Title: Satellite and Radar
1Satellite and Radar
- Lecture 5
- October 7, 2009
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3Review from last week
- Pressure Gradient Force
- PGF CHANGE IN PRESSURE / DISTANCE
- Direction of PGF always pointed from HIGH
pressure toward LOW pressure, directly
perpendicular to an isobar - Magnitude of PGF- strength is directly related to
how closely packed the isobars are at the
surface.
4Review from last week
- Coriolis Force
- The CF is an apparent force that results from the
constant rotation of the Earth. - In N. Hemisphere, acts at a 90 angle to the
right of the object in motion (such as the wind) - We cannot see the planet rotating, so when
something is moving, we perceive it as being
deflected to the right of its intended trajectory
in the N. Hemisphere
5Since friction is directed opposite of the wind,
it slows the wind. When it slows the wind, the
magnitude of the CF is affected and the CF no
longer balances the PGF. Remember, CF is always
90 right of the wind in the northern hemisphere.
As a result the PGF is the dominate force driving
the wind and the wind turns in the direction of
the PGF. This allows the wind to cross the
isobars toward low pressure.
L
996 mb
Pressure Gradient Force
Wind
1000 mb
Frictional Force
Coriolis Force
1004 mb
H
6Review from last week
- Geostrophic Balance
- A balance between the pressure gradient force and
the Coriolis force - Balance allows PGF to be equal and opposite the
CF. This balance will tell use the magnitude of
the geostrophic wind - The geostrophic wind moves parallel to lines of
constant pressure, with low pressure on the left - Frictional Force
- Friction affects geostrophic balance by putting a
drag-force on the air friction always acts in
the direction opposite the direction of the wind
7Satellites
- October 4, 1957 Russia launched Sputnik 1, the
first satellite in history - As a result, space science boomed in America as
it led Americans to fear that the Soviets would
launch missiles containing nuclear weapons. - 1959 Scientists at the Space Science and
Engineering Center (SSEC) at UW-Madison conducted
pioneering meteorological satellite research,
revealing the vast benefits of meteorological
satellites.
http//burro.astr.cwru.edu/stu/advanced/20th_sovie
t_sputnik.html
8Evolution Until Today
- First weather satellite lasted 79 days
- Now many years
- Two distinct types of weather satellites
- GOES - Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellites - POES - Polar Operational Environmental Satellites
(also referred to as LEO Low Earth Orbit) - They are defined by their orbital characteristics
- There are also many other satellites in orbit,
some of which are not functioning and those are
referred to as space debris.
9Geostationary Vs. Polar Orbiting
http//cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/satmet/modules/sat_basi
cs/images/orbits.jpg
10GOES
- GOES Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellites - Orbit as fast as the earth spins
- Maintain constant altitudes (36,000 km, or
22,300 miles) and momentum over a single point,
always over the equator - Imagery is obtained approximately every 15
minutes unless there happens to be an important
meteorological phenomenon worth higher temporal
resolution - Generally has poor spatial resolution- sees large
fixed area and covers polar regions poorly. - But, good for viewing large scale meteorological
phenomena (cyclones, hurricanes, etc.) at lower
and middle latitudes
11GOES
GOES- EAST (GOES- 12)
GOES- WEST (GOES 11)
12GOES COVERAGE
http//goes.gsfc.nasa.gov/pub/goes/global_geosynch
_coverage.gif
13Sample Composite
http//www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/comp/latest_moll.gif
14POES
- POES Polar Operational Environmental
Satellites - Rotates around the earth from pole to pole
- Significantly closer to the Earth than
geostationary satellites (879 km above the
surface) - Sees the entire planet twice in a 24 hour period
- Lower altitude gives it a good spatial
resolution Very high resolution images of the
atmosphere and Earth - Poor temporal resolution Over any point on
Earth, the satellite only captures two images per
day! - Best resolution over the poles
15POES COVERAGE
16POES
- More then a few in orbit currently
- Two examples are TERRA and AQUA
- Have different viewing instruments on them
- One example is MODIS Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer - Acquires data in 36 spectral bands (groups of
wavelengths) - As a result, MODIS can create a true color
visible image, which can - Show changes in vegetation during fall/spring
- Show smoke plumes, dust plumes, etc.
