1. Future of weather prediction: Thunderstorm near Denver's Front Range radar

    A global look at forecasting's future

    More than 1,000 forecasters, researchers, and other professionals from around the globe will convene in Montréal on August 16–21 for a first-of-a-kind meeting aimed at pooling international thought on where weather prediction is headed. NCAR and UCAR participants are on tap to cover a wide range of promising developments.

    • Weather

    Read Article

  2. Hurricanes, risk, and response: National Guard monitors Key West beach as Hurricane Ike approaches, 9/9/08

    A hurricane by any name

    The perceived gender of a hurricane’s name is just one of many factors potentially shaping how someone reacts to a given storm, according to several scientists at NCAR who take a multifaceted approach to studying hurricane response.

    • Weather

    Read Article

  3. Effects of gravity waves: Noctilucent clouds over Helsinki, Finland, on July 2, 2012

    In search of 60-mile-high waves

    A field project this June and July will study gravity waves, towering atmospheric features little-known to the public. Novel instruments to be deployed for the international DEEPWAVE project, based in New Zealand, will provide an unprecedented view of gravity waves, a major shaper of atmospheric variability at multiple heights.

    • Climate,
    • Weather

    Read Article

  4. Aviation safety: Microburst looms near Denver's Stapleton International Airport, July 6, 1984

    Tornadoes, microbursts, and silver linings

    It takes a sharp eye to find something positive in the wreckage of the worst swarm of U.S. tornadoes on record: the 1974 Jumbo Outbreak. Millions of Americans are safer in the air because of Fujita's subsequent analysis of microbursts and tools developed by NCAR and collaborators.

    • Weather

    Read Article

  5. Damage from California mudslides during 1997–98 El Nino

    El Niño or La Nada?

    Why seasonal forecasting can’t tell us with certainty what to expect this summer—and why we might soon have a stronger sense of what late 2014 and early 2015 are likely to bring to large parts of the globe.

    • Climate,
    • Weather

    Read Article