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The Satellite

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Title: The Satellite


1
Surface Pressures from Space
R. A. Brown 2005 AGU
2
The Satellite PBL Model calculation of surface
pressure
  • The microwave scatterometers, radiometers, SARs
    and altimeters have now provided nearly three
    decades of inferred surface winds over the
    oceans. These can all be converted to excellent
    surface pressure fields.
  • Often these products are revolutionary,
    changing the way we view the world.

R. A. Brown 2005 AGU
3
1980 2005 Using surface roughness as a lower
boundary condition on the PBL, considerable
information about the atmosphere and the PBL has
been inferred.
  • The symbiotic relation between surface
    backscatter data and the PBL model has been
    beneficial to both.
  • The PBL model has established superior surface
    truth winds and pressures for the satellite
    model functions.
  • Satellite data have shown that the nonlinear PBL
    solution with OLE is observed most of the time.

4
The PBL Model (surface winds to pressures
R. A. Brown 2005 AGU
5
State of The analytic solution for a PBL
fV K Uzz - pz /? 0 fU - K Vzz pz
/ ? 0 The solution, U (f, K,?p ) was found by
Ekman in 1904.
Unfortunately, this was almost never observed.
fV K Uzz - pz/? 0 fU - K
Vzz pz/? A(v2w2) Solution, U (f, K,?p )
found in 1970. OLE are part of solution for 80
of observed conditions (near-neutral to
convective).
Unfortunately, this scale was difficult to
observe.
The complete nonlinear solution for OLE exists,
including 8th order instability solution,
variable roughness, stratification and
baroclinicity, 1996. Being integrated into MM5,
NCEP (2005)
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
6
Hazards of taking measurements in the Rolls

Hodograph from center zone
Hodograph from convergent zone
1-km
The OLE winds
Station A
3
2 - 5 km
U
2
The Mean Wind
Z/?
1
Station B
V
Mean Flow Hodograph
RABrown 2004
7
  • The dynamics of the typical PBL revealed in
    remote sensing data indicate that K-theory in the
    PBL models is physically incorrect. This will
    mean revision of all GCM PBL models as resolution
    increases.
  • Brown, R.A., 2001 On Satellite
    Scatterometer Model functions, J. Geophys. Res.,
    Atmospheres, 105, n23, 29,195-29,205 Patoux,
    J. and R.A. Brown, 2001 Spectral Analysis of
    QuikSCAT Surface Winds and Two-Dimensional
    Turbulence, J. Geophys. Res., 106, D20,
    23,995-24,005 Patoux, J. and R.A. Brown,
    2002 A Gradient Wind Correction for Surface
    Pressure Fields Retrieved from Scatterometer
    Winds, Jn. Applied Meteor., Vol. 41, No. 2, pp
    133-143 R.A. Brown P. Mourad, 1990 A
    Model for K-Theory in a Multi-Scale Large Eddy
    Environment, AMS Preprint of Symposium on
    Turbulence and Diffusion, Riso, Denmark. On the
    Use of Exchange Coefficients and Organized Large
    Scale Eddies in Modeling Turbulent Flows. Bound.
    Layer Meteor., 20, 111-116, 1981.

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
8
SLP from Surface Winds
  • UW PBL similarity model
  • joins two layers
  • The nonlinear Ekman
  • solution

