Welcome to the web site for NOAA Research, NOAA's Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research

Archive of Spotlight Feature Articles

Ike Liked the Labs

How a "Scientific Siberia" Became the Hub of U.S. Atmospheric Research

by Carol Knight

Ike at the speaker's podium, with the flatirons in the background

President Eisenhower dedicates new building for radio wave propagation laboratory.

Fifty years ago this month, President Dwight D. Eisenhower stood at a podium in Boulder, Colorado, with the famous Flatirons rock formation in the scenic background. He rose to dedicate a building that was to serve as the new home for an area of science that was expanding after the war - radio waves and their propagation in the atmosphere.

This research was important militarily, and in the areas of telecommunications, in understanding solar activity and its affects on the Earth, and the dynamics of the upper and lower atmosphere.

Thus began a proud history of exploration and discovery in the atmospheric sciences at Boulder facilities and institutions that eventually would evolve into six of 12 research laboratories of NOAA Research as well as two of its university partners at the University of Colorado and Colorado State University. It also was the foundation for one of NOAA's centers for collecting and disseminating data on the Earth and space environment.

A few years before the President attended that sunny September ceremony (it is told that he was on a golf vacation with his in-laws, Mamie's Denver family), a newly created laboratory - the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory (CRPL) -- was looking for a home.

Alan Shapley recalls the beginnings of the Boulder Labs.

Alan Shapley, former director of NOAA data center, recalls the beginnings of the Central Radio Propagation Lab in Boulder

In the late 1940s and at the beginning of the Cold War, President Truman had declared that new government facilities not be built within the Washington, D.C. metro area so as not to concentrate so many federal facilities within range of one atomic bomb. As recollected by 85-year-old Alan H. Shapley, a longtime Boulder resident who joined the CRPL in 1947, Congress had appropriated funds for the lab and it was established within the National Bureau of Standards in 1946. (Shapley served as director of the geophysical data center in Boulder from 1972 to 1981.)

For the new lab's permanent home, however, Shapley said the general consensus was that it should be located near a major university and within commuter plane distance to D.C. for lab scientists and administrators who needed to check in regularly with their bosses. The University of Virginia at Charlottesville was mentioned as a possibility.

At about the same time, Shapley recalled, Walter Orr Roberts -- founding president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research and the first director of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), now an important research collaborator with NOAA - had been collecting solar observations from an observatory high in the Colorado Rockies. After the war, Roberts decided to move the high-altitude facility closer to Boulder, and now it is part of NCAR. Roberts was in contact with scientists at the CRPL, and with the then-director of the NBS, who also had Colorado connections, Roberts asked that a delegation be sent to Boulder to see whether the lab might be moved "out West."

Cows graze at the Boulder labs site in the early 1950's

Then and now: The Boulder labs' site was used as a pasture in the early 1950s (above). All Department of Commerce labs in Boulder are now located on the same campus, below; the new NOAA building, left, was dedicated in 1998.

View of Boulder, looking down on the NOAA campus as it was in 1998 when the newest building was dedicated.
©Colin Farrell Photography, Inc

Shapley said many of the folks involved in these areas of science - solar-terrestrial disturbances, high atmospheric dynamics, and radio wave propagation studies - lived and were schooled in the eastern U.S. The prospect of moving "west of the Hudson (River)" - let alone 1800 miles from the East Coast to "a scientific Siberia" -- was not regarded as such a grand idea by some, he recalled..

A site-inspection delegation (including Shapley) winged its way to Colorado in 1949, in a DC-6 that Shapley described as a popular commercial aircraft that featured a lounge in which passengers could relax and visit. The delegation "had a huddle in the lounge," he said, and decided to present a unified front in Colorado: They agreed that they would recommend Boulder as the site for the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory.

Nevertheless, and probably not knowing that a decision had all but been made already, the Boulder Chamber of Commerce and city officials "brought out the heavy-hitters" to lobby the delegation when they arrived in the town. A reception was held at Roberts' home near the Flatirons, and all the stops were pulled, Shapley said.

Later, Shapley said, an official site-selection committee was appointed, and they drew up requirements for the CRPL location. They were looking at Boulder, as well as Stanford and a site in Mississippi, but Colorado had "two trump cards," said Shapely - land donated by businesses and citizens through a Chamber fund-raising effort, and "Big Ed Johnson," Colorado's influential Senator.

Thus it was that President Dwight D. Eisenhower stood at a podium September 14, 1954, and dedicated the new home of the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory in Boulder.

Headlines from the Boulder Daily Camera on the day of the dedication

Local newspaper coverage of the 1954 dedication of the main building at the Boulder site of the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory.

(Two other federal agencies besides NOAA maintain laboratories at the Boulder campus today - the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. All three agencies continue to conduct aspects of the early research begun by the Central Radio Propagation Lab.)

Highlights of NOAA Research laboratories' work in Boulder:

1965: NOAA's Space Disturbance Forecast Center begins routine daily forecasting service with U.S. Air Force Air Weather Service, a relationship that continues today.

1968: NOAA takes over air sampling and analysis of atmospheric carbon dioxide, today the longest modern data record showing increases of this greenhouse gas in the atmosphere.

1975: NOAA develops the first Doppler radar wind profiler to measure winds up to 10 kilometers, resulting in improvements to daily weather forecasts and warnings.

1979: NOAA research in Boulder begins collaboration with the National Weather Service to develop forecasting infrastructure to improve the nation's operational weather services.

1981: NOAA's high-energy pulsed Doppler lidar (using optical rather than radio frequencies) for atmospheric wind measurements monitors winds during landing of the second space shuttle flight.

1986: NOAA scientist proposes that the cause of the Antarctic ozone hole is the interaction of human-produced chlorine compounds with ice clouds in the upper atmosphere; scientists from NOAA lead the first National Ozone Expedition to the South Pole that proves the theory correct, propelling international efforts to protect the ozone layer.

1988: In support of National Weather Service modernization, NOAA scientists develop a meteorological workstation that becomes the prototype for the system now operating in every weather office around the country.

1994: NOAA'sRapid Update Cycle (RUC) weather forecast model becomes the National Weather Service's first forecast model using isentropic coordinates in the vertical and high frequency data for aviation, severe weather, and general forecasts.

1993: NOAA establishes the first national network to monitor the broad spectrum of solar radiation and Earth's emitted radiation at Earth's surface; the network is used to validate data from environmental satellites and weather forecast models.

1997: NOAA researchers help predict climate impacts of the 1997-98 El Niño.

2003: NOAA wind profiler network helps NASA track debris from space shuttle Columbia accident.

 

Activities scheduled for the celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the Department of Commerce Laboratories in Boulder include:

Series of science talks at the local library all summer and through Sept. 8

Science Festival Sept. 10 and 11 for school children (Friday) and the public (Saturday), featuring demonstrations and exhibits on a wide range of science - from a cryogenics demonstration and a weather balloon launch to an exploration of Paleoclimatology through tree ring examination and a stimulating presentation on tornadoes and waterspouts.

Rededication Ceremony on Sept. 13, featuring leaders of the three Department of Commerce agencies, local leaders and citizens, members of the science community, alumni of the Boulder labs, current employees, and others.

Call 303.497.6401 for more information.

[9/6/04]


CLIMATE · OCEANS, GREAT LAKES, and COASTS · WEATHER and AIR QUALITY
ABOUT US
 · RESEARCH PROGRAMS · EDUCATION · HOME

Contact Us
Privacy Policy