Title: Andrew Burton
1Use of Scatterometer Winds in TC
Forecasting Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre
Perth
Andrew Burton Bureau of Meteorology, Perth,
Australia
2Application of Scatterometer to Tropical Cyclone
Forecasting
- Formation
- Size (radius of gales)
- Wind distribution
- Not for absolute intensity
- (winds saturate at gt60 90? knots)
3Where to Get Scatterometer Data
- NRL Monterey
- http//www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc_pages/tc_home.html
- NOAA/NESDIS QuikSCAT
- http//manati.wwb.noaa.gov/quikscat
- Storms page includes ambiguities
- http//manati.wwb.noaa.gov/cgi-bin/qscat_storm.p
l - Alternative NOAA site, with SSMI wind
speeds - http//polar.wwb.noaa.gov/winds/globdata.html
- FNMOC
- http//152.80.49.210/PUBLIC/SCAT
- or http//www.fnmoc.navy.mil/PUBLIC/SCAT
- Remote Sensing Systems
- http//www.ssmi.com
4NRL Monterey http//www.nrlmry.navy.mil/tc_page
s/tc_home.html
5NOAA/NESDIS QuikSCAT http//manati.wwb.noaa.gov/q
uikscat
6FNMOChttp//152.80.49.210/PUBLIC/SCAT/
FNMOC Ambiguity Removal over SSMI
Near Real-Time Ambiguity Removal
7Remote Sensing Systemshttp//www.ssmi.com
8Differences
- Wind retrieval
- RSS uses KU-2000 wind retrieval method
- Others use QuikSCAT1 wind retrieval method
- Rain Flags
- Generally Multidimensional Histogram (MUDH)
procedure a statistical method based on
noisiness of data - RSS has similar approach though it is less
conservative and hence rain affected areas are
often smaller
9Scatterometer Coverage
10 QuikSCAT SeaWinds Measurements
V-pol H-pol
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
11 SeaWinds Swath Geometry
Subtrack View (4 solns,but small angle
var)
Forward Look
Red V-pol Blue H-pol
Edge View (2 solns) V-pol only
Ideal View (4 solns, 90 deg var)
Backward Look
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
12 Scatterometry 2-Look Solutions
1 2 3
4
Solution wind 10m/s at ?? deg
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
13 Scatterometry 4-Look Solution(s)
1 2
3 4
Most-likely solution 10m/s at 40deg
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
From Dr. M. Freilich, Oregon State University
14Ambiguities The Chicken-Scratch Diagram
15Location, Intensity, Wind Distribution
Source Tropical storms discussion group
16(No Transcript)
17Small system (X) analysed for 3 days --no help
from NWP model
20S
170W
170W
O
O
X
X
X
O
25 Jan 1800Z 26 Jan 0517Z
26 Jan 1800Z
170W
160W
170W
160W
O
X
O
27 Jan 1712Z
28 Jan 0427Z
18Interpretation Challenges
- Edge of swath ( 7 wind vector cells)
- Rain effects
- Sensitivity to errors in NWP
- Practical wind regime 3-45? m/s (problems with
both very light and very strong winds) - Resolution (25km) impact in tight gradients
- Ambiguity Removal Process and rain flag process
can affect final solution
19Edge Problems
Along the whole edge or small portion
FNMOC DISPLAY
20Rain Flags MUDH vs RSS
TC Ando
RSS
Less Coverage
FNMOC-NOGAPS
FNMOC-NRT
Same Coverage
21Rain Effects tear drop
- Position using the curvature outside rain block
region. - Look for good north-south winds.
22Streamlines
Beware of winds perpendicular to the swath, even
when they are not flagged
X
Look for non-rain flagged winds
TC Chris 03/02/02 0914Z
23Isotachs
X
Look for min speed near centre
TC Chris 04/02/02 1002Z
24Errors in NWP
TC Guillaume 19/02/02 1341Z
Wrong Model Position?
25Where is TC HUDAH?No circulation!
Try to fix in trough equator-ward of the
strongest winds
?
Max Winds 95 knots
26Model initialization errors
In this case, poor model initialization combined
with a lower skill nadir position, picks proper
wind speed, but NO circulation center
20/2356Z
AVN 19/12Z tau 24
(Light winds?) -----low skill
c
10S
c
10S
?
Max Wind 55 KTS
?
20S
TC Paul
20S
27Comparing Different Solutions
FNMOC-NOGAPS
FNMOC-NRT
28NRCS imageryNormalised Radar Cross Section
29Microwave Imagery vs Quikscat
Scatterometer winds give wrong estimate for
centre
10 S
14 S
18 S
92 E
88 E
84 E
92 E
88 E
84 E
Comparison between Quikscat solution from NESDIS
30/11/2001 at 0023Z and fair LLCC seen in SSMI
near 14.4S 89.1E 30/11/2001 at 0218Z
30Analysis Methods - Summary
- Ignore the bad - streamline the good
- Tear-drop curved end
- TCs equatorward side of max wind
- Compare different solutions
- Isotach method ignore direction
31Conclusions
- Provides coverage over data sparse areas
- Wind speeds generally good useful for areas of
gales etc - Use the data if it makes sense
- Be aware of low skill areas and different
ambiguity removal processes (compare!) - Do not use in isolation