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Earth Observing Laboratory
Field Data Archive

MIST: Microburst and Severe Thunderstorm Experiment

Summary

Project MIST involved fourty-one PAMII stations arranged in a dense cluster around the Huntsville, Alabama airport during June and July, 1986. The full PAM field base was deployed with one of the doppler radars, and an aircraft tracking system, and served as the operational headquarters. The experiment targeted the study of microburst and severe thunderstorm activity, particularly as it applied to airport operations, and aircraft safety. PAM-II stations sampled data on one-minute intervals, and transmitted messages every three minutes: both a maximum utilization of the system's capacity over the GOES telemetry link. Special sensing included an extension of the GALE rain gauge network and humicap devices. All three radiars, CP-2, CP-3 and CP-4 were operating.  MIST was included in the Cooperative Huntsville Meterological Experiment (COHMEX).

Data access

Datasets from this project

Additional information

Related links

Temporal coverage

Begin Date 1986-05-25 00:00:00
End Date 1986-07-31 23:59:59

Spatial coverage


Map data from IBCSO, IBCAO, and Global Topography.

Maximum (North) Latitude: 35.00, Minimum (South) Latitude: 34.00
Minimum (West) Longitude: -87.00, Maximum (East) Longitude: -86.00

NSF

This material is based upon work supported by the NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research, a major facility sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation and managed by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.