Thank you for the replies. The environmental program that I work for
has a air quality / met station (
www.fraxinus.us) and with the
exception of wind, hourly values (reports) represent hourly averages,
not instanteous values recorded at the top of the hour. This may be
the way it is done by EPA for air quality monitoring but it seems less
useful when you want to know what the actual current conditions are.
A co-worker of mine thought that NWS uses 15-minute averages for all
parameters (except for precipitation), but based on comparing NWS
values with our values, I suspected that 1-minute or less averages are
used for the RWR.
Thank you again for taking the time to answer my questions,
Fred Corey
Fred Corey wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to locate the observation interval (averaging interval) for
the National Weather Service Weather Roundup (RWR) that provides
routine, standardized hourly observations for a sub-state region, an
entire state, or a multi-state region. I have reviewed all of the
relevant NWS directives and the federal meterological handbook but I am
unable to locate this information.
Specificially, I would like to know what time interval the weather
observations represent (for example I think that wind speed is a
2-minute average that occurred within the 15 minutes previous to the
hourly roundup), but does temperature represent an instantaneous value
observed at the actual time of the observation or does it represent a
15-minute average, or is it the average value for the entire hourly
observation? Similarly, what about other parameters such as humidity,
pressure, etc.?
Any help you can provide is greatly appreciated.
Thank you,
Fred Corey.