Gust Factors in Aerodrome Weather and Climate Assessment
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Wind gustiness at airports, which is generally determined using gust factors, is impactful across a range of considerations from piloting to airport planning. Yet advisory materials to help assess their quality and representativeness, particularly for aviators, are limited. To address this, a climatological analysis of both gust factors is conducted using Automated Surface Observing System (ASOS) wind observations. Data for multi-year periods at selected airports in the United States are used to assess their site representativeness and for turbulence attribution purposes. Both gust factors vary by direction in response to local terrain features and nearby obstructions and are generally not well correlated with each other. The meteorological gust factor is shown to be more responsive to local obstructions in proximity to the ASOS systems. Excluding lower gusts leads to a marked improvement in the correlation between the two gust factors. Due to ASOS’s siting limitations, attributing observed gustiness to turbulence from nearby terrain or structures is difficult. The gustiness is often localized and may not represent conditions across the full airport. Excluding lower gusts increases the aviation gust factor’s sensitivity to local obstructions. This suggests that obstructions may play a meaningful role in shaping the higher observed gust factors. The potential exists to provide pilots and other users of this data with site- and direction-specific metadata regarding observed gustiness, thereby improving situational awareness.