The quest to understand and forecast the weather has occupied human minds since time immemorial. Long before the advent of computers ushered in the modern era of numerical weather prediction, beliefs about meteorology developed that are still part of our folklore today. Examples include “
red sky at night, shepherds’ delight; red sky in the morning, shepherds’ warning” and “
cows lie down when it is about to rain” [
1]. The revolutionary notion that the weather could be forecast by solving equations based on the laws of physics is only one century old this year [
2]. Although subsequent fundamental breakthroughs in meteorology have been rare, the gradual increase in forecast accuracy that has been enabled partly by high-performance computing and extensive observational networks has been nothing short of a “quiet revolution” [
3].
It is fitting that a new journal entitled
Meteorology [
4] is being launched exactly 100 years after Richardson’s 1922 seminal contribution [
2]. When I was invited to become the founding Editor-in-Chief, I found it astonishing that a journal with that title did not already exist! There are many things about
Meteorology that inspired me to accept the invitation. Primarily, the number of fully open-access journals publishing research on meteorology has previously been very limited. This has led to lots of valuable meteorology research being inaccessible to members of the public—and even to scientists who lack the financial resources to purchase journal subscriptions. There is, therefore, a clear need for a fully open-access journal that focusses exclusively on meteorology.
Open access is probably the most significant development in scientific publishing that has occurred in my career so far. Today, many early-career researchers find it hard to believe that previous generations had their access to publicly funded scientific research restricted by paywalls. Open-access publishing is here to stay, and I am glad that Meteorology is at the forefront of this exciting development.
I have an ambitious vision for the journal. Simply put, I would like Meteorology to become one of the top open-access journals that meteorology researchers consider when choosing where to publish their papers. Some of the journal’s key strengths—apart from being fully open access—will be our hand-picked and highly qualified Editorial Board, coupled with the fast processing of manuscripts and rapid publication times.
Meteorology is an international, cross-disciplinary, scholarly, peer-reviewed, open-access journal of research studies related to the science of weather. It publishes review articles as well as regular research papers, without any limits on page length. It also publishes Special Issues on selected themes, and we welcome proposals for these from the international meteorology research community. Meteorology aims to publish the best meteorology research from around the world, whether it is theoretical, numerical, observational, or experimental.
The scope of Meteorology is broad and covers all aspects of weather science, including atmospheric dynamics, atmospheric physics, atmospheric thermodynamics, microscale meteorology, mesoscale meteorology, synoptic-scale meteorology, polar meteorology, mid-latitude meteorology, tropical meteorology, applied meteorology, aviation meteorology, agricultural and forest meteorology, renewable energy meteorology, links between weather and air quality, geophysical fluid dynamics, atmospheric models and numerical methods, numerical weather prediction, parameterization, weather analysis and forecasting, data assimilation, atmospheric observations, meteorological technology, radar and satellite meteorology, links between weather and land surface processes, urban meteorology, boundary layer meteorology, mountain meteorology, stratospheric meteorology, atmosphere–ocean dynamics, clouds and convection, atmospheric electricity, tropical cyclones, mid-latitude storms, hydrometeorology, turbulence, atmospheric waves, jet streams, radiative transfer, extreme weather, weather in a changing climate, applications of artificial intelligence to meteorology, impacts of geoengineering on weather, and weather modification.
Research into the various aspects of meteorology listed above undoubtedly has a bright future. Meteorology as a scientific discipline has never been more important. The atmosphere is where we live, and the weather within it can vary from pleasant to hazardous—occasionally, it can even be life-threatening. As well as forecasting and understanding weather on timescales from hours to seasons, there is also the question of how climate change will modify meteorological systems, including weather extremes, on timescales from decades to centuries. These are critical research questions with significant societal impacts.
As the founding Editor-in-Chief, I look forward to steering Meteorology on its initial journey into the world, and to watching it grow over time. On behalf of the Editorial Board, I welcome your contributions to the journal, either as authors or reviewers. We are now open for submissions, and we look forward to hearing from you!