DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF WEATHER FORECASTING PACKAGE FOR AVIATION INDUSTRY
(A CASE STUDY OF IMO AIRPORT (SAM MBAKWE AIRPORT)
ABSTRACT
Design and implementation of weather foresting package
for aviation industry is discussed in this research work using Sam Mbakwe
Airport, Owerri – Imo State as a case study. With its objectives research work
as follows: To help aviation meteorologists issue accurate weather forecast. To
enable aviation industry to make decision on control based on information given
etc. This research work reviews the background and general idea of weather
forecasting which motivated me to go into the research work and problem faced
by aviation industry. Inaccuracy issue of weather forecast the use of manual
methods in weather forecast and also in storing or keeping records and its
analysis. Some of the methods used in forecasting are as follows: Persistence
method, synoptic forecasting, statistical method, synoptic forecasting,
statistical method, all narrowing or suggesting better ways of weather
forecasting. The language used in this research was visual basic 6.0 that gave
the resultant effect of design and implementation of the weather forecasting
package that will make forecast of weather conditions faster, accurate and
reliable in our society.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Every day, millions of weather – based economic decisions are
made in transportation, agriculture, power, construction, and other sectors of
the economy. Weather conditions affect the entire economy in many ways both
directly and indirectly, Better weather forests bring economic opportunities to
almost every sector of the economy.
Weather
forecasts re critical to the commercial and private transportation sector,
including airline, shipping and trucking industries, nationally and
internationally. Airlines, for example rely on short term forecasts to best
position their aircraft and adjust flight routes.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The art of weather forecasting began with early civilizations
using reoccurring astronomical and metrological events to help them monitor
seasonal changes in the weather (MISTIC House, 2008) Around 650 BC the
Babylonians tried to predict short term weather changes based on the appearance
of clouds and optical phenomena such as haloes. By 300B.C Chinese astronomers
had developed a calendar that divided the year into 24 festivals, each festival
associated with a different type of weather.
Around 340 B.C the Greek Philosopher Aristotle wrote
Metrological, a philosophical treatise that included theories about the
formation of rain, clouds, hail, wind, thunder, lightening, and hurricanes. In
addition, topics such s astronomy, geography and chemistry were also addressed.
Aristotle made some remarkably acute observations concerning the weather, along
with some significant errors. And his four–volume text was considered by many
to be the authority of weather theory for almost 200 years. Although many of
Aristotle’s claims were erroneous, it was not until about 17th
century that many of his ideas were overthrown.
Throughout the centuries, attempts have been made to produce forecasts based on
weather lore and personal Observation.
However, by the end of the Renaissance, it had become
increasingly evident that the speculations of the natural philosophers were
inadequate and that greater knowledge of the necessary to further our
understanding of the atmosphere (Wilson,2007). In order to do these instruments
were needed to measure the properties. The atmosphere, such as moisture,
temperature, and pressure. The first known design in western civilization for a
hygrometer an instrument to measure the humidity of air was described by
Nicholas Cusa (C.1401 – 1464, German) in the mid fifteenth century. Galileo
Galilsi (1564 – 1642, Italian) invented an early thermometer in 1592 or shortly
thereafter, and Evangelista Torricelli (1608 – 1647, Italian invented the
barometer for measuring atmospheric pressure in 1643.
While these meteorological instruments were being refined
during the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries, other related
observational theoretical and the technological developments also contributed
to our knowledge of the atmosphere, and individuals at scattered locations
began to make and record atmospheric measurements. The invention of the
telegraph and the emergence of telegraph networks in the mid nineteenth century
allowed the routine transmission of weather observations to and from observers
and compilers. Using these data, crude weather maps were drawn and surface wind
patterns and storm systems could be identified and studied. Weather observing
stations began appearing all across the globe, eventually spawning the birth of
synoptic weather forecasting, based on the compilation and analysis many observations
taken simultaneously over a wide area, in the 1860s.
