Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Marine Winds from Scatterometer Data on Weather Analysis and Forecasting
129
Citations
59
References
2001
Year
Satellite Scatterometer DataWeather AnalysisEngineeringScatterometer DataWeather ForecastingOceanographyEarth ScienceMarine MeteorologyNumerical Weather PredictionAtmospheric ScienceMeteorological MeasurementHydrometeorologyMeteorologyPotential ImpactGeographyRadiation MeasurementForecastingScatterometer Surface WindsCoastal MeteorologyClimate DynamicsRadarRemote SensingSatellite MeteorologyMarine Winds
Abstract Satellite scatterometer observations of the ocean surface wind speed and direction improve the depiction of storms at sea. Over the ocean, scatterometer surface winds are deduced from multiple measurements of reflected radar power made from several directions. In the nominal situation, the scattering mechanism is Bragg scattering from centimeter–scale waves, which are in equilibrium with the local wind. These data are especially valuable where observations are otherwise sparse—mostly in the Southern Hemisphere extratropics and Tropics, but also on occasion in the North Atlantic and North Pacific. The history of scatterometer winds research and its application to weather analysis and forecasting is reviewed here. Two types of data impact studies have been conducted to evaluate the effect of satellite data, including satellite scatterometer data, for NWP. These are simulation experiments (or observing system simulation experiments or OSSEs) designed primarily to assess the potential impact of plann...
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