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Meteorological Sounders. Dr. Bernie Connell CIRA/NOAA-RAMMT March 2005. Outline. GOES Sounder Types of soundings Channels Absorption regions (CO 2 , H 2 O, O 3 ) Retrievals (Temperature and Humidity) Derived Product Imagery (DPI) POES – Microwave sounder.
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Meteorological Sounders Dr. Bernie Connell CIRA/NOAA-RAMMT March 2005
Outline GOES Sounder Types of soundings Channels Absorption regions (CO2, H2O, O3) Retrievals (Temperature and Humidity) Derived Product Imagery (DPI) POES – Microwave sounder
Passive Atmospheric Soundings Two basic types: • Vertical sounding – the sounding instrument senses radiation coming from the atmosphere and the earth’s surface. • Limb sounding – the sounding instrument senses radiation in the upper atmosphere from the earth’s limb.
Weighting function • Derived from the vertical change of transmittance (dτ/dp) • Specifies the relative contributions to the outgoing radiance from various levels of the atmosphere. • Determines the layer of the atmosphere that is sensed for a given spectral channel. • The peak occurs at the pressure level that provides the largest contribution detected by the satellite • Contributions from individual spectral channels come from deep and overlapping layers. Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Absorption regions for CO2, H2O, and O3 Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
GOES Sounder Channels Midwave Longwave Shortwave Midwave Resolution = 10 km at nadir Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Greatest absorption by the gas occurrs near the center of an absorption region (indicated by yellow arrows in the above diagram) This usually corresponds to colder brightness temperatures, indicating that the energy is being emitted from higher levels of the troposphere. Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Weighting Function 1 - 14.71 um 2 - 14.37 um 3 - 14.06 um 4 – 13.96 um 5 - 13.37 um 6 - 12.66 um 7 - 12.02 um channels 1 – 5: CO2 channels; channel 6 – low level water vapor channel 7 – window channel Note the location and shapes of the weighting functions Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Weighting Functions for 2 points: wet and dryCO2 channels 1 - 5
Weighting Functions for 2 points: wet and dryH2O channels 10 -12 10-12
Example: Determination of Temperature profile in CO2 absorption region • Radiance to space near the center of the absorption region (14.7 micrometers) usually corresponds to colder satellite brightness temperatures • Away from the center of an absorption region, brightness temperatures increase as absorption by the gas decreases, and radiation from lower in the troposphere reaches the satellite. • By selecting several spectral channels between the center and “wing” of an absorption region, the atmosphere can be probed at different depths Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Retrieval Methods Given a set of observed radiances, what is the temperature profile? This is called the inverse problem or retrieval problem. There are three general approaches to retrievals: Physical retrievals Statistical retrievals Hybrid retrievals Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
Retrieval of profiles from the GOES Sounder by NESDIS (physically based) Radiance at Satellite = (surface blackbody radiance*surface emissivity*atmospheric transmittance) + atmospheric contribution from many layers. • After cloud-clearing, the GOES Sounder radiance measurements are spatially averaged over small areas to improve signal-to-noise ratio. • A first guess profile is obtained from a NWP model, modified by the latest hourly surface reports. Radiances are then calculated for these model first-guess profiles. • The first-guess profiles are then adjusted until the calculated radiances match the observed GOES Sounder radiances (within some threshold). Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder
GOES Sounder ProductsDerived Product Imagery (DPI) Lifted Index CAPE Convective Inhibition Total Precipitable Water Surface Skin Temperature Water vapor winds
Total Precipitable Water • Utilizes “split window” technique to determine boundary-layer moisture (11.0 – 12.0 micrometer difference), and the 3 “water vapor” channels (6.5, 7.0, 7.5 micrometer) for mid-tropospheric moisture. http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/realtime/realtime.html http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/sdpi/html/sdpiimgnewt.html GOES sounder data and products
Lifted Index • Utilizes retrieved temperature/moisture profile • Parcel lifted mechanically from 1000 mb level up to 500 mb level • Operational applications: convective potential; convective morphology http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/realtime/realtime.html http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/sdpi/html/sdpiimgnewt.html GOES sounder data and products
