Title: The SWIFT experiment on
1The SWIFT experiment on the Chinook Mission An
Overview
prepared by Ian McDade Department of Earth and
Space Science Engineering York
University Toronto
2SWIFT the Stratospheric Wind Interferometer
for Transport Studies is a Canadian satellite
instrument designed to make global stratospheric
wind measurements between 15 and 55 km and
provide simultaneous co-located ozone
profiles. Very few satellite measurements of
stratospheric winds exist, so this is something
really new and of great interest to the
international atmospheric science
community SWIFT completed its instrument Phase
B in July and is to start Mission Phase B/C for
implementation on a CSA SmallSat mission called
Chinook scheduled for launch in late 2010
3- OVERALL SCIENCE OBJECTIVES OF SWIFT
- To provide, for the first time ever, global maps
of vector wind profiles in the stratosphere under
both daytime and nighttime conditions in order to
study - Atmospheric dynamics and circulation in general
- Ozone transport from SWIFTs unique co-located
wind - and ozone density measurements
- The potential of stratospheric wind measurements
for improving medium range weather forecasts
4SWIFT Science objectives in more detail
- Dynamics
- Detailed studies of the Quasi-Biennial
Oscillation (QBO) - and the Semi-Annual Oscillation (SAO)
- Equatorial waves and their roles in driving the
- QBO and SAO
- Understanding the influence of the QBO on
extratropical circulation, e.g., the frequency of
stratospheric warmings
5SWIFT Science Objectives in more detail
(continued)
- Ozone transport and monitoring
- Studies of the Brewer Dobson circulation
- The use of wind measurements in parcel
trajectory studies to address the question of
isolation of the tropical stratosphere - The determination of the horizontal ozone flux
and its global budget and interannual variability
through simultaneous measurement of wind and
ozone
6Observational goals and required performance
? Obtain vector winds to an accuracy of 3-5 m/s
or better between 15 km and 55 km ?
Simultaneously obtain ozone number densities to
an accuracy of 5 or better (15-30 km) ?
Vertical resolution 1.5 km ? Horizontal sampling
400 km along track ? Continuous near-global
coverage
7Brief history and current status
- After a very long gestation period going back
to - ? Initial SWIFT concept Gordon Shepherd, Phil
Merilees, 14th Feb 1994 - ? Incubation with ESA 1998-2000
- ? More incubation with ESA/NASDA/JAXA 2000-2003
- ? The CSA decided in early 2004 to make SWIFT the
primary instrument for their second SciSat
mission subsequently named Chinook - ? SWIFT and partner experiment ARGO are just
about to start mission phase B/C contract/studies
for projected launch in Nov 2010 -
8More detailed history (Chapter 1)
- Initial SWIFT concept Gordon Shepherd, Phil
Merilees, Feb 1994 - SWIFT testbed built wsf CSA, MSC, EMS, NSERC,
CRESTech 1996-1998 - SWIFT proposed to ESA as Earth Explorer
Opportunity Mission, Dec, 1998 - SWIFT selected by ESA 5th out of 27
- (highest ranking atmospheric science proposal)
- ESA endorsed SWIFT submission to NASDA for
GCOM-A1, Feb, 2000 - ESA funded SWIFT study for GCOM-A1 mission in
March, 2000 - NASDA selected SWIFT for GCOM-A1 Phase A,
December 28, 2000 - ESA and CSA contract EMS Technologies for Phase A
Studies, 2001-2003 - ESA fund Assimilation Studies to assess SWIFT
impact, 2002-2003 - NASDA (now JAXA) re-scope GCOM-A1 and rename
GOSAT fall 2002 - ESA select Noveltis to develop SWIFT GDR system,
Nov 2003 - The CSA releases RFP for SWIFT Phase B on
GOSAT, October 2003
9More detailed history (Chapter 2)
- JAXA re-scope GOSAT and disembark SWIFT, Dec
2003 - CSA and ESA investigate alternative flight
opportunities for SWIFT - 2004
- CSA assesses SWIFT on a CSA SmallSAT 2004/2005
- CSA selects EMS for 9 month SWIFT Phase B
study on a SmallSAT - Fall 2004
- CSA selects GPS instrument as secondary payload
with SWIFT and - creates the Chinook Mission March 2005
- EMS Phase B PDR for SWIFT on the Chinook
Mission July 2005
10How does SWIFT work?