17Example MODIS image
http//www.ssec.wisc.edu/modis-today/images/terra/
true_color/2008_02_24_055/t1.08055.USA_Composite.1
43.4000m.jpg
18Wildfires Near Los Angeles Using MODIS
19Types of Satellite Imagery
- Measures visible light (solar radiation, 0.6 ?m)
which is reflected back to the satellite by cloud
tops, land, and sea surfaces. - Thus, visible images can only be seen during
daylight hours! - Dark areas Regions where small amounts of
visible light are reflected back to space, such
as forests and oceans - Light areas Regions where large amounts of
visible light are reflected back to space, such
as snow or clouds
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21Visible Pros/Cons
- Pros
- Seeing basic cloud patterns and storm systems
- Monitoring snow cover
- Shows nice shadows of taller clouds (has a 3-D
look to it) - Cons
- Only useful during the daylight hours
- Difficult to distinguish low clouds from high
clouds since all clouds have a similar albedo
(reflect a similar amount of light) - Hard to distinguish snow from clouds in winter
22Types of Satellite Imagery
- Displays infrared radiation emitted by the water
vapor (6.5 to 6.7 ?m) in the atmosphere - Bright, white shades represent radiation from a
moist layer or cloud in the upper troposphere - Dark, grey or black shades represent radiation
from the Earth or a dry layer in the middle
troposphere
23Types of Satellite Imagery
- Displays infrared radiation (10 to 12 ?m)
emitted directly by cloud tops, land, or ocean
surfaces - Wavelength of IR depends solely on the
temperature of the object emitting the radiation - Cooler temperatures (like high cloud tops) are
shown as light gray, or white tones - Warmer temperatures (low clouds, ocean/lake
surfaces) are shown dark gray - Advantage You can always see the IR satellite
image
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26Interpreting Visible vs. IR
27RADAR
- What does Radar mean?
- Radio Detection and Ranging
- During World War II, this Radio Detection and
Ranging technique was developed to track enemy
ship and aircraft. However, it was soon noted
that precipitation, of any kind, would obstruct
this remote detection. At first this was a
problem, but the potential benefits were soon
seen. This was the birth of weather Radar.
28How does RADAR work?
- Radar uses electromagnetic radiation to sense
precipitation. - Sends out a microwave pulse (wavelength of 4-10
cm) and listens for a return echo. - If the radiation pulse hits precipitation
particles, the energy is scattered in all
directions - The RADAR has a listening period. When it
detects radiation scattered back, the radiation
is called an echo.
29How does RADAR work?
- The RADAR beam is typically 0.5o above the
horizon and 1.5o wide. - It rotates in a full circle, with a radius of
200 miles - Time difference between transmission and return
of signal distance to the storm - The intensity of precipitation is measured by the
strength of the echo, in units of decibels (just
like intensity of sound waves!)
30- An image showing precipitation intensity is
called a reflectivity image - Intensity measured in decibels (dBZ)
31- www.radar.weather.gov/graphics/ridge_sitemap.gif
32Types of RADAR
- Conventional Radar
- Echoes are simply displayed on radar screen.
- Only produces reflectivity images.
- Circular sweeps and vertical sweeps, to attempt
to reconstruct the precipitation type and
intensity throughout the atmosphere - Can identify storm structure, locations of
tornadoes, and even non-meteorological objects!
33Good/Bad of Conventional Radar
- Good for
- Seeing bands/location of precip and their
intensity - Hook echoes
- Bow echoes
- Bad for
- Ground clutter, bouncing off things other than
precipitation - Overestimation/Underestimation of precip
- Cannot tell type of precipitation by radar alone
(Have to use temperatures, actual observations,
etc.
34Doppler Radar
- One of the most advanced versions of radar
- Does everything a conventional radar can do, PLUS
more... - In addition to conventional techniques, the
Doppler Radar has a scan that operates on
principle of the Doppler Effect - Usually described using sound waves
- Definition The change in the observed frequency
of waves produced by the motion of the wave source
35Doppler Radar in Meteorology
- Measures changes in wavelength of the RADAR beam
after it is scattered from a travelling object - Wavelength of the beam changes after it
strikes the object - Thus, wind direction AND speed can be measured
by RADAR
36Doppler RADAR in Meteorology
- This is VERY useful in detecting tornado
signatures! - Doppler can measure wind speed and direction in a
storm and can be viewed in a storm-relative
velocity image - Red Winds away from RADAR site, Green Winds
toward RADAR site - This is how the National Weather Service issues
tornado warnings
37Phased-array radar
- Next generation of radar.
- Can scan multiple levels at once using multiple
radar beams sent out at one time. - Scanning only takes 30 secs compared to 6
minutes for the Doppler - Gives instantaneous profile of atmosphere for
winds and precipitation intensity.
38Examples
- Birds on radar
- http//www.crh.noaa.gov/images/mkx/radar/birdanima
tion.gif - http//www.crh.noaa.gov/mkx/?nusing-radar