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Estimating Effective Data Density in a Satellite Retrieval or an Objective Analysis
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References
1993
Year
Satellite RetrievalEngineeringMeasurementObjective AnalysisEarth ScienceActual DensityInformation RetrievalData ScienceSatellite MeasurementCalibrationEffective Data DensityData RetrievalData ManagementStatisticsSatellite ImagingGeodesyDensity EstimationSatellite Signal ProcessingGeographyKnowledge DiscoveryRadiation MeasurementSpatial Data AcquisitionConsistent Objective DefinitionsRadiometryModel Resolution FunctionSignal ProcessingSatellite Navigation SystemsRemote SensingSatellite MeteorologySpatial StatisticsData Modeling
An attempt is made to formulate consistent objective definitions of the concept of “effective data density” applicable both in the context of satellite soundings more generally in objective data analysis. The definitions based upon various forms of Backus-Gilbert “spread” functions are found to be seriously misleading in satellite soundings where the model resolution function (expressing the sensitivity of retrieval or analysis to changes in the background error) features sidelobes. Instead, estimates derived by smoothing the trace components of the model resolution function are proposed. The new estimates are found to be more reliable and informative in simulated satellite retrieval problems and, for the special case of uniformly spaced perfect observations, agree exactly with their actual density. The new estimates integrate to the “degrees of freedom for signal,” a diagnostic that is invariant to changes of units or coordinates used.