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A Local Storm Report (LSR) is transmitted by the National Weather Service (NWS) when it receives significant information from storm spotters, such as amateur radio operators, storm chasers, law enforcement officials, civil defense (now emergency management) personnel, firefighters, EMTs or public citizens, about severe weather conditions in their warning responsibility area (County Warning ...
Track the storm's progress and forecast below: Original article source: Winter storm live tracker: Snowfall maps, current alerts, weather warnings, ice forecasts, power outages Show comments
Where severe storms are possible, storm spotting groups such as Skywarn in the United States coordinate amateur radio operators and localized spotters to keep track of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. Reports from spotters and chasers are given to the National Weather Service so that they have ground truth information to warn the general ...
The data collected by FIRMS are presented as a free web mapping service, with the active fire locations if any overlaid on a map. [1] The detections are displayed on top of a static background layer and each visualized detection is clickable to display its data, such as detection time, coordinates, satellite and instrument.
This map contains continuously updated storm reports and damage from the National Weather Service for the past 48 hours. Reports include tornado, wind storm and hail storm reports.
Golf-ball-sized hail (1.75 inches) is expected with the incoming storm. "At 7:03 p.m., a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was located over Prosper, or near Frisco, moving ...
The WFLA Wobble Tracker will remain actively streaming 24/7 until Milton makes landfall. Be prepared with the 2024 Hurricane Guide and stay ahead of tropical development with the Tracking the ...
The multiple reflections of the radar beam causing the hail spike. Generally known as hail spikes, these are the result of energy from the radar hitting hail, very heavy rain, or in extreme cases, debris being lofted by a tornado, and being reflected to the ground, where they reflect back to the hail and then to the radar as in the image on the left. [1]