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Dive into the research topics where Kirk L. Clawson is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirk L. Clawson.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2007

THE PENTAGON SHIELD FIELD PROGRAM Toward Critical Infrastructure Protection

Thomas T. Warner; Paul Benda; Scott P. Swerdlin; Jason C. Knievel; Edward Argenta; Bryan Aronian; Ben B. Balsley; James F. Bowers; Roger G. Carter; Pamela Clark; Kirk L. Clawson; Jeff Copeland; Andrew Crook; Rod Frehlich; Michael L. Jensen; Yubao Liu; Shane D. Mayor; Yannick Meillier; Bruce Morley; Robert Sharman; Scott M. Spuler; Donald Storwold; Juanzhen Sun; Jeffrey Weil; Mei Xu; Alan Yates; Ying Zhang

The Pentagon, and its 25,000+ occupants, represents a likely target for a future terrorist attack using chemical, biological, or radiological material released into the atmosphere. Motivated by this, a building-protection system, called Pentagon Shield, is being developed and deployed by a number of government, academic, and private organizations. The system consists of a variety of data-assimilation and forecast models that resolve processes from the mesoscale to the city scale to the building scale, and assimilate meteorological and contaminant data that are measured by remote and in situ sensors. This paper reports on a field program that took place in 2004 in the area of the Pentagon, where the aim was to provide meteorological data and concentration data from tracer releases, and to support the development and evaluation of the system. In particular, the results of the field program are being used to improve our understanding of urban meteorological processes, verify the overall effectiveness of the ...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

The Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP): A Public–Private Partnership Addressing Wind Energy Forecast Needs

James M. Wilczak; Cathy Finley; Jeff Freedman; Joel Cline; Laura Bianco; Joseph B. Olson; Irina V. Djalalova; Lindsay Sheridan; Mark Ahlstrom; John Manobianco; John Zack; Jacob R. Carley; Stan Benjamin; Richard L. Coulter; Larry K. Berg; Jeffrey D. Mirocha; Kirk L. Clawson; Edward Natenberg; Melinda Marquis

AbstractThe Wind Forecast Improvement Project (WFIP) is a public–private research program, the goal of which is to improve the accuracy of short-term (0–6 h) wind power forecasts for the wind energy industry. WFIP was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), with partners that included the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), private forecasting companies (WindLogics and AWS Truepower), DOE national laboratories, grid operators, and universities. WFIP employed two avenues for improving wind power forecasts: first, through the collection of special observations to be assimilated into forecast models and, second, by upgrading NWP forecast models and ensembles. The new observations were collected during concurrent year-long field campaigns in two high wind energy resource areas of the United States (the upper Great Plains and Texas) and included 12 wind profiling radars, 12 sodars, several lidars and surface flux stations, 184 instrumented tall towers, and over 400 nacelle anemome...


Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2008

Plume Dispersion Anomalies in a Nocturnal Urban Boundary Layer in Complex Terrain

Dennis Finn; Kirk L. Clawson; Roger G. Carter; J. D. Rich; K Jerry Allwine

Abstract The URBAN 2000 experiments were conducted in the complex urban and topographical terrain in Salt Lake City, Utah, in stable nighttime conditions. Unexpected plume dispersion often arose because of the interaction of complex terrain and mountain–valley flow dynamics, drainage flows, synoptic influences, and urban canopy effects, all within a nocturnal boundary layer. It was found that plume dispersion was strongly influenced by topography, that dispersion can be significantly different than what might be expected based upon the available wind data, and that it is problematic to rely on any one urban-area wind measurement to predict or anticipate dispersion. Small-scale flows can be very important in dispersion, and their interaction with the larger-scale flow field needs to be carefully considered. Some of the anomalies observed include extremely slow dispersion, complicated recirculation dispersion patterns in which plume transport was in directions opposed to the measured winds, and flow decoupl...


Atmospheric Environment | 2010

Tracer Studies to Characterize the Effects of Roadside Noise Barriers on Near-road Pollutant Dispersion Under Varying Atmospheric Stability Conditions

Dennis Finn; Kirk L. Clawson; Roger G. Carter; J. D. Rich; Richard M. Eckman; Steven G. Perry; Vlad Isakov; David K. Heist


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2004

Winter CO 2 fluxes above sagebrush-steppe ecosystems in Idaho and Oregon

Tagir G. Gilmanov; Douglas A. Johnson; Nicanor Z. Saliendra; Tony J. Svejcar; Ray Angell; Kirk L. Clawson


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2010

Analysis of Urban Atmosphere Plume Concentration Fluctuations

Dennis Finn; Kirk L. Clawson; Roger G. Carter; J. D. Rich; Chris Biltoft; Martin Leach


Seventh Conference on Coastal Atmospheric and Oceanic Prediction and Processes joint with the Seventh Symposium on the Urban Environment (10-13 September 2007) | 2007

Urban Dispersion Program: Urban Measurements Applied to Emergency Response

K Jerry Allwine; Kirk L. Clawson; Julia E. Flaherty; John H. Heiser; Rayford P. Hosker; Martin Leach; Leo W. stockham


Archive | 2006

Retention of Tracer Gas from Instantaneous Releases of SF6 in an Urban Environment

J. C. Doran; K Jerry Allwine; Kirk L. Clawson; Roger G. Carter


Archive | 2001

MDIFF transport and diffusion models

J. F. Sagendorf; Roger G. Carter; Kirk L. Clawson


Archive | 2015

Project SageBrush phase 1

Dennis D. Finn; Kirk L. Clawson; Richard M. Eckman; Roger G. Carter; J. D. Rich; T. W. Strong; S. A. Beard; B. R. Reese; D. Davis; Hailong Liu; E. Russell; Z. Gao; Steve Brooks

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Roger G. Carter

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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J. D. Rich

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Richard M. Eckman

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Dennis Finn

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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K Jerry Allwine

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jeffrey Weil

University of Colorado Boulder

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Martin Leach

San Jose State University

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Michael L. Jensen

University of Colorado Boulder

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Shane D. Mayor

California State University

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Andrew Crook

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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