Hurricane Wind Retrieval Algorithm Development for a Conical Scanning Airborne Scatterometer

Author(s):  
S. Vasudevan ◽  
W.L. Jones
Author(s):  
Faozi Said ◽  
Zorana Jelenak ◽  
Jeonghwang Park ◽  
Seubson Soisuvarn ◽  
Paul S. Chang

2012 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 030702
Author(s):  
Shen Fa-Hua ◽  
Shu Zhi-Feng ◽  
Sun Dong-Song ◽  
Wang Zhong-Chun ◽  
Xue Xiang-Hui ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 2813-2825 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Plach ◽  
V. Proschek ◽  
G. Kirchengast

Abstract. The new mission concept of microwave and infrared-laser occultation between low-Earth-orbit satellites (LMIO) is designed to provide accurate and long-term stable profiles of atmospheric thermodynamic variables, greenhouse gases (GHGs), and line-of-sight (l.o.s.) wind speed with focus on the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS). While the unique quality of GHG retrievals enabled by LMIO over the UTLS has been recently demonstrated based on end-to-end simulations, the promise of l.o.s. wind retrieval, and of joint GHG and wind retrieval, has not yet been analyzed in any realistic simulation setting. Here we use a newly developed l.o.s. wind retrieval algorithm, which we embedded in an end-to-end simulation framework that also includes the retrieval of thermodynamic variables and GHGs, and analyze the performance of both stand-alone wind retrieval and joint wind and GHG retrieval. The wind algorithm utilizes LMIO laser signals placed on the inflection points at the wings of the highly symmetric C18OO absorption line near 4767 cm−1 and exploits transmission differences from a wind-induced Doppler shift. Based on realistic example cases for a diversity of atmospheric conditions, ranging from tropical to high-latitude winter, we find that the retrieved l.o.s. wind profiles are of high quality over the lower stratosphere under all conditions, i.e., unbiased and accurate to within about 2 m s−1 over about 15 to 35 km. The wind accuracy degrades into the upper troposphere due to the decreasing signal-to-noise ratio of the wind-induced differential transmission signals. The GHG retrieval in windy air is not vulnerable to wind speed uncertainties up to about 10 m s−1 but is found to benefit in the case of higher speeds from the integrated wind retrieval that enables correction of wind-induced Doppler shift of GHG signals. Overall both the l.o.s. wind and GHG retrieval results are strongly encouraging towards further development and implementation of a LMIO mission.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhen Li ◽  
Ad Stoffelen ◽  
Anton Verhoef

Abstract. Rotating-beam wind scatterometers exist in two types: rotating fan-beam and rotating pencil-beam. In our study, a generic simulation frame is established and verified to assess the wind retrieval skill of the three different scatterometers: SCAT on CFOSAT, WindRad on FY-3E and SeaWinds on QuikScat. Besides the comparison of the so-called 1st rank-solution retrieval skill of the input wind field, other Figure of Merits (FoMs) are applied to statistically characterize the associated wind retrieval performance from three aspects: wind vector root mean square error, ambiguity susceptibility, and wind biases. The evaluation shows that, overall, the wind retrieval quality of the three instruments can be ranked from high to low as WindRad, SCAT, and SeaWinds, where the wind retrieval quality strongly depends on the Wind Vector Cell (WVC) location across the swath. Usually, the higher the number of views, the better the wind retrieval, but the effect of increasing the number of views reaches saturation, considering the fact that the wind retrieval quality at the nadir and sweet swath parts stays relatively similar for SCAT and WindRad. On the other hand, the wind retrieval performance in the outer swath of WindRad is improved substantially as compared to SCAT due to the increased number of views. The results may be generally explained by the different incidence angle ranges of SCAT and WindRad, mainly affecting azimuth diversity around nadir and number of views in the outer swath. This simulation frame can be used for optimizing the Bayesian wind retrieval algorithm, in particular to avoid biases around nadir, but also to investigate resolution and accuracy through incorporating and analysing the spatial response functions of the simulated Level-1B data for each WVC.


2017 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1749-1761 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nan Li ◽  
Ming Wei ◽  
Yongjiang Yu ◽  
Wengang Zhang

AbstractWind retrieval algorithms are required for Doppler weather radars. In this article, a new wind retrieval algorithm of single-Doppler radar with a support vector machine (SVM) is analyzed and compared with the original algorithm with the least squares technique. Through an analysis of coefficient matrices of equations corresponding to the optimization problems for the two algorithms, the new algorithm, which contains a proper penalization parameter, is found to effectively reduce the condition numbers of the matrices and thus has the ability to acquire accurate results, and the smaller the analysis volume is, the smaller the condition number of the matrix. This characteristic makes the new algorithm suitable to retrieve mesoscale and small-scale and high-resolution wind fields. Afterward, the two algorithms are applied to retrieval experiments to implement a comparison and a discussion. The results show that the penalization parameter cannot be too small, otherwise it may cause a large condition number; it cannot be too large either, otherwise it may change the properties of equations, leading to retrieved wind direction along the radial direction. Compared with the original algorithm, the new algorithm has definite superiority with the appropriate penalization parameters for small analysis volumes. When the suggested small analysis volume dimensions and penalization parameter values are adopted, the retrieval accuracy can be improved by 10 times more than the traditional method. As a result, the new algorithm has the capability to analyze the dynamical structures of severe weather, which needs high-resolution retrieval, and the potential for quantitative applications such as the assimilation in numerical models, but the retrieval accuracy needs to be further improved in the future.


2017 ◽  
Vol 212 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 585-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Harding ◽  
Jonathan J. Makela ◽  
Christoph R. Englert ◽  
Kenneth D. Marr ◽  
John M. Harlander ◽  
...  

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