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Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2008. Lightning-Warning Systems for Use by Airports. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/14192.
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Page 52
Page 53
Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2008. Lightning-Warning Systems for Use by Airports. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/14192.
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Page 53

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

52 1. Glickman, T. S. (ed). Glossary of Meteorology, 2d ed. American Me- teorological Society, Boston, 2000. 2. MacGorman, D. R., and W. D. Rust. The Electrical Nature of Storms. Oxford University Press, NY, 1998. 3. Rakow, V. A., and M. A. Uman. Lightning: Physics and Effects. Cambridge University Press, New York, 2003. 4. Uman, M. A. Lightning. McGraw-Hill, New York, 1969 (reprinted by Dover, 1984). 5. National Weather Service, Southern Region Headquarters. Jetstream: An Online School for Weather. www.srh.noaa.gov/ jetstream/lightning/lightning.htm. Accessed March 14, 2008. 6. National Weather Service Forecast Office. Colorado Lightning Re- source Page. www.crh.noaa.gov/pub/?n=ltg.php. Accessed March 14, 2008. 7. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, Severe Storms Laboratory. A Severe Weather Primer: Questions and An- swers About Lightning. www.nssl.noaa.gov/primer/lightning/ltg_ basics.html. Accessed March 14, 2008. 8. Christian, Hugh J., and Melanie A. McCook. Lightning Detection from Space: A Lightning Primer. Global Hydrology and Climate Center, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Marshall Space Flight Center. thunder.msfc.nasa.gov/primer/. Accessed March 14, 2008. 9. NASA Kennedy Space Center. Lightning Tips. www.nasa.gov/centers/ kennedy/news/lightning_tips.html. Accessed March 14, 2008. 10. National Lightning Safety Institute. Lightning Safety. www. lightningsafety.com/. Accessed March 14, 2008. 11. American Meteorological Society. Lightning Safety Awareness. www. ametsoc.org/policy/lightningpolicy_2002.html. Accessed March 14, 2008. 12. Lankford, T. T. Aviation Weather Handbook. McGraw-Hill, New York, 2001. 13. Griffiths, R. F., and B. Vonnegut. Tape Recorder Photocell Instru- ment for Detecting and Recording Lightning Strokes. Weather, Vol. 30, No. 8, 1975, pp. 254–257. 14. Vonnegut, B., O. H. Vaughan, Jr., M. Brook, and P. Krehbiel. Mesoscale Observations of Lightning from Space Shuttle. Bul- letin of the American Meteorological Society, Vol. 66, No. 1, 1985, pp. 20–29. 15. Beasley, W. H., M. M. Lengyel, L. G. Byerley, E. R. Mansell, R. Jabrzemski, J. W. Conway, and M. Eilts. On the Need for Electric- Field Meters to Support Critical Lightning Hazard-Warning Decision Processes. Conference On Meteorological Applications of Lightning Data, American Meteorological Society, San Diego, 2005, 5 pp. 16. Eisenhawer, S. W., T. F. Bott, and C. R. Odom. Analysis of Opera- tional Data from the Lightning Detection and Warning System at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Conference On Meteorological Applications of Lightning Data, American Meteorological Society, San Diego, 2005, 24 pp. 17. Jerauld, J., V. A. Rakov, M. A. Uman, K. J. Rambo, and D. M. Jordan. An Evaluation of the Performance Characteristics of the U.S. National Lightning Detection Network in Florida using Rocket- Triggered Lightning. Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 110, No. D19 (D19106), 2005, 16 pp. 18. Biagi, C. J., K. L. Cummins, K. E. Kehoe, and E. P. Krider. NLDN Performance in Southern Arizona, Texas and Oklahoma in 2003- 2004. 19th International Lightning Detection Conference, 24 April, Tucson, 2006, 31 pp. 19. Rison, W., and G. P. Chapman. Lightning Protection for High Explosives and Instrumentation Using a Field Mill System. Pro- ceedings of the 1988 International Aerospace and Ground Confer- ence on Lightning and Static Electricity, NOAA Special Report, Oklahoma City, 1988, pp. 289–293. 20. Hoeft, R., and C. Wakefield. Evaluation of the Electric Field Mill as an Effective and Efficient Means of Lightning Detection. Proceed- ings of the 1992 International Aerospace and Ground Conference on Lightning and Static Electricity, National Interagency Coordinating Group (INCG), Atlantic City, 1992, 13 pp. 21. Goodman, S. J., D. E. Buechler, P. D. Wright, and W. D. Rust. Light- ning and Precipitation History of a Microburst Producing Storm. Geophysical Research Letters, Vol. 15, No. 11, 1988, pp. 1185–1188. 22. Mueller, C., T. Saxen, R. Roberts, J. Wilson, T. Bentancourt, S. Dettling, N. Oien, and J. Yee. NCAR Auto-Nowcast System. Weather and Forecasting, Vol. 18, No. 4, 2003, pp. 545–561. 23. Mecikalski, J. R., S. J. Paech, and K. M. Bedka. Developing Methods to Nowcast Total Lightning Flash Rates and Convective Initiation Using Satellite Infrared Convective Cloud Information. Conference on Meteorological Applications of Lightning Data, American Meteo- rological Society, San Diego, 2005, 5 pp. 24. Potts, R. The Application of TITAN for Thunderstorm Nowcast Operations. Hydrological Applications of Weather and Climate Modeling: Extended Abstracts from the Seventeenth BMRC Modeling Workshop, BMRC Research Report No. 111, 2005, 5 pp. 25. MacGorman, D., I. Apostolakopoulos, A. Nierow, J. Cramer, N. Demetriades, and P. Krehbiel. Improved Timeliness of Thun- derstorm Detection from Mapping a Larger Fraction of Lightning Flashes. 19th International Lightning Detection Conference, 24 April, Tucson, 2006, 7 pp. References

