Public Information Notice
National Weather Service Headquarters Washington DC
400 PM EST Fri Dec 3, 2010
TO: Subscribers:
-Family of Services
-NOAA Weather Wire Service
-Emergency Managers Weather Information Network
-NOAAPORT
Other NWS Partners and Employees
From: KevinSchrab
Chief, Observing Services Division
Office of Climate Water and Weather Services
Subject: Transition of MADIS Real-Time Processing to NWS
Operations
Effective November 2, 2010, the NWS Meteorological Assimilation Data
Ingest System (MADIS) real time processing became operational.
MADIS is a distributed information technology system that ingests
environmental data from government and non-government observation
collection systems. MADIS then performs static and dynamic quality
control on the data, converts the data sets into common formats, and
makes them available to the user community enterprise through multiple
data transfer protocols via the Internet.
MADIS leverages partnerships with international agencies; federal,
state, and local agencies (e.g. state Departments of Transportation);
universities; volunteer networks; and the private sector (e.g. airlines,
railroads), to integrate observations from their stations with those of
NOAA to provide a finer density, higher frequency observational database
for use by the greater meteorological community. MADIS observational
products and services were first developed at NOAA Research by the
Global Systems Division (GSD) of the Earth System Research Laboratory
(ESRL).
The NWS MADIS system consists of a distributed architecture consisting
of ingest and distribution services at the Telecommunications Operations
Center (TOC) with processing performed at the National Centers for
Environmental Prediction (NCEP) Central Operations NCO). MADIS will
continue to run quasi-operationally in a research test environment at
ESRL/GSD, where new advances will be developed and tested prior to being
put into operations. The ESRL/GSD system also has an archive of
real-time data, and serves as the backup to the operational system.
For more information on MADIS, or to become a MADIS data user, see
http://madis.noaa.gov.
Existing MADIS data users have been sent an email describing how to
access the NWS MADIS system. MADIS users should switch to the NWS MADIS
system by January 31, 2011.
If you have questions or feedback, please contact:
Madis-support@xxxxxxxx <mailto:Madis-support@xxxxxxxx>
National Public Information Notices are online at:
http://www.weather.gov/os/notif.htm
<http://www.weather.gov/os/notif.htm>
$$
NNNN
Melody Magnus <melody.magnus@xxxxxxxx <mailto:melody.magnus@xxxxxxxx>>
Webmaster
Office of Climate, Water and Weather Services
National Weather Service
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Linda Miller - lmiller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Community Services, Unidata
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
P.O. Box 3000
Boulder, CO 80307-3000
303-497-8646 fax: 303-497-8690