[NARCCAP-discuss] Questions on data for our project.

Antonia Rosati arosati at ucar.edu
Sun Apr 1 10:23:14 MDT 2012


Hi Ping,

An OpenID is a URL that uniquely identifies you. For more information
on OpenID, you can visit the Wikipedia: OpenID webpage.

Here is an example of an OpenID for the NARCCAP ESG portal:
Example:
https://www.earthsystemgrid.org/myopenid/username_joe

When you specifically log in, you'll type in the whole URL
and replace "username_joe" with your personal ESG username.

Once you enter this OpenID, you will be redirected to a page that
will ask for your ESG password.


Toni Rosati
NARCCAP User Community Liaison
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
narccap at ucar.edu

On Sat, 31 Mar 2012 03:56:24 +0000
  ping yang <pingyang.whu at gmail.com> wrote:
  Hi Seth,
  
  I tried to install the NCL and NCO on my machine, however, it seem
that it
  is not easy for the configuration, First I have difficulty in
downloading
  the binaries(it requires an OpenID, I created my account but still
can not
  get it).
  
  I tried to download the NARCCAP data, but I didn't successfully find
a way
  to get it, here is always require an OpenID for the downloading, but
I have
  no idea how to get the correct OpenID, would you please let me know
whether
  you can give me some instruction or there are some materials?
  
  Looking forward to hearing from you.
  
  All the Best!
  
  Ping
  
  On Mon, Mar 12, 2012 at 11:17 PM, Seth McGinnis <mcginnis at ucar.edu>
wrote:
  
> Hi Ping,
>
> All the NARCCAP data is 3-hourly, so if you want daily and monthly
> averages,
> you'll have to do the averaging yourself.  The only exceptions are 
>the four
> variables in Table 1, which are inherently daily values.  (We do have
> plans to
> make a number of monthly and seasonal averages and climatologies
> available, but
> they're not ready yet.)
>
> If you're an NCL user, I wrote a script ("aggregate.ncl") for 
>creating
> various
> time-averages that you may find useful.  You can find it here:
> http://narccap.ucar.edu/contrib/tools/ncl/  It's also pretty easy to
> create
> those time-averages using the NCO command "ncrcat" and the multislab
> feature.
>  (Especially if you have NCO installed with udunits support, and can 
>use
> date
> ranges for subsetting the time coordinate -- see my post to the
> narccap-discuss
> mailing list of about a week ago for more details.)
>
> To get the variables that you list, you'll need either to change 
>units or
> calculate them from other variables, depending. The published data
> includes:
>
> * tas = surface air temperature in degK
> * pr = precipitation in flux units (kg/m^2/s)
> * ps = surface air pressure (in Pa)
> * clt = cloud cover (fraction from 0 to 1 -- look in Table 3 for this 
>one)
>
> I wrote a couple shellscripts that use NCO commands to change units 
>for
> temperature and precipitation.  You can find them here:
> http://narccap.ucar.edu/contrib/tools/util/  The "tas2temp" script
> converts
> degK to degC, and "pr2prec" converts precip from kg/m^2/s to mm/day. 
>The
> commands to convert ps files from Pa to mbar would be entirely 
>analogous.
>
> Relative humidity can be calculated from specific humidity, 
>temperature,
> and
> pressure (variables huss, tas, and ps).  There's an NCL script
> ("calc_humid.ncl", which also calculates dewpoint) in that
> contrib/tools/ncl
> directory on the website.
>
> I haven't had cause to calculate wet bulb temperatures yet, so I 
>can't
> offer
> any tools to help with that yet, sorry.
>
> Cheers,
>
> --Seth
>
>
> On Sun, 11 Mar 2012 11:19:00 -0600
>  ping yang <pingyang.whu at gmail.com> wrote:
> >Dear NARCCAP users,
> >
> >I need data for the following items with daily step and monthly 
>step:
> >
> >•Precipitation –Units (mm)
> >
> >•Surface Air temperature –Units (°C)
> >
> >•Surface Air pressure –Units (mbars)
> >
> >•Humidity (relative )
> >
> >•Wet bulb temperature –Units (°C)
> >
> >•Cloud Cover
> >
> >I looked into the NARCCAP data tables, actually there are so much
> >information that I am a little confusing,  e.g., I found the Max/Min
> >Surface air temperature data in daily but the instantaneous surface
> >air temperature data in 3 hours, and some data like Wet bulb
> >temperature I don't know how it was classified or named in the 
>NARCCAP
> >dataset.  Is here someone has the same experiences who can give me
> >some instructiona on how to get those data or some suggestion on how
> >to process the available data?
> >
> >All the Best,
> >
> >Ping
> >--
> >Ping Yang, Ph.D.
> >Postdoctoral Research Associate
> >CUNY Environmental Crossroads Initiative
> >_______________________________________________
> >narccap-discuss mailing list
> >narccap-discuss at mailman.ucar.edu
> >http://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/narccap-discuss
>
> _______________________________________________
> narccap-discuss mailing list
> narccap-discuss at mailman.ucar.edu
> http://mailman.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/narccap-discuss
>
  
  
  
  --
  Ping Yang, Ph.D.
  CUNY Environmental Crossroads Initiative
  Marshak Science Building - Suite 925
  The City College of New York - CUNY
  160 Convent Avenue, New York NY 10031
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