45 research outputs found
Inter-technique validation of tropospheric slant total delays
An extensive validation of line-of-sight tropospheric slant total delays (STD) from Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), ray tracing in numerical weather prediction model (NWM) fields and microwave water vapour radiometer (WVR) is presented. Ten GNSS reference stations, including collocated sites, and almost 2 months of data from 2013, including severe weather events were used for comparison. Seven institutions delivered their STDs based on GNSS observations processed using 5 software programs and 11 strategies enabling to compare rather different solutions and to assess the impact of several aspects of the processing strategy. STDs from NWM ray tracing came from three institutions using three different NWMs and ray-tracing software. Inter-techniques evaluations demonstrated a good mutual agreement of various GNSS STD solutions compared to NWM and WVR STDs. The mean bias among GNSS solutions not considering post-fit residuals in STDs was -0.6 mm for STDs scaled in the zenith direction and the mean standard deviation was 3.7 mm. Standard deviations of comparisons between GNSS and NWM ray-tracing solutions were typically 10 mm +/- 2 mm (scaled in the zenith direction), depending on the NWM model and the GNSS station. Comparing GNSS versus WVR STDs reached standard deviations of 12 mm +/- 2 mm also scaled in the zenith direction. Impacts of raw GNSS post-fit residuals and cleaned residuals on optimal reconstructing of GNSS STDs were evaluated at intertechnique comparison and for GNSS at collocated sites. The use of raw post-fit residuals is not generally recommended as they might contain strong systematic effects, as demonstrated in the case of station LDB0. Simplified STDs reconstructed only from estimated GNSS tropospheric parameters, i.e. without applying post-fit residuals, performed the best in all the comparisons; however, it obviously missed part of tropospheric signals due to non-linear temporal and spatial variations in the troposphere. Although the post-fit residuals cleaned of visible systematic errors generally showed a slightly worse performance, they contained significant tropospheric signal on top of the simplified model. They are thus recommended for the reconstruction of STDs, particularly during high variability in the troposphere. Cleaned residuals also showed a stable performance during ordinary days while containing promising information about the troposphere at low-elevation angles.Web of Science1062208218
The CORDEX.be initiative as a foundation for climate services in Belgium
The CORDEX.be project created the foundations for Belgian climate services by producing high-resolution Belgian climate information that (a) incorporates the expertise of the different Belgian climate modeling groups and that (b) is consistent with the outcomes of the international CORDEX ("COordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment") project. The key practical tasks for the project were the coordination of activities among different Belgian climate groups, fostering the links to specific international initiatives and the creation of a stakeholder dialogue. Scientifically, the CORDEX.be project contributed to the EURO-CORDEX project, created a small ensemble of High-Resolution (H-Res) future projections over Belgium at convection-permitting resolutions and coupled these to seven Local Impact Models. Several impact studies have been carried out. The project also addressed some aspects of climate change uncertainties. The interactions and feedback from the stakeholder dialogue led to different practical applications at the Belgian national level
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Review of Environmental Monitoring by Means of Radio Waves in the Polar Regions: From Atmosphere to Geospace
The Antarctic and Arctic regions are Earth's open windows to outer space. They provide unique opportunities for investigating the troposphere–thermosphere–ionosphere–plasmasphere system at high latitudes, which is not as well understood as the mid- and low-latitude regions mainly due to the paucity of experimental observations. In addition, different neutral and ionised atmospheric layers at high latitudes are much more variable compared to lower latitudes, and their variability is due to mechanisms not yet fully understood. Fortunately, in this new millennium the observing infrastructure in Antarctica and the Arctic has been growing, thus providing scientists with new opportunities to advance our knowledge on the polar atmosphere and geospace. This review shows that it is of paramount importance to perform integrated, multi-disciplinary research, making use of long-term multi-instrument observations combined with ad hoc measurement campaigns to improve our capability of investigating atmospheric dynamics in the polar regions from the troposphere up to the plasmasphere, as well as the coupling between atmospheric layers. Starting from the state of the art of understanding the polar atmosphere, our survey outlines the roadmap for enhancing scientific investigation of its physical mechanisms and dynamics through the full exploitation of the available infrastructures for radio-based environmental monitoring
Sounding the earth's atmospheric water vapour using signals emitted by Global Navigation Satellite Systems
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) are used to determine positions. As GNSS signals traverse the atmosphere, they undergo refraction, which is a disturbance that needs to be eliminated to allow high-accuracy positioning. However, when using stations with accurately known positions, the tropospheric path delay induced by the neutral atmosphere can be retrieved and provides valuable information to study the atmospheric water vapour for meteorological and climate applications. In this thesis, a GNSS analysis method was developed to estimate in near real-time tropospheric Zenith Path Delays (ZPD) from a European network of GNSS stations which comply with all requirements imposed by operational meteorology. Today, the method is applied to provide a service within the EUMETNET GNSS Water Vapour Program (E-GVAP). ZPD are estimated every 15 min, with a precision of about 5mm, a reliability score above 99% and are assimilated by meteorological agencies in their numerical weather prediction models. The method was further applied to observations from the Belgian dense GPS network during a severe thunderstorm to reconstruct the 2-D water vapour field over Belgium. The analysis showed that adding observations from GNSS densification networks on top of the European one is mandatory to monitor small-scale water vapour structures. Modernised GNSS and the new European Galileo system will provide us in the future with more signals of better quality and better observation geometry. A full multi-GNSS analysis will improve the precision and reliability of the ZPD estimates, the monitoring of small-scale water vapour structures and open new fields of meteorological applications.(PHYS 3) -- UCL, 201