TY - JOUR
T1 - The pentagon shield field program
T2 - Toward critical infrastructure protection
AU - Warner, Thomas
AU - Benda, Paul
AU - Swerdlin, Scott
AU - Knievel, Jason
AU - Argenta, Edward
AU - Aronian, Bryan
AU - Balsley, Ben
AU - Bowers, James
AU - Carter, Roger
AU - Clark, Pamela
AU - Clawson, Kirk
AU - Copeland, Jeff
AU - Crook, Andrew
AU - Frehlich, Rod
AU - Jensen, Michael
AU - Liu, Yubao
AU - Mayor, Shane
AU - Meillier, Yannick
AU - Morley, Bruce
AU - Sharman, Robert
AU - Spuler, Scott
AU - Storwold, Donald
AU - Sun, Juanzhen
AU - Weil, Jeffrey
AU - Xu, Mei
AU - Yates, Al
AU - Zhang, Ying
PY - 2007/2
Y1 - 2007/2
N2 - The Pentagon, and its 25,000+ occupants, represents a likely target for a future terrorist attack using chemical, biological, or radiological material released into the atmosphere. Motivated by this, a building-protection system, called Pentagon Shield, is being developed and deployed by a number of government, academic, and private organizations. The system consists of a variety of data-assimilation and forecast models that resolve processes from the mesoscale to the city scale to the building scale, and assimilate meteorological and contaminant data that are measured by remote and in situ sensors. This paper reports on a field program that took place in 2004 in the area of the Pentagon, where the aim was to provide meteorological data and concentration data from tracer releases, and to support the development and evaluation of the system. In particular, the results of the field program are being used to improve our understanding of urban meteorological processes, verify the overall effectiveness of the operational building protection system, and verify the skill of the component meteorological, and transport and dispersion, modeling systems. Based on the experience gained in this project, it will be more straightforward to develop similar systems to protect other high-profile facilities against the accidental or intentional release of hazardous material into the atmosphere.
AB - The Pentagon, and its 25,000+ occupants, represents a likely target for a future terrorist attack using chemical, biological, or radiological material released into the atmosphere. Motivated by this, a building-protection system, called Pentagon Shield, is being developed and deployed by a number of government, academic, and private organizations. The system consists of a variety of data-assimilation and forecast models that resolve processes from the mesoscale to the city scale to the building scale, and assimilate meteorological and contaminant data that are measured by remote and in situ sensors. This paper reports on a field program that took place in 2004 in the area of the Pentagon, where the aim was to provide meteorological data and concentration data from tracer releases, and to support the development and evaluation of the system. In particular, the results of the field program are being used to improve our understanding of urban meteorological processes, verify the overall effectiveness of the operational building protection system, and verify the skill of the component meteorological, and transport and dispersion, modeling systems. Based on the experience gained in this project, it will be more straightforward to develop similar systems to protect other high-profile facilities against the accidental or intentional release of hazardous material into the atmosphere.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33947692232
U2 - 10.1175/BAMS-88-2-167
DO - 10.1175/BAMS-88-2-167
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33947692232
SN - 0003-0007
VL - 88
SP - 167
EP - 176
JO - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
JF - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
IS - 2
ER -