11SWIFT is based on the Doppler Imaging
Michelson concept already used by the WINDII
instrument on UARS. WINDII measured Doppler
shifts in the wavelengths of airglow emission
lines in the visible region of the spectrum to
determine winds in the upper mesosphere and
thermosphere and made remarkable discoveries
about atmospheric tides and mesosphere and
thermosphere dynamics SWIFT will do the same
thing but use a thermal emission line from ozone
in the mid IR region to push this successful
technique down into the stratosphere
12The Doppler Imaging Michelson concept as applied
on SWIFT
Using etalon filters, a single thermal emission
line (an ozone rotation-vibration line near 9
mm) is isolated as shown in the left panel
The wind produces a Doppler shift in the emission
line A Michelson interferometer produces the
Fourier transform (right) of the input line
spectrum (left) The phase shift of a single
fringe gives the Line of Sight (LOS) wind speed
as illustrated on the next slide
13Phase measurement and the LOS wind speed
The interferometer is phase-stepped to four
positions, yielding I1, I2, I3 and I4 From these
the phase is computed, and from this the apparent
LOS wind speed The radiance, Iav, is the average
of I1, I2, I3 I4 and is determined by the ozone
density and atmospheric temperature This
analysis is performed for each tangent height in
the image field
14 SWIFT viewing geometry (side view)
Image field 1 degree square (50 km x 50 km) made
up of 81x81 pixels each 0.64 km high
15 SWIFT viewing geometry (top view)
16For each tangent height in the limb image SWIFT
obtains a LOS wind speed (after correcting for
the satellite velocity and Earth rotation
components) By observing at two orthogonal (or
near orthogonal) directions as shown in the next
slide, SWIFT can resolve the wind speed and
direction i.e., measure the vector wind
profiles
17SWIFT viewing geometry SWIFT measures line of
sight wind speeds in two orthogonal directions
Image field 1 x 2 (50 km x 100 km) made up of
81x 162 pixels each 0.64 km high/wide. Stratosphe
ric coverage from 15 km to 65 km
- 650 km orbit has tangent distance of 2860 km.
- Orthogonal FOVs resolve full horizontal wind
vector - Spacecraft velocity means 8 minute delay
between orthogonal components
18SWIFT Instrument Concept (Phase B)
- No pointing mirrors
- Satellite controls pointing with independent
3-axis system - Single etalon, tilted to tune for satellite
Doppler shifts, isolates the ozone line for each
viewing direction
19SWIFT Instrument Concept (Phase B) Solid model
SWIFT
20SWIFT Retrieval algorithm Uses iterative
Optimal Estimation with a forward model based on
a SWIFT Instrument Simulator (SIS) and an
atmospheric Radiative Transfer model, together
with the Maximum a Posteriori (MAP) solver of
Rodgers (2000), to find the FOV wind profile and
ozone density profiles most consistent with the
raw observations
21SWIFT Illustrative retrieval noise standard
deviations
MAPDR
MAP
Unconstrained
Wind and ozone random error standard deviations
(lines) and sample retrieval results from a
single realization/simulation (points) with
measurement noise
22SWIFT Science Team
23SWIFT Science Team Architecture
Principal Investigator Ian McDade (York U.)
Deputy P.I Craig
Haley (York U.) Co.I.
Co.I. Co.I. Co.I.
Co.I Lead IDC Lead GDRSOC
Lead GDV Lead GDAM Lead ECUIDA J
.Drummond B. Solheim K. Strong
T. Shepherd Y. Rochon (U. of T.)
(York U.) (U. of T.)
(U. of T.) (E.C.) Plus other
Co-Investigators now being identified IDC
Instrument Development, Characterization and
calibration GDRSOC Geophysical Data Retrieval
and Science Operations Centre GDV Geophysical
Data Validation GDAM Geophysical Data Analysis
and Modelling ECUIDA Environment Canada User
Interface Data Assimilation
24SWIFT and Chinook Schedule
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