A comparison of the impact of TOVS and ATOVS satellite sounding data on the accuracy of numerical weather forecasts

被引:0
|
作者
English, SJ [1 ]
Renshaw, RJ [1 ]
Dibben, PC [1 ]
Smith, AJ [1 ]
Rayer, PJ [1 ]
Poulsen, C [1 ]
Saunders, FW [1 ]
Eyre, JR [1 ]
机构
[1] Met Off, Bracknell RG12 2SZ, Berks, England
关键词
ATOVS; data assimilation; numerical weather prediction; satellite sounding; 1D-var; 3D-var;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The Advanced TIROS Operational Vertical Sounder (ATOVS) was launched on the NOAA-15 satellite in May 1998. This provided a very significant improvement in the information available from meteorological polar-orbiting satellites compared with the previous TIROS Operational Vertical Sounder system, particularly for humidity and vertical resolution of temperature in cloudy areas. In preparation for assimilation of the observations into a three-dimensional analysis of atmospheric temperature and humidity, the observations have been compared with calculated top-of-atmosphere brightness temperatures computed from numerical weather prediction model profiles of temperature and humidity. Differences between observed and modelled brightness temperature are small. In some parts of the tropics and northern hemisphere the standard deviation of these differences for the tropospheric Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit sounding channels is only marginally higher than the radiometric noise of the observations. Early in 1999 a series of observation-system experiments were completed in which ATOVS observations were assimilated using a one-dimensional variational analysis. No use of the new humidity information could be made because of interference problems experienced by the microwave humidity sounder on ATOVS. Nonetheless, these experiments showed that the assimilation of the new temperature information provided by the radiance observations reduces forecast errors by as much as 20% in the southern hemisphere and 5% in the northern hemisphere. Further improvements have been found by assimilating more data over land. The major impact arises from the microwave channels. Whilst forward-model errors may be slightly lower for the microwave channels than the infrared channels the primary reason is the provision of sounding information in active weather systems, which are usually cloudy.
引用
收藏
页码:2911 / 2931
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [22] Creating Truth Data to Quantify the Accuracy of Cloud Forecasts from Numerical Weather Prediction and Climate Models
    Hutchison, Keith D.
    Iisager, Barbara D.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERE, 2019, 10 (04):
  • [23] A COMPARISON BETWEEN SOUNDING DATA AND WRF FORECASTS AT APEX SITE
    Caneo, M.
    Pozo, D.
    Illanes, L.
    Cure, M.
    [J]. ASTRONOMICAL SITE TESTING DATA IN CHILE, 2011, 41 : 59 - 62
  • [24] A cloud-detection scheme for use with satellite sounding radiances in the context of data assimilation for numerical weather prediction
    English, SJ
    Eyre, JR
    Smith, JA
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1999, 125 (559) : 2359 - 2378
  • [25] The use of satellite data in numerical weather prediction
    Saunders, Roger
    [J]. WEATHER, 2021, 76 (03) : 95 - 97
  • [26] Impact of GPS and TMI precipitable water data on mesoscale numerical weather prediction model forecasts
    Koizumi, K
    Sato, Y
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN, 2004, 82 (1B) : 453 - 457
  • [27] Impact of satellite-derived cloud cover on road weather forecasts
    Bliznak, Vojtech
    Zacharov, Petr
    Sokol, Zbynek
    Pesice, Petr
    Stastka, Jindrich
    Sedlak, Pavel
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH, 2023, 292
  • [28] Hydrometeorological accuracy enhancement via postprocessing of numerical weather forecasts in complex terrain
    McCollor, Doug
    Stull, Roland
    [J]. WEATHER AND FORECASTING, 2008, 23 (01) : 131 - 144
  • [29] The Radiometric Sensitivity Requirements for Satellite Microwave Temperature Sounding Instruments for Numerical Weather Prediction
    Bell, William
    Di Michele, Sabatino
    Bauer, Peter
    McNally, Tony
    English, Stephen J.
    Atkinson, Nigel
    Hilton, Fiona
    Charlton, Janet
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC TECHNOLOGY, 2010, 27 (03) : 443 - 456
  • [30] The impact of targeted satellite observations on numerical weather prediction
    Dando, M. L.
    Thorpe, A. J.
    Eyre, J. R.
    [J]. QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2007, 133 (629) : 1945 - 1957