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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-24
    Description: 〈title xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"〉Abstract〈/title〉〈p xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xml:lang="en"〉Sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events can form a window of forecast opportunity for polar vortex predictions on subseasonal‐to‐seasonal time scales. Analyzing numerical ensemble simulations, we quantify the associated enhanced predictability due to reduced upward planetary wave fluxes during the mostly radiatively driven recovery phase following SSWs. Ensembles that predict an SSW show reduced ensemble spread in terms of polar vortex strength for several weeks to follow, as well as a corresponding reduction in forecast errors. This increased predictability is particularly pronounced for strong SSWs and even occurs if not all ensemble members predict a major SSW. Furthermore, we found a direct impact of the occurrence of SSWs on the date of the final warming (FW): the decrease in upward wave fluxes delays the FW significantly. The reduced spread after SSWs and the delay in FW date have potentially further implications for (subseasonal) predictions of the tropospheric and mesospheric circulations.〈/p〉
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The polar vortex is a large scale circulation active during winter in the higher levels of the polar atmosphere. Changes in the strength of the polar vortex can have an impact on the weather over mid‐latitude regions like Europe. This is the case especially for the period after so‐called sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events, where the polar vortex breaks down very abruptly and then slowly recovers over several weeks. Such a break‐down of the polar vortex tends to suppress wave activity and hence reduces the dynamical variability in the polar stratosphere, leading to a more predictable evolution of the circulation. We quantify the strength and timescale of this increase in predictability of the polar vortex after an SSW using a large set of winter time model forecasts.〈/p〉
    Description: Key Points: 〈list list-type="bullet"〉 〈list-item〉 〈p xml:lang="en"〉Sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) lead to reduced forecast spread in the polar stratosphere for several weeks after the event〈/p〉〈/list-item〉 〈list-item〉 〈p xml:lang="en"〉Reduced forecast spread after SSWs is driven by suppressed vertical planetary wave propagation due to persistent negative wind anomalies〈/p〉〈/list-item〉 〈list-item〉 〈p xml:lang="en"〉Final warmings are delayed for winters with SSW, consistent with reduced upward wave fluxes following the SSW〈/p〉〈/list-item〉 〈/list〉 〈/p〉
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://apps.ecmwf.int/datasets/data/s2s-realtime-instantaneous-accum-ecmf/levtype=sfc/type=cf/
    Description: https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/cdsapp#!/dataset/reanalysis-era5-pressure-levels?tab=overview
    Description: https://doi.org/10.5282/ubm/data.395
    Keywords: ddc:551.5 ; sudden stratospheric warming ; final warming ; strat‐trop‐coupling ; polar vortex ; predictability ; window of forecast opportunity
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-10-12
    Description: Respecting fertilizer application, the metal content in drainage water is studied under conventional agricultural management from 2013 to 2014 in two adjacent fields located in the North German Plain. Findings are compared with data of nutrients, main ions, and dissolved organic carbon, as well as element contents in fertilizers and geogenic background values of soils. Comparatively low metal concentrations are found in drainage water. These results are in line with metal contents of applied mineral fertilizers, of cattle slurry, and random analysis of the two soils considered. Relating to effective ordinances, the applied fertilizers occasionally pose a risk for the groundwater or downstream water bodies. Concentrations of some metals (Al, Co, Cr, Pb, and V) are rather affected by soil erosion than by fertilizers. Besides fertilizers and soil erosion, mainly pedo‐hydrological conditions, which differ between the two fields, influence element profiles in tile drainage by the extent of anoxia and subsequent denitrification and sulfate reduction. Against the background of climate change, further investigations with respect to possible changes in soil water budget are necessary.
    Description: Variability of metals in drainage water from arable fields is investigated. Drainage improves topsoil conditions by amelioration. It also may aggravate diffuse pollution by shortening residence time of water in soil. In the study, besides fertilizers and soil erosion, mainly pedo‐hydrological conditions influence metal concentrations in tile drainage. Measures to minimize soil erosion should supplement careful use of fertilizers.
