NOAA’s Air Resources Laboratory—75 Years of Research Linking Earth and Sky: A Historical Perspective

Author:

Stein Ariel F.1,Hicks Bruce B.2,Myles LaToya3,Simon Margaret1

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/Air Resources Laboratory, College Park, Maryland;

2. NOAA/Air Resources Laboratory, Oak Ridge, and MetCorps, Norris, Tennessee;

3. NOAA/Air Resources Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee

Abstract

Abstract For over 75 years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Air Resources Laboratory (NOAA ARL) has been at the forefront of federal meteorological and climate research. As the Special Projects Section (SPS) of the U.S. Weather Bureau (USWB), the laboratory pioneered the development of atmospheric trajectory modeling, initially used in studies related to nuclear weapons following World War II. Model development was guided by observations following weapons tests, assisted by later experiments using a wide variety of atmospheric tracers. Today’s familiar Gaussian plume dispersion model, previously in nascent form, was developed and promoted with ARL research, as was the much later and widely used HYSPLIT model. Much of ARL’s early research was focused on the challenges presented by the complex terrain surrounding nuclear installations, often addressed with high-spatial-resolution meteorological measurements, atmospheric tracers, and site-specific models. ARL has since extended boundary layer research to increasingly complex landscapes, such as forests, agricultural lands, and urban areas, and has expanded its research scope to air quality, weather, and climate applications based on the knowledge and experience developed throughout its long history. Examples of these research endeavors include the establishment of the U.S. Climate Reference Network, fundamental contributions to the development of the National Air Quality Forecast Capability, and foundational participation in the National Atmospheric Deposition Program. ARL looks forward to continuing to refine scientific understanding from field experiments, including coupling ground-based experimentation with modeling, and sustained observations, in order to facilitate the transfer of knowledge into practical applications of societal relevance.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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