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A cooperative effort of NASA, the USAF and the NWS
Updated: December 2007
 

AMU Staff
 

Dr. Frank Merceret - AMU Chief and Director of Weather Research for the Kennedy Space Center Weather Office

Education
J.D., University of Miami School of Law, 1975
Ph.D., Earth and Planetary Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 1972
B.A., Physics, Johns Hopkins University, 1965
Dr. Merceret has over 30 years of professional experience in the atmospheric sciences. His primary areas of expertise are measurement (in-situ and remote sensing) and data analysis. He has published over 100 scientific and technical papers including more than 35 in peer-reviewed journals. As an atmospheric physicist with the NOAA National Hurricane Research Laboratory (now the Hurricane Research Division), he undertook airborne measurements of hurricane cloud properties and the dynamics of hurricane boundary layer winds. At the NOAA Research Facilities Center (now Aircraft Operations Center) he was responsible for the calibration and analysis of data collected by the NOAA "hurricane hunter" aircraft. Since 1991 Dr. Merceret has served the Chief of the AMU and now also serves as Director of Research for the KSC Weather Office. His current research focuses on winds and atmospheric electricity as they affect the safety of spaceport launch, landing and ground operations.

Dr. Bill Bauman - AMU Program Manager

Education
Ph.D., Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, 1995
M.S., Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, 1989
B.S., Meteorology, Lyndon State College, 1981
Dr. Bauman has over 26 years of federal government experience including 20 years as a meteorologist and Air Force officer and over six years in private industry managing government programs. Dr. Bauman has been with ENSCO as the AMU as program manager since August 2003. Dr. Bauman’s weather experience included nine years of operational forecasting, six years of research and development, and eleven years of senior-level program management. Technical experience includes Doppler weather radar, mesoscale numerical weather prediction, aviation, range & aerospace meteorology and meteorological instrumentation.

Dr. Dave Short

  Education
Ph.D., Meteorology, Texas A&M University, 1988
M.S., Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, 1979
B.S., Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, 1977
Dr. Short has over 36 years experience in meteorological research and operations. This includes four years as a USAF weather observer, three years as a USAF weather forecaster, 11 years as an analyst of global patterns of rainfall and cloudiness from satellite observations, ten years as a research scientist developing algorithms for passive and active microwave remote sensing of rainfall with NASA’s Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), two years as a visiting research scientist in Japan, and eight years in transitioning weather technology from research to operations in support of America’s Space Program. Analysis experience includes properties of the raindrop size distribution and observations of global to meso-scale properties of precipitating clouds from space-borne and surface based meteorological radars. Publications include 48 articles in refereed scientific journals and more than 80 papers in scientific conference and workshop proceedings. He has also participated in meteorological field experiments on the pack ice of the Arctic Ocean and in the equatorial Pacific Ocean.

Ms. Winnie Crawford

  Education
M.S., Meteorology, Penn State University, 1994
B.S., Meteorology, Metropolitan State College of Denver, 1990
Ms. Crawford was a student assistant at the National Center for Atmospheric Research while an undergraduate and conducted research as a graduate student at The Pennsylvania State University in the area of numerical weather prediction. She has been employed by ENSCO since October 1994. She has been assigned to tasks involving mesoscale model analysis and verification, graphics display modification, Doppler radar data analysis, and statistical forecast guidance. Ms. Lambert is also the technical editor of the Applied Meteorology Unit Quarterly and Monthly reports, and assists in writing proposals when needed. She attends NWA and AMS conferences where she presents her work and supports the ENSCO booth at these conferences that showcase ENSCO meteorological capabilities.

Dr. Leela Watson

Education
Ph.D., Meteorology, Florida State University, 2006
M.S., Meteorology, Florida State University, 2003
B.S., Environmental Science, University of Miami, 1998
Dr. Watson joined the AMU upon completion of her Ph.D. in July 2006 and has been running high resolution numerical weather prediction (NWP) models on the AMU cluster in support of various AMU tasks. She has experience using NWP models, with a focus on modeling of tropical cyclones, as well as various meteorological computer software.

Mr. Joe Barrett

Education
M.S., Computer Science, Florida State University, 2005
B.S., Meteorology, Florida State University, 1995
Mr. Barrett has over nine years of professional experience as a meteorologist and computer scientist. This includes nearly a year as a National Weather Service (NWS) Student Trainee Meteorologist, two years as a NWS Meteorology Intern, and over five years as an NWS weather forecaster. He has been with the AMU since April 2006, transitioning weather technology from research into operations in support of the United States space program. As a weather forecaster, he also provided assistance in the maintenance of the office’s computer systems. He has published one NWS technical memorandum and two conferences papers. In addition, he has written two unpublished case studies.

Mr. Joe Dreher

Education
M.S., Atmospheric Science, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, 2004
B.S., Meteorology, State University of New York at Brockport, 2002
Mr. Dreher has nearly eight years of experience as a meteorologist. This includes over two years of volunteer work at the NWS, two years as a graduate research student, and four years working as a staff meteorologist within ENSCO. Mr. Dreher joined ENSCO in 2004 and has worked on multiple government related programs involving synoptic and mesoscale observational and data analyses, model analysis and verification, mesoscale modeling, and graphics generation. He has been responsible for writing customer monthly and final reports when needed. In addition, he has written or coauthored 16 technical papers including two peer reviewed publications to be published in mid-2008. Mr. Dreher joined the AMU team in April 2008.