    Description: German Federal Environmental Foundation (DBU)
    Keywords: 631.4 ; drainage water ; fertilizer ; metal concentrations ; North German Plain ; pedo‐hydrological conditions
    Type: map
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-09-22
    Description: February‐March 2020 was marked by highly anomalous large‐scale circulations in the Northern extratropical troposphere and stratosphere. The Atlantic jet reached extreme strength, linked to some of the strongest and most persistent positive values of the Arctic Oscillation index on record, which provided conditions for extreme windstorms hitting Europe. Likewise, the stratospheric polar vortex reached extreme strength that persisted for an unusually long period. Past research indicated that such circulation extremes occurring throughout the troposphere‐stratosphere system are dynamically coupled, although the nature of this coupling is still not fully understood and generally difficult to quantify. We employ sets of numerical ensemble simulations to statistically characterize the mutual coupling of the early 2020 extremes. We find the extreme vortex strength to be linked to the reflection of upward propagating planetary waves and the occurrence of this reflection to be sensitive to the details of the vortex structure. Our results show an overall robust coupling between tropospheric and stratospheric anomalies: ensemble members with polar vortex exceeding a certain strength tend to exhibit a stronger tropospheric jet and vice versa. Moreover, members exhibiting a breakdown of the stratospheric circulation (e.g., sudden stratospheric warming) tend to lack periods of persistently enhanced tropospheric circulation. Despite indications for vertical coupling, our simulations underline the role of internal variability within each atmospheric layer. The circulation extremes during early 2020 may be viewed as resulting from a fortuitous alignment of dynamical evolutions within the troposphere and stratosphere, aided by each layer's modification of the other layer's boundary condition.
    Description: Key Points Large‐ensemble simulations are needed to fully characterize coupled extremes in the polar vortex and tropospheric jet in early 2020. Details of the vortex structure play an important role in promoting either reflection or dissipation of upward propagating waves 1 and/or 2. Modulation of lowermost stratospheric circulation from above and below facilitates co‐evolution of tropospheric and stratospheric extremes.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/datasets/reanalysis-datasets/era5
    Description: https://doi.org/10.5282/ubm/data.281
    Description: https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/daily_ao_index/ao.shtml
    Keywords: ddc:551.5
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: Everyday, international broadcasters, ships, and aircraft use a naturally conducting atmospheric layer, the ionosphere, to reflect communications signals over the Earth's horizon. A better understanding of this layer, with its irregularities, instabilities, and dynamics, would improve communications transmission and reception. This atmospheric layer is also a lens that can distort signal transmissions from communications, navigation, and surveillance satellites. The ionosphere over Canada and other high latitude countries can carry large currents and is particularly dynamic, so that a scientific understanding of this layer is critical. The BOLAS (Bistatic Observations using Low Altitude Satellites) mission would characterize reflective and transmissive properties of the ionosphere by flying two satellites, each with identical HF receivers, dipole antennas, particle probes, and GPS receivers. The satellites would be connected by a non-conducting tether to maintain a 100 m separation, and would cartwheel in the orbit plane to spatially survey the ionosphere. The six-month mission would fly in a high inclination, 350 x 600 km orbit, and would be active during passes over the auroral region of Canada. This paper discusses the system requirements and architecture, spacecraft and operations concepts, and mission design, as well as team organization, international cooperation and the scientific and technological benefits that are expected.
