Norman, OK (PRWEB) March 3, 2008 -- Weather Decision
Technologies (WDT) today unveiled details of its Aviation Weather
Decision Support System (AWDSSTM) designed to enhance
operational safety and flight management planning at the world's
leading international airports.
Dubai International Airport (DXB), the fastest growing airport in
the world in 2007, has implemented a fully integrated WDT AWDSS
system which provides automated and intensely detailed, real-time
"nowcasts" and forecasts on meteorological conditions such as fog,
thunderstorms, low-level wind shear, microbursts, inversions, gust
and sea-breeze fronts, and other hazards affecting the airport. The
Dubai AWDSS was fully installed by WDT in December 2007 and is now
going through a six month process to ensure it is tuned to the
local environment and meets all of the requirements of the Dubai
ATC and meteorological staff.
The AWDSS enhanced analysis, interpretation functionality and
color-coded Aviation Weather Situation Display completely redefine
the manner in which regional and runway weather data and custom
alerts are delivered, with accurate, ultra-high resolution data
supplied directly to ATC operations and to operational
meteorologists for safety and flight planning up to 72 hours
ahead.
The WDT automated weather warning system will be on display at the
ATC 2008 trade show taking place in Amsterdam, March 11-13, 2008
(Stand # D125). With the system, airport meteorologists can
customize and control a rich array of information that is precisely
synchronized with scheduled arrival and departure times.
Streamlined communications functions linked to airport operations
centers enable rapid decision-making, thereby avoiding costly
airborne staging or "on-the-runway" re-routing procedures.
"The AWDSS installed at Dubai airport will greatly enhance safety
with timely and accurate alerts, warnings and forecasts, enabling
critical services to ATC and airport operations relating to runway
management and flight planning," said David Thomas, Senior Manager,
Meteorological Services, Dubai International Airport. "We selected
WDT because they offered us an extremely elegant solution - one
which we were able to install easily into our existing
infrastructure, and greatly reducing our overall acquisition and
implementation costs," said Thomas.
"The beauty of our system is not simply the superior accuracy of
the weather information we provide, but also the strength of the
research and development pedigree we bring to our customers'
projects," said Mike Eilts, President and CEO, WDT. "Our licensing
agreements and close working relationships with government and
private research and technology leaders such as the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA), the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT)/Lincoln Laboratories, Canada's McGill University
and the National Severe Storms Laboratory make it possible to put
leading edge monitoring, analysis and forecasting technologies
within the reach of airports everywhere," said Eilts.
Lifting the Fog on Hazardous Airport Weather Conditions The
WDT-Dubai International airport project literally "lifts the fog"
on hitherto hard-to-predict dynamic weather conditions affecting
critical flight planning and airport traffic management activities.
Dubai's airport is known for its difficult-to-forecast fog, marked
temperature inversions and occasional severe low level wind shear.
These phenomena result from a high diurnal temperature range and
rapidly fluctuating coastal humidity. The AWDSS installation marks
the first time an integrated airport weather system is being
utilized to predict both wide area weather conditions and local
area weather phenomena in a single turnkey solution.
WDT's system is backwards-compatible with customers' installed
radar, surface sensor or satellite imagery reception equipment and
uses off-the-shelf hardware to reduce cost and time-to-market. The
solution offers extremely high resolution data on easy-to-use
aviation weather situation displays, with one button, one-click
functionality. The combined radar, surface observations and
numerical forecast data are highly accurate, and are delivered as
minute-by-minute visual and audible alerts. AWDSS offers full
redundancy for emergency back-up, with 2x the actually required
server capacity.
Technology "Firsts" to Meet Airport Needs The WDT AWDSS technology
platform offers airports the following key technology
"firsts":
- First continuous wind and thermodynamic profiling system, providing continuous images designed to predict and display dynamic changes in hazardous weather;
- First built-in automatic data interpretation system to provide one-button, one-click data retrieval, color coding, audio alerts and watch warnings with an optional manual override mode for airport meteorologists to customize data and to communicate directly with ATC operations centers;
- First aviation weather nowcasting system providing very precise
forecasts of fog, turbulence, thunderstorms, gust fronts, and
inversion strength out to a few hours in advance; First mesoscale
modeling system integrated within an aviation weather system for
forecasts from 1-72 hours in advance.