U10
to the log layer solution.
Use inverse PBL model to estimate
from satellite . Use vector math to get
non-divergent field UGN. Use Least-Square
optimization to find best fit SLP to swaths
G
(UG) ?P(U10)
There is extensive verification from ERS-1/2,
NSCAT, QuikSCAT
R. A. Brown 2005 AGU
9
The solution for the PBL boundary layer (Brown,
1974, Brown and Liu, 1982), may be written U/VG
ei ? - e ze-iz ieizsin ? U2
where VG is the geostrophic wind vector, the
angle between U10 and VG is ?u, ?HT, (Ta
Ts,)PBL and the effect of the organized large
eddies (OLE) in the PBL is represented by
U2(u, Ta Ts, ?HT)
This may be written
U/VG ??(u), U2(u), u, zo(u), VT(?HT),
?(Ta Ts), ? Or U/VG ?u, VT(?HT), ?(Ta
Ts), ?, k, a ? u, ?HT, Ta Ts,
for ? 0.15, k 0.4 and a 1
In particular,
VG ? (u,?HT, Ta Ts) ? ?n(?P, ?, f) Hence ?P
?n u(k, a, ?), ?HT, Ta Ts, ?, f ? fn(?o)
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
10
The nonlinear solution applied to satellite
surface winds yields accurate surface pressure
fields. These data show
The agreement between satellite and ECMWF
pressure fields indicate that both the
Scatterometer winds and the nonlinear PBL model
(VG/U10) are accurate within ? 2 m/s.
A 3-month, zonally averaged offset angle
ltVG, U10gt of 19 suggests that the mean marine
PBL state is near neutral (the angle predicted by
the nonlinear PBL model).
Swath deviation angle observations can be used
to infer thermal wind and stratification.
Higher winds are obtained from pressure
gradients and used as surface truth (rather than
from GCM or buoy winds).
VG (pressure gradients) rather than U10 could
be used to initialize GCMs
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
11
  • The nonlinear PBL solution applied to satellite
    surface winds provides sufficient accuracy to
    determine surface pressure fields from satellite
    data alone.
  • Patoux, J. and R.A. Brown, 2002 A Scheme
    for Improving Scatterometer Surface Wind Fields,
    J. Geophys. Res., 106, No. 20, pg 23,985-23,994

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
12
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
R. A. Brown 2004 EGU
13
Dashed ECMWF
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
14
Surface Pressures
QuikScat analysis
ECMWF analysis
J. Patoux R. A. Brown
15
a
b
QuikSCAT 10 Jan 2005 0709 UTC
OPC Sfc Analysis and IR Satellite Image 10 Jan
2005 0600 UTC
c
d
UWPBL 10 Jan 2005 0600 UTC
GFS Sfc Analysis 10 Jan 2005 0600 UTC
16
GFS 08 Jul 2005
OPC 08 Jul 2005
1003
996
996
b
a
UWPBL 08 Jul 2005
QuikSCAT 08 Jul 2005
1001
992
c
d
17
To get smooth synoptic wind fields from a
scatterometer
(JPL)
Raw scatterometer winds
UW Pressure field smoothed
JPL Project Local GCM nudge smoothed Dirth
(with ECMWF fields)
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
18
  • We can uniquely offer a continuous record of
    QuikScat-derived surface pressure fields These
    pressure fields extend through the Tropics - a
    region that is poorly characterized by numerical
    weather forecast models - and contain fine
    details that are absent from numerical model
    analyses
  • Patoux, J., R.C. Foster and R.A. Brown,
    2003 Global Pressures from Scatterometer
    Winds, Jn. Applied Meteor. 42, 813-826

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
19
  • Surface pressures as surface truth yield high
    wind predictions. This suggests that the global
    climatology surface wind record is too low by 10
    20.
  • Brown, R.A., Lixin Zeng, 2001 Comparison
    of Planetary Boundary Layer Model Winds with
    Dropwindsonde Observations in Tropical Cyclones,
    J. Applied Meteor., 40, 10, 1718-1723 Foster
    Brown, 1994, On Large-scale PBL Modelling
    Surface Wind and Latent Heat Flux Comparisons,
    The Global Atmos.-Ocean System, 2, 199-219.

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
20
  • There is evidence from these data that the
    secondary flow characteristics of the nonlinear
    PBL solution (Rolls or Coherent Structures) are
    present more often than not over the worlds
    oceans. This contributes to basic understanding
    of PBL modelling and air-sea fluxes.
  • Brown, R.A., 2002 Scaling Effects in Remote
    Sensing Applications and the Case of Organized
    Large Eddies, Canadian Jn. Remote Sensing, 28,
    340-345 Levy G., 2001, Boundary Layer Roll
    Statistics from SAR. Geophysical Research
    Letters. 28(10),1993-1995.

