silverbullet satellite receiver
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silverbullet satellite receiver
Comparisons of mesopause region temperatures measured by ground-based and satellite instruments above Svalbard (78°N) Margit E. Dyrland1, Frank Mulligan2 and Chris Hall3 The University Centre in Svalbard National University of Ireland, Maynooth The University of Tromsø May 2010 Outline - Instruments and data - OH(6-2) vs SABER - Temperature-wind coupling - Meteor wind radar (MWR) temperatures Photo: M. Dyrland “The Silver Bullet” 1m Ebert-Fastie spectrometer measuring hydroxyl airglow OH(6-2) From October 2007 placed at the Kjell Henriksen Observatory (KHO), before that at Nordlysstasjonen (5 km away) s/n issues after the move :o( What the ”Silver Bullet” measures: Auroral line 8446Å “auroral contamination” Temperatures are derived from the intensities of the various OH(6-2) rotational lines via a Boltzmann plot. Meteor radar temperatures and winds Temperatures from Nippon/Norway Svalbard Meteor Radar (NSMR): 1) Da=λ2 ln2/16π2 τ1/2 2) Da=Kamb·T2/P T=const ·√(P/τ1/2) (Hall et al., 2004) Photo: F. Sigernes Zonal and meridional winds from: Cross-correlation between the data recorded on each receiver (five of them) (Tsutsumi et al., 1999) In operation since 2001 Courtesy of Chris Hall Satellite temperatures and OH altitude TIMED SABER satellite data: OH(4-2)/OH(5-3) temperatures and altitude distribution SABER profiles of temperature and OH volume emission rate (VER) for 2003 and 2004 OH equivalent temperatures found by weighting kinetic temperatures by VER (Mulligan and Lowe, Ann. Geophys., 2008) The 2003-2004 winter at mesopause level above Svalbard - unique OH(6-2) temperatures SABER OH equivalent temperatures SABER OH VER peak altitudes Eastward/westward zonal wind Poleward/equatorward meridional wind Bias: SABER-OH(6-2) = 5.6 ± 4.4 K (using Goldman et al., 1998) SABER-OH(6-2) = 14.0 ± 11.8 K (using Langhoff et al., 1986) Dyrland et al. (2010), JGR Atmospheres Meridional wind vs OH(6-2) temperature Corr.coeff R=0.71 Similar to Antarctic measurements by Espy et al., 2003 Meridional wind vs SABER OH peak altitude Corr.coeff R=-0.83 Not observed before! (to my knowledge) Dyrland et al., JGR, 2010 NSMR(MWR) vs SABER vs Aura MLS vs OH(6-2) Four completely independent temperature data sets, from instruments with very different field of views. NSMR (MWR) clearly overestimates the temperature in the initial “guess”.. Calibration/adjustment of MWR temperatures: SABER or Aura MLS as input? Aura MLS and SABER at Longyearbyen 110 100 90 Altitude (km) 80 70 60 50 40 SABER 2005 d032 Lat=80.956 Long=20.511 Time=4.308865 UT Aura 2005 d032 Lat=80.655 Long=23.844 Time=4.150042 30 20 10 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260 280 300 Temperature (K) Pro SABER: - Much better vertical resolution Pro Aura MLS: - Better annual coverage We chose Aura MLS Original time series before adjustment Coinciding daily averages of NSMR and Aura MLS temperatures Monthly mean diurnal variation in MWR temperatures Bias (tidal perturbation?) as function of month Second step: Adjustment of NSMR temperatures according to bias Comparisons with models etc.. Dyrland et al., in press Radio Sci., 2010 SIOS – Svalbard Integradted Arctic Earth Observing System Integrate the studies of geophysical, chemical and biological processes from all research and monitoring platforms. This will be done through: Organize all infrastructure and all research and monitoring activities into four observation platforms being land-based, sea-based, glacier/ice-based and space/air-based Assess the present infrastructure and activities to identify gaps and weaknesses in the system. Invest in additional infrastructure and activities to close these gaps Establish a Knowledge Centre in Longyearbyen for data assessment, storage and delivery, education and outreach, cooperative efforts, and input to Earth System modeling Take actions to coordinate the SIOS initiative with complementary ESFRI efforts as well as other Earth Observation Systems and related modelling efforts Preparatory phase 2008-2010: Gap analysis and technical design studies of all observational platforms under the Norwegian national infrastructure roadmap. Designing and organizing the Knowledge Centre, setting up the board and recruiting management. Construction phase 2010->: Implementing new instruments and validation programs, based on gap analysis. Establishing integrated database services. Recruiting personnel and starting up the Knowledge Centre Operation 2012->: Full operation of the European Hub and Node in SAON. Thank you for your attention! Photo: M. Dyrland
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