26. Allan, S. S., S. G. Gaddy, and J. E. Evans. Delay Causality and Re- duction at the New York City Airports Using Terminal Weather Information Systems. Project Report ATC-291, MIT Lincoln Labo- ratory, Lexington, 2001. 27. GRA, Inc. Economic Values for FAA Investment and Regulatory Decisions, A Guide. Contract No. DTFA 01-02-C00200. Federal Aviation Administration, Office of Aviation Policy and Plans, 2007. 28. Murphy, M. J., R. L. Holle, and N. W. S. Demetriades. Cloud-to- Ground Lightning Warnings Using Total Lightning Mapping and Electric Field Mill Observations. Third Conference on Meteorological Applications of Lightning Data, American Meteorological Society, New Orleans, 2008, 9 pp. 29. Kimball, M., and F. W. Gallagher III. Operational Evaluation of Lightning Precursors from a Network of Field Meters at Dugway Proving Ground. Third Conference on Meteorological Applications of Lightning Data, American Meteorological Society, New Orleans, 2008, 5 pp. 30. Hondl, K. D., and M. D. Eilts. Doppler radar signatures of devel- oping thunderstorms and their potential to indicate the onset of cloud-to-ground lightning. Monthly Weather Review, Volume 122, No. 8, 1994, pp. 1818–1836. 31. Saxen, T. R., and C. K. Mueller. A Short-Term Lightning Potential Forecasting Method. 30th International Conference on Radar Mete- orology, American Meteorological Society, Munich (Germany), 2001, pp. 237–239. 32. Murphy, M .J., and R. L. Holle. Warnings of Cloud-to-Ground Lightning Hazard Based on Combinations of Lightning Detection and Radar Information. 19th International Lightning Detection Conference, Tucson, 2006, 6 pp. 33. Souders, C. G., and R. C. Showalter. The Role of ITWS in the National Airspace System Modernization: An Update. 10th Con- ference on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, American Meteorological Society, Portland, 2002, 4 pp. 34. Rasmussen, R., M. Dixon, F. Hage, J. Cole, C. Wade, J. Tuttle, S. McGettigan, L. Stevenson, W. Fellner, S. Knight, E. Karplus, and N. Rehak. Weather Support to Deicing Decision Making (WSDDM): A Winter Weather Nowcasting System. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, Vol. 82, No. 4, 2001, pp. 579–596. 35. Weather Integrated Product Team. Weather Concept of Opera- tions. Technical Document, Next Generation Air Transportation System, Joint Planning and Development Office, Washington DC, 60 pp. 36. Andrews, M. General Overview: JPDO and WxIPT Reorganization and Joint Weather Program. 13th Conference on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, American Meteorological Society, New Orleans, 2008, 31 slides. 37. Carmichael, B. The Single Authoritative Source for Weather In- formation. 13th Conference on Aviation, Range and Aerospace Meteorology, American Meteorological Society, New Orleans, 2008, 12 slides. 38. Goodman, S. J., R. J. Blakeslee, and W. Koshak. Geostationary Lightning Mapper for GOES-R and Beyond. Fifth GOES Users’ Conference, NOAA/NESDIS, New Orleans, 2008, 30 slides. 53

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 Lightning-Warning Systems for Use by Airports
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TRB’s Airport Cooperative Research Program (ACRP) Report 8: Lightning-Warning Systems for Use by Airports explores the operational benefits associated with delay reductions that lightning detection and warning systems may be able to generate. The report is designed to help in the assessment of whether such systems are cost-beneficial on an individual airport or airline basis.

An ACRP Impacts on Practice related to ACRP Report 8 was produced in 2011.

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