IEM Daily Feature
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Unreliable Dew Points
Posted: 21 Jul 2011 12:33 AM
Our recent stretch of extremely hot and muggy weather has gotten Iowa
a bit of publicity as some of our automated stations have calculated
heat indexes that exceeded 130 degrees! Typically, this is blamed on
the abundant transpiring corn crop in the state, but that is not the
entire story. The primary source of automated weather data in the
state are located at airports, but there are two classes of
instruments. The federally administered ASOS sites have higher
quality and sometimes different sensors than their state run AWOS
counterparts. Unfortunately, their data is typically thrown together
in the same pot and reported as such. While the ASOS sites did
indicate gaudy heat indexes exceeding 110 at times, they were not as
high as the AWOS sites which got all the headlines. The featured
chart presents a comparison of an ASOS and AWOS site separated by 30
some miles and both surrounded by farm fields. The bottom plot raises
the most doubt as even while visibilities were at 2-4 miles, relative
humidity was just 75% at the AWOS site and near 100% at the ASOS site.
This is probably an indication that the AWOS air temperature has a
warm bias. The second plot shows another issue of having the AWOS dew
point rise dramatically during the morning hours at a much higher rate
than the ASOS site. It is hard to imagine a natural process that
could be putting that much water into the atmosphere in the early
morning hours. The first plot of the ASOS site shows a reasonable
depiction of transpiring corn (slowly rising dew point throughout the
day peaking late afternoon coinciding with plant transpiration), but
the dew point temperature barely gets to 80 degrees which keeps the
calculated heat index at reasonable values. The moral of the story is
that not all automated sensors are alike and while heat indexes over
110 surely were felt in Iowa these past days, the high end values over
120 are questionable.
Voting:
Good = 54
Bad = 5
Tags: awos heatindex dewpoint
Voting:
Good = 54
Bad = 5
Tags: awos heatindex dewpoint