    Keywords: Law, Political Science and Space Policy
    Type: The Sixth Alumni Conference of the International Space University; 73-88; NASA-CP-3355
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: An orbital emplacement for the transmitter and the antenna of a communications link at ELF (30 to 300 Hz) and VLF (3 kHz to 30 kHz) to submerged submarines has been considered since the very inception of the space age. However, only recently has space technology reached a sufficient level of maturity for system designers to undertake serious studies of this link configuration. The optimistic outlook stems from recent space technology developments, such as the design and construction by NASA of long orbiting tethers, and the testing, onboard Shuttle Orbiter ATLANTIS, of the first spaceborne 20 km metal wire. This is known as the Tethered Satellite System-1 (TSS-1), a space mission that might be possibly followed by other flights, with tether lengths that could reach 100 km. Once deployed at a height of, say, 300 km, from a Shuttle Orbiter, or from another suitable platform, a long, thin tether aligns itself along the local vertical by virtue of the gradient of the Earth gravity field. If made of metal, the tether can function as a VED (Vertical Electric Dipole) transmitting antenna at ELF and VLF.
    Keywords: COMMUNICATIONS AND RADAR
    Type: AGARD, ELF(VLF)LF Radio Propagation and Systems Aspects; 14 p
    Format: text
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  • 6
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-17
    Description: A tethered satellite system has been conceived as a device to extend the capability of the Space Shuttle to perform scientific/applications investigations and operational activities. The concept envisions a multiple-use tethered system with closed-loop control, capable of supporting a payload or satellite suspended from the Shuttle cargo bay, toward or away from the earth, at distances up to 100 kilometers from the Shuttle. This paper discusses the background and results of early analyses and feasibility studies, and presents a design and operational description of the system. Also presented are a discussion of potential applications of the Tethered Satellite System, and plans for an operational verification flight in 1982.
    Keywords: SPACE TRANSPORTATION
    Type: Journal of the Astronautical Sciences; 26; Jan
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The Marshall Amateur Radio Club Experiment (MARCE) data system, the data recorded during the flight of STS-61C, the manner in which the data was reduced to engineering units, and the performance of the student experiments determined from the data are briefly described.
    Keywords: COMMUNICATIONS AND RADAR
    Type: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center The 1986 Get Away Special Experimenter's Symposium; p 149-156
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: The basic design considerations for waveguide slottery arrays are reviewed, with emphasis on those design requirements that are most significant to both airborne and spaceborne synthetic array radar (SAR) systems. As an illustration of both design procedures and performance capability of slotted waveguide planar arrays, an L-band planar array was designed, fabricated, and tested. This array has an aperture approximately one meter wide by two meters high and was designed to be a typical submodule of a larger antenna. Measurements of radiation patterns, gain, and VSWR were recorded and are presented, together with the performance characteristics predicted on the basis of theoretical analysis.
    Keywords: COMMUNICATIONS AND RADAR
    Type: NASA. Johnson Space Center Addendum to Proc. of the 1978 Syn. Aperture Radar Technol. Conf.; 16 p
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 9
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2014-09-17
    Description: Forces on tethered satellites, tether tension as a function of the effective mass, and parameters of candidate tether materials are examined. Illustrations show: stabilization control law; tethered satellite deployment and retrieval; angular momentum; electric motor effect reboost; a very long tether phenomenon; shuttle tethered satellite effects on the orbiter; artificial gravity; tethered satellite rendezvous docking relative velocity; and scaling up from the shuttle/TSS. Limitations of the tethered satellite system and of tether properties as well as cost/benefits trades for future applications are considered.
    Keywords: MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
    Type: Appl. of Tethers in Space, Vol. 1; 15 p
    Format: text
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2018-12-01
    Description: The small free-flying tether system deployable from a Get-Away Special canister is analyzed. The objectives of the GAS experiment which include demonstrating electric power generation and orbital reboost using electrodynamic technology, measuring micrometeoroid hazards to the tethers, conducting a radio propagation experiment, and measuring long wire radar-cross-section are discussed. The physical layout and components of the mother and daughter satellites are described. The command and control system of the tether system is examined. The electrodynamic experiments to be conducted after plasma contact is established and the electrodynamical capabilities of the system are considered.
    Keywords: ASTRONAUTICS (GENERAL)
    Format: text
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