Lifted Index positive values – stable air mass negative values – unstable air mass
Skin Temperature • Utilizes longwave IR window channels (11.0, 12.0 micrometer), plus shortwave channel (3.8 micrometer) at night • Operational applications: fog forecasting; frost/freezing temperature forecasting; highlight regions of differential heating. http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/sdpi/html/sdpiimgnewt.html GOES sounder data and products
Cloud Top Pressure • Utilizes longwave IR window (11.0, 12.0 micrometer) and CO2 channels (13.4, 13.9, 14.1 micrometer) • Uses visible channel and/or shortwave IR channel (4.0 micrometer) for “cloud clearing” • Operational applications: supplement ASOS; aviation TAFs http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/realtime/realtime.html http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/opdb/goes/sdpi/html/sdpiimgnewt.html GOES sounder data and products
GOES Soundings and Derived Product Imagery Advantages: • Hourly products • Shows trends, gradients, and advection • Indicates instability prior to cloud development • A good check against models Disadvantages • Coarse vertical resolution (only 18 IR channels) • Clouds prevent retrieval profiles • Specific (FOV) values not as indicative as trends • Potential for elevated convection not diagnosed • Product availability not timely (~1 hour past valid time) • Limited coverage GOES sounder data and products
POES - Microwave • 19 – 200 GHz sensed by SSM/I and AMSU • Frequencies below 200 GHz are relatively insensitive to cirrus clouds • Frequencies below 50 GHz lie within an atmospheric window region and are primarily sensitive to emission by water vapor, clouds, precipitation, and surface features.
Microwave Spectrum and Channel locations Region for Temperature Sounding between 50 and 60 GHz
AMSU-A AMSU-B Notation: x±y±z; x is the center frequency. If y appears, the center frequency is not sensed, but two bands, one on either side of the center frequency, are sensed; y is the distance from the center frequency to the center of the two pass bands. If z appears, it is the width of the two pass bands. Polarization: R = rotates with scan angle. Source: Kidder and Vonder Haar (1995)
Stan Kidder’s AMSU web page at CIRA: http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
SSM/T Application: Vertical Temperature Sounding Polarization: V = vertical, H = horizontal Source: Kidder and Vonder Haar (1995)
TPW from AMSU and SSMI 3 channels centered at 183 GHz for moisture sounding / TPW 23GHz for TPW
Weighting functions for AMSU – Bcourtesy of Tom Greenwald C3 183.3 +/- 1R GHz C4 183.3 +/- 3R GHz C5 183.3 +/- 7R GHz Note: AMSU-B channels 1-5 are often referred to as AMSU channels 16-20. Stan Kidder’s AMSU web page at CIRA: http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
AMSU Products TPW • Total Precipitable Water (TPW) • Cloud Liquid Water (CLW) • Rain rate • Snow and Ice cover CLW Ice cover Rain rate Snow cover http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
AMSU Products • Microwave Surface and Precipitation Products System (MSPPS) http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/corp/scsb/mspps/main.html • CIRA’s AMSU Website http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
References CDs produced by the COMET program (see meted.ucar.edu) Polar Satellite Products for the Operational Forecaster POES Introduction and Background POES Microwave Applications An Introduction to POES Data and Products Satellite Meteorology: Remote Sensing Using the New GOES Imager Satellite Meteorology: Using the GOES Sounder Kidder, S.Q., and T.H. Vonder Haar, 1995: Satellite Meteorology. Academic Press, 466 pp. Stan Kidder’s AMSU webpage at CIRA: http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/ NOAA/NESDIS Office of Research and Applications (ORA) Operational Products Development Branch (OPDB) Derived GOES sounder products: http://orbit-net.nesdis.noaa.gov/goes/sdpi/ The Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies Realtime GOES Page http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/realtime/realtime.html NOAA/NESDIS/ORA/Hydrology Team/Microwave Remote Sensing Project Microwave Surface and Precipitation Products System (MSPPS) http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/corp/scsb/mspps/main.html
Lab Learn to navigate the following links to locate imagery for your region: GOES Derived Product Imagery: NOAA/NESDIS/ORA/OPDB http://orbit-net.nesdis.noaa.gov/goes/sdpi/ CIMSS http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/realtime/realtime.html Stan Kidder’s AMSU webpage at CIRA: http://amsu.cira.colostate.edu/ Microwave Surface and Precipitation Products System (MSPPS) http://www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/corp/scsb/mspps/main.html