Difference between revisions of "Storing soundings in SPDB"
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=== '''TTAA/TTBB''' === | === '''TTAA/TTBB''' === | ||
+ | [http://weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/sounding.html University of Wyoming soundings]. | ||
+ | [https://meteor.geol.iastate.edu/classes/mt311/extras/Codul-TEMP.pdf TTAA/TTBB format]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | `NWSsoundingIngest -params NWSsoundingIngest.test -debug -f /path/to/data/NWS_soundings/20210101_000000.denver_soundings.txt` | ||
+ | `SpdbQuery -url /path/to/data/NWS_soundings/spdb -mode interval -start "2021 01 01 00 00 00" -end "2021 02 01 00 00 00"` | ||
+ | |||
+ | In the RadxPid params files the PID_sounding_location_name would be set as "72469", the Denver station ID. (In Mdv2SoundingSpdb.gfs, set with $(RADAR)) | ||
=== '''Other applications''' === | === '''Other applications''' === |
Revision as of 00:45, 11 February 2021
Overview
Thermodynamic soundings are important in RadxPid because temperature helps distinguish between liquid and frozen hydrometeors. Soundings can be ingested into RadxPid in three ways:
- entered manually in the PID thresholds file - only one sounding is allowed.
- estimated from model output (Grib2toMdv, Mdv2SoundingSpdb) - this is the preferred method.
- observed sounding downloaded and converted from native format to SPDB - described below.
The second and third method both require data or output to be converted to an SPDB database file, which is a non-gridded file. This page describes how to convert Grib2 and TTAA/TTBB files to SPDB.
Model Output
TTAA/TTBB
University of Wyoming soundings.
`NWSsoundingIngest -params NWSsoundingIngest.test -debug -f /path/to/data/NWS_soundings/20210101_000000.denver_soundings.txt`
`SpdbQuery -url /path/to/data/NWS_soundings/spdb -mode interval -start "2021 01 01 00 00 00" -end "2021 02 01 00 00 00"`
In the RadxPid params files the PID_sounding_location_name would be set as "72469", the Denver station ID. (In Mdv2SoundingSpdb.gfs, set with $(RADAR))