Title: SeaWinds AMSRderived Impact Table
1SeaWinds AMSR-derived Impact Table
- Jan 17, 2006
- Bryan Stiles and R. Scott Dunbar
2Impact Table Overview
- Speed Bias and Cross Track Directional Bias are
tabularized by - Attenuation
- Backscatter ratio B/ ?0
- Cross Track Distance
- Average outer beam measured ?0
- Cross track bias is computed for
Scatterometer-only DIRTH w.r.t NCEP - Speed Bias is computed similarly below a ?0
threshold but is computed directly from A and B
above the threshold.
3To compute speed impacts at high winds we
- Estimate retrieved wind speed from average
measured s0. (using QSCAT1) - An estimate of speed is derived for each beam.
- An average value is computed weighted by the
number of measurements from each beam. - Estimate true wind speed similarly from s0s
corrected using A and B. - Compute the difference between the two speeds.
- Accumulate difference for each WVC in SWS mission
into bins in speed impact table. - This resulting table is the GMF-derived table.
4Why do we compute Speed Impact two different ways?
- The two methods agree well for moderate wind
speeds (7-15 m/s). - The A, B model of rain impact on s0 was estimated
as a function of liquid, vapor, SST, and beam. - To obtain agreement between the A, B model and
the NWP speed biases at high winds. - Rain backscatter would have to be a increasing
function of wind speed. AND/OR - Attenuation would have to decrease with wind
speed. - Because the required changes in A, B seem
counterintuitive, we conclude that the NWP speed
winds are systematically biased low for cases
with high wind speed and high liquid. - This could be explained by rain correlating with
small scale high wind regions, poorly represented
by low resolution NWP fields. - For this reason we do not want to use NCEP speed
impacts for high winds.
5At low wind speeds computing speed impact
directly from A and B overestimates speed impact.
- Why?
- Errors in liquid estimate.
- Cases of truly high liquid and low measured s0 do
not occur. - Some bins in impact table are populated solely by
the high end of the liquid error distribution. - Errors in backscatter, B, estimate
- For very low winds where rain-free s0lt -25 dB, B
estimates cannot meet the required precision to
correct the speeds well. - Solution?
- New table using NCEP-derived impact for average
outer beam measured s0 lt 0.021. - O.021 is the 99.9 percentile of the B value.
6Speed impact as originally derived by
SWS-NWPHigh wind biases are wrong due to NCEP
error
7Speed Biases Computed from A and BLow wind
biases are wrong due to errors in liquid and B
8Final Hybrid table fixes high speed and low speed
problems
9Speed Impact vs ECMWF wind and AMSR Liquid
10Direction Impact vs ECMWF wind and AMSR Liquid