Publication Date:
2019-07-18
Description:
Scatterometer observations of the ocean surface wind speed and direction improve the depiction and prediction of storms at sea. These data are especially valuable where observations are otherwise sparse ---mostly in the Southern Hemisphere and tropics, but also on occasion in the North Atlantic and North Pacific. The SeaWinds scatterometer on the QuikScat satellite was launched in July 1999 and it represents a dramatic departure in design from the other scatterometer instruments launched during the past decade (ERS-1,2 and NSCAT). The NASA Data Assimilation Office (DAO) was the first data assimilation center to assimilate QuikScat SeaWinds data and evaluate their impact on numerical weather prediction. Several data impact experiments have been performed, using systems from both the DAO (GEOS-3) and from NCEP (GDAS). In general, these experiments have shown a modest impact of SeaWinds data on numerical weather prediction, the magnitude of which appears to be comparable to the magnitude of the impact of AMI scatterometer data from the ERS satellites. Some of the main results from these experiments will be presented at the meeting.
Keywords:
Meteorology and Climatology
Type:
2001 AGU Fall Meeting; Dec 10, 2001 - Dec 14, 2001; San Francisco, CA; United States
Format:
text
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