Temperature and water vapor profiles derived from downward-looking GPS occultation data

被引:6
|
作者
Aoyama, Y [1 ]
Shoji, Y
Mousa, A
Tsuda, T
Nakamura, H
机构
[1] Kyoto Univ, Radio Sci Ctr Space & Atmosphere, Uji, Kyoto 6110011, Japan
[2] Japan Meteorol Agcy, Meteorol Res Inst, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
[3] Japan Meteorol Agcy, Numer Predict Div, Tokyo, Japan
关键词
D O I
10.2151/jmsj.2004.433
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Downward-looking (DL) Global Positioning System (GPS) occultation experiments from the top of Mt. Fuji were carried out as a joint project between Kyoto University, Meteorological Research Institute in Japan, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in the U.S.A. from July 10 to September 25, 2001, in order to obtain temperature, water vapor and pressure profiles near the Earth's surface. A TurboRogue SNR-8000 GPS receiver and a choke ring antenna were installed at the Mt. Fuji weather station located at an altitude of about 3.8 km. Applying an Abel inversion, these DL observations can provide refractivity profiles over an area south of Mt. Fuji. This paper shows temperature, relative humidity, and pressure profiles derived from these refractivity profiles using a one-dimensional variational technique (1D-Var). The derived profiles show agreement with the Mt. Fuji weather station observations within 1.7 degreesC, 1.2%, and 1.0 hPa at the receiver altitude.
引用
收藏
页码:433 / 440
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Deriving atmospheric water vapor and ozone profiles from active microwave occultation measurements
    Feng, DD
    Syndergaard, S
    Herman, BM
    Kursinski, ER
    Yunck, TP
    Romberg, FW
    SENSORS, SYSTEMS, AND NEXT-GENERATION SATELLITES IV, 2000, 4169 : 299 - 308
  • [22] An investigation of atmospheric temperature profiles in the Australian region using collocated GPS radio occultation and radiosonde data
    Zhang, K.
    Fu, E.
    Silcock, D.
    Wang, Y.
    Kuleshov, Y.
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2011, 4 (10) : 2087 - 2092
  • [23] How transferable are downward-looking and handheld ground penetrating radar data? Experiments in the context of buried threat detection
    Stump, Evan
    Reichman, Daniel
    Collins, Leslie M.
    Malof, Jordan M.
    DETECTION AND SENSING OF MINES, EXPLOSIVE OBJECTS, AND OBSCURED TARGETS XXIV, 2019, 11012
  • [24] Estimated errors in a global gravity wave climatology from GPS radio occultation temperature profiles
    de la Torre, A.
    Llamedo, P.
    Alexander, P.
    Schmidt, T.
    Wickert, J.
    ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH, 2010, 46 (02) : 174 - 179
  • [25] Retrieval of water vapor profiles from GPS/MET radio occultations
    O'Sullivan, DB
    Herman, BM
    Feng, D
    Flittner, DE
    Ward, DM
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2000, 81 (05) : 1031 - 1040
  • [26] Performance of the improved Abel transform to estimate electron density profiles from GPS occultation data
    M. Garcia-Fernandez
    M. Hernandez-Pajares
    J. M. Juan
    J. Sanz
    GPS Solutions, 2005, 9 : 105 - 110
  • [27] Sequential atmospheric profiles near a fixed location derived from GPS-LEO occultation measurements
    Yan, HJ
    Huang, D
    Huang, C
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1999, 26 (04) : 451 - 453
  • [28] Performance of the improved Abel transform to estimate electron density profiles from GPS occultation data
    Garcia-Fernandez, M
    Hernandez-Pajares, M
    Juan, JM
    Sanz, J
    GPS SOLUTIONS, 2005, 9 (02) : 105 - 110
  • [29] Global estimates of gravity wave parameters from GPS radio occultation temperature data
    Wang, L.
    Alexander, M. J.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2010, 115
  • [30] Ionospheric climatology derived from gps occultation observations made by the ionospheric occultation experiment
    Straus, P
    GPS SOLUTIONS, 2005, 9 (02) : 164 - 173