Publication | Open Access
First Spaceborne GNSS‐Reflectometry Observations of Hurricanes From the UK TechDemoSat‐1 Mission
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Citations
19
References
2017
Year
EngineeringSharp GradientsGeophysical Signal ProcessingGeophysicsSatellite MeasurementAtmospheric ScienceSpaceborne Gnss‐reflectometry ObservationsMeteorological MeasurementGnss‐r SignalsGeodesyMeteorologyRadiation MeasurementEye WallUk Techdemosat‐1 MissionSpace WeatherSatellite Navigation SystemsRemote SensingSatellite MeteorologySpace Geodesy
Abstract We present the first examples of Global Navigation Satellite Systems‐Reflectometry (GNSS‐R) observations of hurricanes using spaceborne data from the UK TechDemoSat‐1 (TDS‐1) mission. We confirm that GNSS‐R signals can detect ocean condition changes in very high near‐surface ocean wind associated with hurricanes. TDS‐1 GNSS‐R reflections were collocated with International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship (IBTrACS) hurricane data, MetOp ASCAT A/B scatterometer winds, and two reanalysis products. Clear variations of GNSS‐R reflected power (σ 0 ) are observed as reflections travel through hurricanes, in some cases up to and through the eye wall. The GNSS‐R reflected power is tentatively inverted to estimate wind speed using the TDS‐1 baseline wind retrieval algorithm developed for low to moderate winds. Despite this, TDS‐1 GNSS‐R winds through the hurricanes show closer agreement with IBTrACS estimates than winds provided by scatterometers and reanalyses. GNSS‐R wind profiles show realistic spatial patterns and sharp gradients that are consistent with expected structures around the eye of tropical cyclones.
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