With the formation of regional and global metrological
observation networks in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, more data were
becoming available for observation based weather forecasting. A great stride in
monitoring weather at high at altitudes was made in the 1920s with the
invention of the radiosonde. Small light weight boxes equipped with weather
instruments and a radio transmitter, radiosondes are carried high
into the atmosphere by a hydrogen or helium – filled balloon that ascends to an
altitude of about 30 kilometers before bursting (Gaffen, 2008). During the
ascent, these instruments transmit temperature moisture, and pressure data
(Called soundings) back to ground station. Three, the data are processed and
made available for constructing weather maps or insertion into computer models
for weather prediction. Today, radiosondes are launched every twelve (12) hours
from hundreds of ground stations all over the world.
1.2 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The objectives of this research work are as follows:
1. To help aviation meteorologists issue
accurate weather forecast.
2. To enable aviation meteorologists
issue weather forecast with minimum delay.
3. To enable Aviation industry to make
decision on flight control based on information given.
4. To study and use advance programming
language as logical tool for forecasting weather conditions.
5. To make sure of effective analysis,
design implementation, and also provide solution to state problems
in Aviation weather forecast.
1.3 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The current method of weather forecasting in the Aviation
industry impeded by the following problems
1. Inaccuracy issue of weather forecast
2. Delay from the head quarters
(meteorological services Headquarters in Lagos) in forecasting weather
conditions.
3. The use of manual methods in weather
forecast and also in storing or keeping recordings of previous measurements of
weather elements and its analysis
1.4 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
The scope of this project will be to design workable easy to
use and reliable software package used to forecast weather conditions for
Aviation industry (Sam Mbakwe Airport).
The scope of this project design extends to the following
range and deals with the total automation of the following:
1. The data entry section which
facilitates easy entry of data obtained from measurements of various
instruments.
2. The data base: the data entered is stored in a data
base for record purpose and also for easy sorting of a particular record(s)
3. The weather analysis: This analyses a given record of
daily weather measurements and also permits the statistics of the data to be
viewed.
4. The weather forecast: The impact of weather and its
remarks is stated.
1.5 SIGNIFICANT OF THE STUDY
The significant of this study is to design a weather
forecasting package for Aviation industry that would provide information
concerning the weather conditions on a daily basis, and information would be
useful for
1. Aircraft landing
2. Aircraft take-off
3. Making decisions on route changes and
inconveniences; and
4. Discomfort arising from altitudinal
changes in flight.
1.6 LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
One of the limitations the researcher encountered was the
difficulty in getting information and relevant facts about the current system
from the staff of the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET), Imo Airport.
Another limitation encountered by the researcher is financial
constraints, especially in transport fare to the area of study for the
collection of data and also the cost of getting information from relevant
journals, books materials printed – out from internet, etc.
Finally, lack of relevant textbooks related to the study
useful making citations.
1.7 DEFINITION OF TERMS
- Beaufort scale: A scale that indicates the wind seed using the effect wind has on certain familiar objects.
- DRIZZLE: A form of precipitation that consists of water droplets less than 5mm.
- FOG: water that has condensed closed to ground level, producing cloud of very small droplets that reduces visibility to less than one km (three thousand and three hundred feet).
- LIGHTNING: Any and all forms of visible electrical discharged produced by thunder storms.
- METEOROLOGY: The study of the phenomena of the atmosphere and all the processes that take place in the atmosphere and the relationships with processes at the surface of the earth.
- RADIOSONDE: A balloon carrying instruments for measuring conditions in the upper atmosphere.
- RAIN: A type of precipitation that is in the form of water droplets larger than 0.5mm.
- SNOW: Precipitation composed of white or translucent ice crystals. Snow forms in cold clouds by the direct transfer of water vapor to ice
- TAUNDERSTORM (or thundershower) – A local storm, produced by a cumulonimbus cloud, and accompanied by thunder and lightning.
- WEATHER: State of the atmosphere with respect to heat or cold wetness or dryness, clam or storm, clearness or cloudiness. Also weather is the meteorological day today variations of the atmosphere and their effects on life and human activity.
SOLD BY:
No comments:
Post a Comment