A Quality Control study of the distribution of NOAA MIRS Cloudy retrievals during Hurricane Sandy
Abstract
Cloudy radiance present a difficult challenge to data assimilation (DA) systems, through both the radiative transfer system as well the hydrometers required to resolve the cloud and precipitation. In most DA systems the hydrometers are not control variables due to many limitations. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Microwave Integrated Retrieval System (MIRS) is producing products from the NPP-ATMS satellite where the scene is cloud and precipitation affected. The test case that we present here is the life time of Hurricane and then Superstorm Sandy in October 2012. As a quality control study we shall compare the retrieved water vapor content during the lifetime of Sandy with the first guess and the analysis from the NOAA Gridpoint Statistical Interpolation (GSI) system. The assessment involves the gross error check system against the first guess with different values for the observational error's variance to see if the difference is within three standard deviations. We shall also compare against the final analysis at the relevant cycles to see if the products which have been retrieved through a cloudy radiance are similar, given that the DA system does not assimilate cloudy radiances yet.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFMNG21A1457F
- Keywords:
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- 3260 MATHEMATICAL GEOPHYSICS Inverse theory;
- 3336 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES Numerical approximations and analyses;
- 3315 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES Data assimilation;
- 4468 NONLINEAR GEOPHYSICS Probability distributions;
- heavy and fat-tailed