Title: Success Stories Making a Difference
1 Success
Stories Making a Difference Optimizing HF
Radar for SAR using USCG Surface Drifters
Art Allen U.S. Coast Guard Josh Kohut, Scott
Glenn Rutgers University and the Mid-Atlantic
Regional Coastal Ocean Observing System
2USCG Area of Responsibility
3Mid-Atlantic is the Most Urbanized Coast in the
Unites States
Puerto Rico has many similarities
4(No Transcript)
5Coast Guard Wide
.
6CG Wide
- 3 searches / day 1000 / yr
- 3 persons lost / day 1000 / yr
- Costs 10k/hr to search
- 10k/hr x 1000 x 3 hr 30M
- Value of Statistical Life 3M
- 1000 x 3M 3B
7CG Wide
- Assume 100 persons involved / yr with
sub-optimal search areas - Assume 22 POS now typical
- 22 save/100 vs. 48/100 vs. 67/100
- Save 26 to 45 additional persons / yr
- ( 78M 135M VSL)
8Search Rescue Problem
- Create a SAR case when alerted
- Gather data, estimate uncertainties
- Use model to determine search area
- Estimate resource availability and capability
- Plan the next search
- Promulgate the search plan
- Perform the search plan
- Evaluate the completed search
- Repeat above until survivors are found and rescued
9Search And Rescue Optimal Planning System SAROPS
WWW NOAA Navy
(CMF) CJMTK Mapping Framework
EDS
Maptech
MORE EXTS
- SAROPS Extension
- GUI
- Drift Resouce allocation modules
3D Analyst
- SAR Tools Extension
- Flares, Patterns, Etc
Spatial - A
GeoStat - A
HAZMAT
SAROPS
C-Map
Other
10Search And Rescue Optimal Planning System SAROPS
SAROPS Computer Screen
11Compact CODAR HF Radars
5 MHz
Receive Antenna
Transmit Antenna
25 MHz and 13 MHz
12MARCOOS
13Hurricane Floyd Simulation - 1999 Point
Measurement vs. Field of Measurements United
States Coast Guard Rutgers
Factor of 25 Reduction
Factor of 4 Reduction
- Conclusions
- 1999 data footprint was too small.
- Operational decision aids could not use the data.
- A vision for the future was developed.
14Integration of CODAR and UConn Statistical
Forecasts with SAROPS 2002 Tidally Dominated
Long Island Sound 2004 - Winds Tides - Full
Continental Shelf
Arthur Allen, Chris Turner, Marion
Lewandowski, Paul Hall, Eoin Howlett, Dave
Ullman, Jim ODonnell, Todd Fake, Josh Kohut,
Hugh Roarty, Scott Glenn
15US Coast Guard Self Locating Data Marker Buoy
(SLDMB)
Drifters are Tossed Overboard Expand and Drift
with the Surface currents Positions transmitted
to Shore via satellite
16Comparison of Actual Drifter Tracks with CODAR
Data
New Jersey Shelf (2004)
Long Island Sound (2002)
Nearest Coastal Site CODAR Currents SLDMB Drifter
17Lost Glider Recovery Rutgers, USCG, Civil Air
Patrol
Civil Air Patrol
Glider ru02 as seen from Search Plane
Communication Plane
Search Plane
18Existing HF Radar QA/QC/Metadata Working Groups
www.qartod.org Q2 Spring, 2005 Norfolk VA Q3
Fall, 2005 San Diego CA
www.rowg.org/rowg Rowg1 February 2005 Points
Unknown Rowg2 March, 2006 Charleston SC Rowg3
September, 2007 San Diego, CA
19US Coast Guard SAROPS Testbed
July 26-September 15 2006
10 Drifters 51 Days
February 24 April 7 2007
2 Drifters 45 Days
April 30 June 7, 2007
6 Drifters 30 Days and counting
In Partnership with - USCG RD Center -
USCG Office of SAR - URI (Dave Ullman) -
Rutgers
20Start
Start
Coast Guard SLDMB Drifters
21MARCOOS Forecast Models HF Radar Data
Assimilation
Statistical Model STPS U. Connecticut Dynami
cal Models NYHOPS Stevens Institute of
Technology ROMS Rutgers University HOPS
U. Massachusetts, Dartmouth
All 4 forecasts will be evaluated for inclusion
in the USCG search planning tool, SAROPS