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NOAA National Operational Model Archive & Distribution System |
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About NOMADS
Table of ContentsTo address a growing need for remote access to high volume numerical weather prediction and global climate models and data, the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC), along with the National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) and the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL), initiated the NOAA Operational Model Archive and Distribution System (NOMADS) project. NOMADS addresses model data access needs as outlined in the U.S. Weather Research Program (USWRP) "Implementation Plan for Research in Quantitative Precipitation Forecasting" and Data Assimilation to "redeem practical value of research findings and facilitate their transfer into operations." The NOMADS framework was also developed to facilitate climate model and observational data inter-comparison issues as discussed in documents such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC 1990, 1995, 2001) and the U.S. National Assessment (2000). NOMADS is being developed as "A Unified Climate and Weather Archive" so that users can make decisions about their specific needs on time scales from days (weather), to months (El Nino), to decades (global warming). The following presentation provides an overview of the NOMADS project:
NOMADS Project Overview - 2005 (.pdf 2.6 MB)
NOMADS is a network of data servers using established
and emerging technologies to access and integrate model
and other data stored in geographically distributed
repositories in heterogeneous formats. NOMADS
enables the sharing and inter-comparing of model
results and is a major collaborative effort, spanning
multiple Government agencies and academic
institutions. The data available under the NOMADS
framework include model input and Numerical Weather
Prediction (NWP) gridded output from NCEP, and Global
Climate Models (GCM) and simulations from GFDL and
other leading institutions from around the world.
The goals of NOMADS are to:
Here is a list of all NOMADS nodes and what they provide:
National Climatic Data Center
A near-real-time server supported by NCDC is available :
NCDC-NOMADS Archive Component .
National Centers for Environmental Prediction
A real-time server supported 24x7 by NCEP is available at
The NCEP-NOMADS high-availability server
This server provides:
Four non-operational research and development servers used for
customer testing of new products and services prior to operational
implementation
National Coastal Data Development Center
The OceanNOMADS is a NOMADS node dedicated to NOAA and Navy ocean-models.
Currently available are Real Time Ocean Forecast System (RTOFS), Atlantic region, as well as selected regions of the Global Navy Coastal Ocean Model and Navy Intra Americas Sea model.
The NOMADS framework is actively partnering with existing and development activities including the Comprehensive Large Array Stewardship System (CLASS); the National Oceanographic Partnership Program's (NOPP) National Virtual Ocean Data System (NVODS); the Department of Energy's Earth System Grid (ESG); and the Thematic Real-time Environmental Data Distributed Services (THREDDS) project being developed through the National Science Foundation and Unidata. To ensure that Agency and Institutional requirements are being met, the NOMADS collaborator's have established Science and Technical Advisory Panels. These newly established panels would ensure the NOMADS system and metadata architecture could provide necessary inter-operability; and develop data archive requirement recommendations to NOAA. For a list of participating organizations, see NOMADS Partners. NOMADS fosters system inter-operability by integrating
legacy systems and emerging technologies and existing
metadata conventions used for models and observational
data. NOMADS relies on local decisions about data
holdings. Loosely combining legacy systems, while
developing new ways to support data access to valuable
data, permits NOMADS to work on the cutting edge of
distributed data systems. In this effort, no one
institution carries the weight of data delivery since
data are distributed across the network, and served by
the institutions that developed the data. The
responsibility for documentation falls on the data
generator; with the Advisory Panels ensuring overall
quality and systems standards, and to determine which
NOMADS data are required for long-term storage.
Further, NOMADS in no way precludes the need for
national centers to maintain and support long-term
archives. In fact, NOMADS and secure data
archives are mutually supportive and necessary for
long-term research. The primary science benefit
of the NOMADS framework is that it enables a feedback
mechanism to tie Government and university research
directly back to the NOAA operational communities,
numerical weather prediction quality control and
diagnostics processes at NCEP, and climate model
assessments and inter-comparisons from around the
world.
Both researchers and policy makers alike now expect our national data assets to be easily accessible and interoperable with each other, regardless of their physical location. As a result, an effective interagency distributed data service requires coordination of data infrastructure and management extending beyond traditional organizational boundaries. Under NOMADS and its collaborators, NOAA will be at the forefront of a worldwide-distributed data-serving network. This will allow users at any level, to obtain weather and climate information. This will allow the users to make better, informed decisions about how nature will impact their future, either in their life or in their business decisions. For further information contact the NOMADS PI, Glenn Rutledge at Glenn.Rutledge@noaa.gov. Glenn Rutledge
NOMADS Project Manager
NOAA Meteorologist / Physical Scientist
(828) 271-4097
Danny Brinegar
Physical Scientist
(828) 271-4773
Dan Swank
(Contractor: STG)
Meteorologist, System Analyst, & Data Management
(828) 271-4007
Georgi Kostov
(Contractor: STG)
Systems Adiministrator
(828) 271-4921
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