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Consistency and structural uncertainty of multi-mission GPS radio occultation records.

Authors :
Steiner, Andrea K.
Ladstädter, Florian
Ao, Chi O.
Gleisner, Hans
Shu-Peng Ho
Hunt, Doug
Schmidt, Torsten
Foelsche, Ulrich
Kirchengast, Gottfried
Ying-Hwa Kuo
Lauritsen, Kent B.
Mannucci, Anthony J.
Nielsen, Johannes K.
Schreiner, William
Schwärz, Marc
Sokolovskiy, Sergey
Syndergaard, Stig
Wickert, Jens
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions. 2019, p1-43. 43p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Atmospheric climate monitoring requires observations of high-quality conforming to the criteria of the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS). Radio occultation (RO) data based on Global Positioning System (GPS) signals are available since 2001 from several satellite missions with global coverage, high accuracy, and high vertical resolution in the troposphere and lower stratosphere. We assess the consistency and long-term stability of multi-satellite RO observations for use as climate data records. As a measure of long-term stability, we quantify the structural uncertainty of RO data products arising from different processing schemes. We analyze atmospheric variables from bending angle to temperature for four RO missions, CHAMP, Formosat-3/COSMIC, GRACE, and Metop, provided by five data centers. The comparisons are based on profile-to-profile differences, aggregated to monthly means. Structural uncertainty in trends is found lowest from 8 km to 25 km altitude globally for all inspected RO variables and missions. For temperature, it is < 0.05 K per decade in the global mean and < 0.1 K per decade at all latitudes. Above 25 km, the uncertainty increases for CHAMP while data from the other missions are based on advanced receivers and are usable to higher altitudes for climate trend studies: dry temperature to 35 km, refractivity to 40 km, and bending angle to 50 km. Larger differences in RO data at high altitudes and latitudes are mainly due to different implementation choices in the retrievals. The intercomparison helped to further enhance the maturity of the RO record and confirms the climate quality of multi-satellite RO observations towards establishing a GCOS climate data record. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18678610
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139996824
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2019-358