279 research outputs found
Assimilation of reprocessed ERS scatterometer data into ECMWF weather analysis on the Mediterranean Sea
International audienceSince the launch of ERS-1 in 1991 and ERS-2 in 1995, carrying a C-band Scatterometer, a data set of more than thirteen years of backscattered signal from the Earth surface is available for exploitation. With its global coverage, day or night and all-weather operation, ERS Scatterometer data offer unique opportunity for long-term studies and research. To fulfill the needs of the scientific community, the European Space Agency (ESA) has developed the project: Advanced Scatterometer Processing System (ASPS). Main scope of the project is to provide with state-of-the-art algorithm, high quality and homogenous Scatterometer measurements (sigma nought) of the Earth surface and high quality wind field over the Oceans by re-processing the entire ERS mission. Additional scope is to provide on experimental basis scientific products in high resolution tailored for the emerging Scatterometer application on Ice and Land. The ASPS project is now in a pre-operational phase and the scope of the paper is to give to the scientific community an overview of the ASPS data and show the assimilation of the data into the ECMWF weather analysis system. ASPS data hopefully will help the scientific community to better understand and monitor the Earth's climate changes and to protect our environment
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The role of the stratospheric polar vortex for the austral jet response to greenhouse gas forcing
Future shifts of the austral midlatitude jet are subject to large uncertainties in climate model projections. Here we show that, in addition to other previously identified sources of inter-model uncertainty, changes in the timing of the stratospheric polar vortex breakdown modulate the austral jet response to greenhouse gas forcing during summertime (December-February). The relationship is such that a larger delay in vortex breakdown favors a more poleward jet shift, with an estimated 0.7-0.8-degree increase in jet shift per 10 days delay in vortex breakdown. The causality of the link between the timing of the vortex breakdown and the tropospheric jet response is demonstrated through climate modeling experiments with imposed changes in the seasonality of the stratospheric polar vortex. The vortex response is estimated to account for about 30% of the inter-model variance in the shift of the summertime austral jet, and about 45% of the mean jet shift
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Airmass analysis of the processes driving the progression of the Indian summer monsoon
The Indian summer monsoon is a vital source of water and a cause of severe impacts for more than a billion people in the Indian subcontinent. The INCOMPASS project investigates the mechanisms driving its onset and progression through an observational field campaign supplemented by highâresolution numerical simulations for the 2016 season using UK Met Office models. A 4.4âkm resolution convectionâpermitting limitedâarea model simulation (driven at its boundaries by a dailyâinitialised global model) is used in this study, and verified against observations, along with shortâleadâtime operational global forecasts. These data show that the monsoon progression towards northwest India in June 2016 is a nonâsteady process, modulated by the interaction between moist lowâlevel southwesterly flow from the Arabian Sea and a northwesterly incursion of descending dry air from western and central Asia. The location and extent of these two flows are closely linked to midlatitude dynamics, through the southward propagation of potential vorticity streamers and the associated formation of cyclonic circulations in the region where the two airmasses interact. Particular focus is devoted to the use of Lagrangian trajectories to characterise the evolution of the airstreams and complement the Eulerian monsoon progression analysis. The trajectories confirm that the interaction of the two airstreams is a primary driver of the general moistening of the troposphere associated with monsoon progression. They also indicate the occurrence of local diabatic processes along the airstreams, such as turbulent mixing and local evaporation from the Arabian Sea, in addition to moisture transport from remote sources. In summary, this combined EulerianâLagrangian analysis reveals the nonâsteady nature of monsoon progression towards northwest India. This process is driven by the interaction of different airmasses and influenced by a synergy of factors on a variety of scales, such as midlatitude dynamics, transient weather systems and local diabatic processes
Observed transport variability of the Atlantic Subtropical Cells and their impact on tropical sea-surface temperature variability
The Atlantic Subtropical Cells (STCs) are shallow wind-driven overturning circulations connecting the tropical upwelling areas with the subtropical subduction regions. In both hemispheres they are characterized by equatorward transport at thermocline level, upwelling at the equator and poleward Ekman transport in the surface layer. STCs are suggested to impact sea surface temperature variability in tropical upwelling regions on interannual to decadal time scales through the variability either in STC transport and/or hydrographic properties.
Here we present a 21st century mean state of the horizontal branches of the Atlantic STCs. Argo
float data and repeated ship sections show that the equatorward part of the STCs can be observed
between the 26.0 kg m-3 isopycnal and a seasonally varying upper boundary (30-70 m). Transport estimates within this layer reveal that the southern hemisphere contributes about 3 times more to the transport convergence between 10°N and 10°S than the northern hemisphere. In contrast, poleward transports in the surface layer driven by the Ekman divergence are rather symmetric.
Overall, a residual transport of about 3 Sv remains. This missing transport could either be linked to diapycnal transport across the 26.0 kg m-3 isopycnal, as part of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation which partly upwells in the tropics, or to uncertainties of the transport estimates, particularly at the western boundary at 10°N.
