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Objectively Determining the Rotational Center of Tropical Cyclones in Passive Microwave Satellite Imagery
Author(s) -
Anthony Wimmers,
Christopher S. Velden
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of applied meteorology and climatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.079
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1558-8432
pISSN - 1558-8424
DOI - 10.1175/2010jamc2490.1
Subject(s) - tropical cyclone , satellite , remote sensing , meteorology , wind shear , multispectral image , enhanced data rates for gsm evolution , geology , brightness temperature , center (category theory) , microwave , mesoscale meteorology , wind speed , environmental science , geodesy , computer science , artificial intelligence , geography , physics , telecommunications , chemistry , astronomy , crystallography
Precise center-fixing of tropical cyclones (TCs) is critical for operational forecasting, intensity estimation, and visualization. Current procedures are usually performed with manual input from a human analyst, using multispectral satellite imagery as the primary tools. While adequate in many cases, subjective interpretation can often lead to variance in the estimated center positions. In this paper an objective, robust algorithm is presented for resolving the rotational center of TCs: the Automated Rotational Center Hurricane Eye Retrieval (ARCHER). The algorithm finds the center of rotation using spirally oriented brightness temperature gradients in the TC banding patterns in combination with gradients along the ring-shaped edge of a possible eye. It is calibrated and validated using 85–92-GHz passive microwave imagery because of this frequency’s relative ubiquity in TC applications; however, similar versions of ARCHER are also shown to work effectively with other satellite imagery of TCs. In ...

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