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NASA's GMAO Atmospheric Motion Vectors Simulator: Description and Application to the MISTiC Winds ConceptAn atmospheric wind vectors (AMVs) simulator was developed by NASA's GMAO to simulate observations from future satellite constellation concepts. The synthetic AMVs can then be used in OSSEs to estimate and quantify the potential added value of new observations to the present Earth observing system and, ultimately, the expected impact on the current weather forecasting skill. The GMAO AMV simulator is a tunable and flexible computer code that is able to simulate AMVs expected to be derived from different instruments and satellite orbit configurations. As a case study and example of the usefulness of this tool, the GMAO AMV simulator was used to simulate AMVs envisioned to be provided by the MISTiC Winds, a NASA mission concept consisting of a constellation of satellites equipped with infrared spectral midwave spectrometers, expected to provide high spatial and temporal resolution temperature and humidity soundings of the troposphere that can be used to derive AMVs from the tracking of clouds and water vapor features. The GMAO AMV simulator identifies trackable clouds and water vapor features in the G5NR and employs a probabilistic function to draw a subset of the identified trackable features. Before the simulator is applied to the MISTiC Winds concept, the simulator was calibrated to yield realistic observations counts and spatial distributions and validated considering as a proxy instrument to the MISTiC Winds the Himawari-8 Advanced Imager (AHI). The simulated AHI AMVs showed a close match with the real AHI AMVs in terms of observation counts and spatial distributions, showing that the GMAO AMVs simulator synthesizes AMVs observations with enough quality and realism to produce a response from the DAS equivalent to the one produced with real observations. When applied to the MISTiC Winds scanning points, it can be expected that the MISTiC Winds will be able to collect approximately 60,000 wind observations every 6 hours, if considering a constellation composed of 12 satellites (4 orbital planes). In addition, one of the main expected impacts of the MISTiC Winds concept is the ability to derive water vapor feature tracking AMVs below 500-400 hPa, an unique feature among the water vapor AMVs derived from the current Earth observing system.
Document ID
20180004516
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Carvalho, David
(Universities Space Research Association (USRA) Greenbelt, MD, United States)
McCarty, Will
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Errico, Ron
(Morgan State Univ. Baltimore, MD, United States)
Prive, Nikki
(Morgan State Univ. Baltimore, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2018
Publication Date
July 4, 2018
Subject Category
Geosciences (General)
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN57935
Meeting Information
Meeting: Workshop on Sensitivity Analysis and Data Assimilation in Meteorology and Oceanography
Location: Aveiro
Country: Portugal
Start Date: July 1, 2018
End Date: July 6, 2018
Sponsors: Morgan State Univ.
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG11HP16A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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