Mesonet Stations Record High Wind Event Across Kentucky
February 13, 2009
Bowling
Green, Ky. - The value of the Kentucky Mesonet was demonstrated again Wednesday as high winds and a squall line swept across the state.
“A well-placed network like this helps take our state to another level in monitoring weather conditions and responding to localized events,” said Mike Grogan, lead systems architect for the Kentucky Mesonet.
Wind gusts in excess of 50 mph were recorded at 17 of the network’s 20 stations with two of the other three reporting gusts of 49 mph, Grogan said. Half of the sites in the statewide environmental monitoring network recorded gusts of 58 mph or higher (or 50 knots) which meets the criteria for a wind warning, he said.
The Kentucky Mesonet provides data to the National Weather Service, statewide media and emergency management offices. During events like Wednesday’s, the Mesonet and other groups participate in a computerized messaging system for rapid communication of severe weather hazards, Grogan said.
“Though we are building a research-quality network, situations like this really help highlight the operational role of a network like we’re building in Kentucky,” Grogan said.
The National Weather Service used the Mesonet data along with reports from its weather stations, weather spotters, media and other sources to alert the public about severe weather and as part of the official report on weather events.
While a squall line caused some of Kentucky’s high winds, the winds were mostly caused by what are known as gradient winds, Grogan said. On Wednesday, Kentucky was caught between two weather systems– a low pressure system tracking toward the Great Lakes and a high pressure system off the east coast.
Wednesday’s high winds also were a problem in areas of Kentucky still recovering from a recent ice storm and where many trees are weakened by the ice and utility crews are still working to restore power, Grogan said.
“In a non-convective wind situation, a network like the Mesonet is what you need to accurately measure wind at the local level,” he said.
Here’s a list of maximum gusts recorded Wednesday at Mesonet stations:
Morehead (Rowan County) – 67 mph Madisonville (Hopkins County) – 62.7 mph
Columbia (Adair County) – 62.5 mph Hopkinsville (Christian County) – 61.8 mph
Owenton (Owen County) – 60.4 mph Frankfort (Franklin County) – 60.2 mph
Hartford (Ohio County) – 60.1 mph Princeton (Caldwell County) – 58.2 mph
Barbourville (Knox County) -- 57.7 mph Shepherdsville (Bullitt County) – 57.6 mph
Jackson (Breathitt County) – 57.4 mph Murray (Calloway County) – 56.7 mph
Scottsville (Allen County) – 56.0 mph Lexington (Fayette County) – 55.9 mph
Stanford (Lincoln County) – 55.3 mph Bowling Green (Warren County) – 54.5 mph
McKee (Jackson County) – 53.2 mph Leitchfield (Grayson County) – 49.4 mph
Liberty (Casey County) – 48.6 mph Russellville (Logan County) – 43.0 mph
Additional information and data are available online at www.kymesonet.org
More WKU news is available at www.wku.edu and at http://wkunews.wordpress.com/. If you’d like to receive WKU news via e-mail, send a message to WKUNews@wku.edu.
For information, contact Mike Grogan at (270) 745-4569 or Stuart Foster at (270) 745-5983.
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