z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Forecast Impact of FORMOSAT ‐7/ COSMIC ‐2 GNSS Radio Occultation Measurements
Author(s) -
Ruston Benjamin,
Healy Sean
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
atmospheric science letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.951
H-Index - 45
ISSN - 1530-261X
DOI - 10.1002/asl.1019
Subject(s) - radiosonde , gnss applications , radio occultation , environmental science , numerical weather prediction , meteorology , troposphere , satellite system , cosmic cancer database , global forecast system , satellite , geography , physics , aerospace engineering , engineering , astrophysics
The FORMOSAT‐7/COSMIC‐2 GNSS‐RO mission was launched on June 25, 2019, and it has provided a large increase in the number of GNSS‐RO observations available for operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) in the latitude band between ±40°. A key aim of this mission has been to improve the GNSS‐RO measurement quality in the lower and middle troposphere. In this study, we summarize the impact of the FORMOSAT‐7/COSMIC‐2 measurements in two independent NWP systems, which are now assimilating these measurements operationally. These are the United States Navy Global Environmental Model (NAVGEM) and the European Center for Medium‐Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Integrated Forecasting System (IFS). Both systems employ a 4‐dimensional variational system (4D‐Var), and assimilate GNSS‐RO bending angles. The experiments cover the period January to March 2020. The impact of the FORMOSAT‐7/COSMIC‐2 measurements is assessed using improvements in short‐range forecast departures to other observations such as radiosonde and radiances, forecast error statistics against a verifying analysis, and adjoint based Forecast Sensitivity to Observation Impact (FSOI) estimates. The FORMOSAT‐7/COSMIC‐2 measurement has a clear impact on stratospheric temperatures and winds in the tropics. A novel finding is that the measurements also improve the tropical tropospheric humidity fit to radiosondes, and the fit to tropospheric radiances sensitive to humidity. To date, the impact of GNSS‐RO on humidity has been difficult to demonstrate in well constrained, operational NWP systems assimilating the full suite of observations. The results are achieved with a conservative assimilation approach which extended the quality control and observation error assignments used for the previous COSMIC receivers; further, possible improvements to the assimilation strategy are noted.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here