- Typical meteorological year
A typical meteorological year (TMY) is a collation of selected
weather data for a specific location, generated from a data bank much longer than a year in duration. It is specially selected so that it 'showcases' the range of weather phenomena for the location in question: the coldest typical conditions, the hottest typical conditions, the strongest rainfall, etc, while still giving annual averages that are consistent with the long-term averages for the location in question.TMY data is frequently used in building simulation, in order to assess the expected heating and cooling costs for the design of the building. It is also used by designers of solar energy systems including solar domestic hot water systems and large scale solar thermal power plants.
The first TMY collection was based on 229 locations in the US and was collected between 1948 and 1980. The second edition of the TMY is called "TMY 2". It is based on 237 stations collecting data between 1961 and 1990. The TMY2 data include
Precipitable water column (precipitable moisture), which is important in predictingradiative cooling . The third, and latest TMY collection was based on data for 1020 locations in the USA including Guam, Puerto Rico, and US Virgin Islands, derived from a 1991-2005 period of record.The TMY3s are data sets of hourly values of solar radiation and meteorological elements for a 1-year period. Their intended use is for computer simulations of solar energy conversion systems and building systems to facilitate performance comparisons of different system types, configurations, and locations in the United States and its territories. Because they represent typical rather than extreme conditions, they are not suited for designing systems to meet the worst-case conditions occurring at a location. The source data are available for download from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory for download. The reference for the TMY3 is:
Wilcox, S. and W. Marion. 2008. User's Manual for TMY3 Data Sets, NREL/TP-581-43156. April 2008. Golden, Colorado: National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
The commercial software
TRNSYS supports simulations using TMY data. Currently, it provides a limited set of TMY data for free with its demonstration version. TMY data specific for your location will usually need to be paid for, however. On the other hand, an advanced, comprehensive, and free simulation package developed under funding from the US Department of Energy calledEnergyPlus also reads TMY3 data files, and a large number of these are available at no cost from their website.See also:
* http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/old_data/nsrdb/tmy2/ - contains TMY2 data for 239 locations in the United States, Puerto Rico, and Guam.
* [http://swera.unep.net/ Solar and Wind Energy Resource Assessment] - Contains TMY data for Africa (Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya) Asia and Pacific (Bangladesh, China, Nepal, Sri Lanka) & Latin America and Caribbean (Brazil, Cuba, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua)
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