approach to quality control and bias adjustment (QC/BA) that addresses this for wind speeds. They incorporate QC steps for official stations and develop new QC/BA steps to address the novel challenges posed by crowd-sourced data. Chen et al. (2021) showed after QC/BA, the wind speed climatology of a network of PWSs matched well with the climatology of ocial stations, and the wind speed variability between PWSs was similar to that of official&#160; tations. Additionally, subsequent analysis has shown that the quality controlled and bias adjusted data from PWSs is able to detect small scale extreme wind speeds&#160; ssociated with thunderstorms, that were not observed at official stations. No attempt has yet been made to quality control crowd-sourced observations of wind gusts&#160; espite how impractical it is to obtain widespread observations of wind gusts using standard techniques.</p>
<p>In this project we will develop the necessary methods and software for the QC/BA of wind gusts. As part of this, we will develop inter-variable consistency checks between crowd-sourced wind speeds, wind gusts and wind directions. We will also produce an open-source, high-quality wind gust data set from PWSs that can be used to improve forecasts, warnings, and veri cation of extreme gusts.</p>
<p><strong>References</strong></p>
<p>Chen, J., Saunders, K. & Whan, K. (2021), `Quality control and bias correction of citizen science wind observations', <em>Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteo-</em><br /><em>rological Society (under review) </em>.</p>
Title: Second Wind: Extending the official wind gust records with citizen science observations
Description:
<p>Extreme wind gusts have severe socio-economic impacts, so any source of extra information on this variable is invaluable for mitigating associated damages and<br />protecting vulnerable communities.
Unfortunately, networks of ocial measurement stations are limited in their ability to observe wind gusts.
Official stations<br />are separated by vast distances, so extreme wind gusts often go unobserved due to the highly localised nature of these events.
A wealth of additional observa-<br />tions is available from personal weather stations (PWSs) and could be used in combination with official observations to observe extreme gust events.
However,<br />concerns about underlying data quality have to date prevented the usage of gust data from PWSs.
</p>
<p>Research for other meteorological variables has demonstrated that with appropriate quality control PWSs can contribute high-quality observations that complement ocial measurements.
It is well known that PWSs can provide useful and reliable temperature and precipitation observations.
For crowd-sourced wind variables, the situation is more dicult.
Crowd-sourced wind observations have di erent sources of error that pose signi cant challenges to quality control.
For example, instrumentation is non-standard which results in di erent sensor sensitivities, and non-standard station placements introduce severe spatial in-consistencies and result in censoring of low wind speeds.
Chen et al.
(2021) recently developed a&#160; exible approach to quality control and bias adjustment (QC/BA) that addresses this for wind speeds.
They incorporate QC steps for official stations and develop new QC/BA steps to address the novel challenges posed by crowd-sourced data.
Chen et al.
(2021) showed after QC/BA, the wind speed climatology of a network of PWSs matched well with the climatology of ocial stations, and the wind speed variability between PWSs was similar to that of official&#160; tations.
Additionally, subsequent analysis has shown that the quality controlled and bias adjusted data from PWSs is able to detect small scale extreme wind speeds&#160; ssociated with thunderstorms, that were not observed at official stations.
No attempt has yet been made to quality control crowd-sourced observations of wind gusts&#160; espite how impractical it is to obtain widespread observations of wind gusts using standard techniques.
</p>
<p>In this project we will develop the necessary methods and software for the QC/BA of wind gusts.
As part of this, we will develop inter-variable consistency checks between crowd-sourced wind speeds, wind gusts and wind directions.
We will also produce an open-source, high-quality wind gust data set from PWSs that can be used to improve forecasts, warnings, and veri cation of extreme gusts.
</p>
<p><strong>References</strong></p>
<p>Chen, J.
, Saunders, K.
& Whan, K.
(2021), `Quality control and bias correction of citizen science wind observations', <em>Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteo-</em><br /><em>rological Society (under review) </em>.
</p>.
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