From 2010 to 2017, both Ekman divergence and thermocline layer convergence between 10°N and 10°S suggest an increase in STC transport with a dominating contribution from the northern hemisphere. The observations further show opposing thermocline layer transports at the western boundary and in the interior basin that are partly compensating each other. Implications of the increase in STC transport and variability of the STC hydrographic variability in the tropical Atlantic will be discussed
Assimilation of atmospheric infrasound data to constrain tropospheric and stratospheric winds
This data assimilation study exploits infrasound from explosions to probe an atmospheric wind component from the ground up to stratospheric altitudes. Planned explosions of old ammunition in Finland generate transient infrasound waves that travel through the atmosphere. These waves are partially reflected back towards the ground from stratospheric levels, and are detected at a receiver station located in northern Norway at 178 km almost due North from the explosion site. The difference between the true horizontal direction towards the source and the backazimuth direction(the horizontal direction of arrival) of the incoming infrasound wave-fronts, in combination with the pulse propagation time, are exploited to provide an estimate of the average cross-wind component in the penetrated atmosphere. We perform offline assimilation experiments with an ensemble Kalman filter and these observations, using the ERA5 ensemble reanalysis atmospheric product as background(prior) for the wind at different vertical levels. We demonstrate that information from both source scan be combined to obtain analysis (posterior) estimates of cross-winds at different vertical levels of the atmospheric slice between the explosion site and the recording station. The assimilation makes greatest impact at the 12â60 km levels, with some changes with respect to the prior of the order of 0.1â1.0 m/s, which is a magnitude larger than the typical standard deviation of the ERA5 background. The reduction of background variance in the higher levels often reached 2â5%. This is the first published study demonstrating techniques to implement assimilation of infrasound data into atmospheric models. It paves the way for further exploration in the use of infrasound observationsâ especially natural and continuous sources â to probe the middle atmospheric dynamics and to assimilate these data into atmospheric model products
Charmed quark component of the photon wave function
We determine the c-anti-c component of the photon wave function on the basis
of (i) the data on the transitions e+ e- -> J/psi(3096), psi(3686), psi(4040),
psi(4415), (ii) partial widths of the two-photon decays eta_{c0}(2979),
chi_{c0}(3415), chi_{c2}(3556) -> gamma-gamma, and (iii) wave functions of the
charmonium states obtained by solving the Bethe-Salpeter equation for the
c-anti-c system. Using the obtained c-anti-c component of the photon wave
function we calculate the gamma-gamma decay partial widths for radial
excitation 2S state, eta_{c0}(3594) -> gamma-gamma, and 2P states
chi_{c0}(3849), chi_{c2}(3950) -> gamma-gamma.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
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Potential for early forecast of Moroccan wheat yields based on climatic drivers
Wheat production plays an important role in Morocco. Current wheat forecast systems use weather and vegetation data during the crop growing phase, thus limiting the earliest possible release date to early spring. However, Morocco' s wheat production is mostly rainfed and thus strongly tied to fluctuations in rainfall, which in turn depend on slowly evolving climate dynamics. This offers a source of predictability at longer time scales. Using physically guided causal discovery algorithms, we extract climate precursors for wheat yield variability from gridded fields of geopotential height and sea surface temperatures which show potential for accurate yield forecasts already in December, with around 50% explained variance in an outâofâsample cross validation. The detected interactions are physically meaningful and consistent with documented oceanâatmosphere feedbacks. Reliable yield forecasts at such long lead times could provide farmers and policy makers with necessary information for early action and strategic adaptation measurements to support food security
Quark--antiquark states and their radiative transitions in terms of the spectral integral equation. {\Huge II.} Charmonia
In the precedent paper of the authors (hep-ph/0510410), the states
were treated in the framework of the spectral integral equation, together with
simultaneous calculations of radiative decays of the considered bottomonia. In
the present paper, such a study is carried out for the charmonium
states. We reconstruct the interaction in the -sector on the basis of
data for the charmonium levels with , , ,
, , and radiative transitions
, , ,
and , ,
. The levels and their wave functions
are calculated for the radial excitations with . Also, we determine the
component of the photon wave function using the annihilation
data: , , , , , and perform the calculations of the partial widths of
the two-photon decays for the states: , ,
, and states:
, , . We discuss the status of the recently observed states
X(3872) and Y(3941): according to our results, the X(3872) can be either
or , while Y(3941) is .Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure
Confinement, the gluon propagator and the interquark potential for heavy mesons
The interquark static potential for heavy mesons described by a massive One
Gluon Exchange interaction obtained from the propagator of the truncated
Dyson-Schwinger equations does not reproduced the expected Cornell potential. I
show that no formulation based on a finite propagator will lead to confinement
of quenched QCD. I propose a mechanism based on a singular nonperturbative
coupling constant which has the virtue of giving rise to a finite gluon
propagator and (almost) linear confinement. The mechanism can be slightly
modified to produce the screened potentials of unquenched QCD.Comment: 12 pages and 7 figure
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