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
21
Programs and Fields available onhttp//pbl.atmos.
washington.edu Questions to rabrown, neal
or jerome_at_atmos.washington.edu
  • Direct PBL model PBL_LIB. (75 -00) An
    analytic solution for the PBL flow with rolls,
    U(z) f( ?P, ?To , ?Ta , ?)
  • The Inverse PBL model Takes U10 field and
    calculates surface pressure field ?P (U10
    , ?To , ?Ta , ?) (1986 - 2000)
  • Pressure fields directly from the PMF ?P (?o)
    along all swaths (exclude 0 - ? 5 lat.?) (2001)
    (dropped in favor of I-PBL)
  • Global swath pressure fields for QuikScat swaths
    (with global I-PBL model) (2004)
  • Surface stress fields from PBL_LIB corrected for
    stratification effects along all swaths (2005)

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
22

Marine Weather from Satellites and PBL models
  • Surface Winds Pressure Fields from Space
  • The ability to extract surface pressure maps from
    satellite scatterometer data has been described
    in a series of papers since the 80s. The
    technique has been recently improved for the
    purpose of providing near real-time surface
    pressures for NCEP forecasters. The fields have
    proved more valuable to the forecasters than the
    raw QuikScat winds while providing more detail in
    the pressure fields than ever before.

23
Status of organized large eddies (OLE)
verification
  • Airplane campaigns in cold air outbreaks (1976
    - ).
  • Ground based Lidar detects OLE (1996 -) Lidar
    from Aircraft PBL flights (1999 -).
  • Satellite derived surface pressures (1997) using
    nonlinear PBL model are accurate.
  • Satellite SAR data of ocean surface shows
    evidence of ubiquitous OLE (1978 1986 1997-).

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
24
  • Surface Pressure fields
  • The basic PBL model uses the geostrophic wind
    (aka pressure gradient) as a boundary condition
    to calculate the wind profile and surface stress.
    It was evident that the same conceptual model
    could use surface stress as input and calculate
    the UG or SP. Gad Levy took this task for his
    thesis work (1981) and the result was the
    "Inverse Model" which was used to calculate
    surface pressure fields from satellite data (plus
    a surface pressure magnitude) (Ocean Surface
    Pressure Fields from Satellite Sensed Winds,
    (R.A. Brown and G. Levy), Mon. Wea. Rev., 114, pp
    2197-2206, 1986). This has proven to be an
    extremely valuable contribution of scatterometer
    data and has been revised and perfected by Lixin
    Zeng and Jerome Patoux (Estimating Central
    Pressures of Oceanic Mid-latitude Cyclones, (R.A.
    Brown and Lixin Zeng) J. Applied Meteor., 33, 9,
    1088-1095, 1994 A Scheme for Improving
    Scatterometer Surface Wind Fields, J. Geophys.
    Res., Patoux, J. and R.A. Brown, 106, No. 20, pg
    23,985-23,994, 2002 Global Surface Pressures
    from Satellite Scatterometers, Patoux and Brown,
    in press, Jn. Applied Meteor. )
  • The Surface Pressure (SP) fields were used to
    correct the MF for high winds by assuming that
    the pressure measurements on the buoys were still
    OK in high winds and using SP plus the PBL model
    to calculate U10. They were routinely 10 higher
    than the GCM products. Since the inverse pressure
    fields agreed well with GCM values (in the
    Northern Hemisphere where there were sufficient
    surface measurements for the GCM), I proposed
    that the scatterometer could be viewed as a
    pressure measurement instrument, and we developed
    a MF that successfully related SP directly to the
    scatterometer backscatter measurement.
  • On the other hand, the remote sensing data has
    given proof that the nonlinear equilibrium PBL
    solution is the correct one. The first
    verification came when Mike Freilich ran a UG
    field simultaneous with the U10 MF
    parameterization analysis. He noted that they
    were both good robust model functions and that
    the UG was turned 19 deg from U10 direction. The
    model predicts a turning of 18 deg at neutral
    stratification. The data suggests that the model
    is correct in the mean, and that the average
    oceanic PBL is nearly neutrally stratified.
  • However, the most convincing satellite data for
    rolls comes from the synthetic aperture Radar
    (SAR) data. These show that a wind MF applied to
    backscatter data on 100-m resolution reveal long
    (100s-km) lines of higher roughness/winds,
    roughly parallel to the wind and separated by the
    usual roll wavelength of 1-3-km. We obtained a
    NASA grant to analyze the statistics of these
    observations and Levy found roll signatures over
    50 of the time in the North Pacific. Since I
    expected the downdraft regions to be sufficient
    to see only occasionally, the large frequency of
    observations indicates that the rolls are almost
    always there.

R. A. Brown 2005 EGU
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