576 research outputs found
Resolution enhancement of multichannel microwave imagery from the Nimbus-7 SMMR for maritime rainfall analysis
A restoration of the 37, 21, 18, 10.7, and 6.6 GHz satellite imagery from the scanning multichannel microwave radiometer (SMMR) aboard Nimbus-7 to 22.2 km resolution is attempted using a deconvolution method based upon nonlinear programming. The images are deconvolved with and without the aid of prescribed constraints, which force the processed image to abide by partial a priori knowledge of the high-resolution result. The restored microwave imagery may be utilized to examined the distribution of precipitating liquid water in marine rain systems
Rainfall observation from X-band, space-borne, synthetic aperture radar
Abstract. Satellites carrying X-band Synthetic Aperture Radars (SAR) have recently been launched by several countries. These provide new opportunities to measure precipitation with higher spatial resolution than has heretofore been possible. Two algorithms to retrieve precipitation from such measurements over land have been developed, and the retrieved rainfall distributions were found to be consistent. A maritime rainfall distribution obtained from dual frequency (X and C-band) data was used to compute the Differential Polarized Phase Shift. The computed Differential Polarized Phase Shift compared well with the value measured from space. Finally, we show a comparison between a recent X-band SAR image of a precipitation distribution and an observation of the same rainfall from ground-based operational weather radar. Although no quantitative comparison of retrieved and conventional rainfall distributions could be made with the available data at this time, the results presented here point the way to such comparisons.</p
Potential of high-resolution detection and retrieval of precipitation fields from X-band spaceborne synthetic aperture radar over land
Abstract. X-band Synthetic Aperture Radars (X-SARs), able to image the Earth's surface at metric resolution, may provide a unique opportunity to measure rainfall over land with spatial resolution of about few hundred meters, due to the atmospheric moving-target degradation effects. This capability has become very appealing due to the recent launch of several X-SAR satellites, even though several remote sensing issues are still open. This work is devoted to: (i) explore the potential of X-band high-resolution detection and retrieval of rainfall fields from space using X-SAR signal backscattering amplitude and interferometric phase; (ii) evaluate the effects of spatial resolution degradation by precipitation and inhomogeneous beam filling when comparing to other satellite-based sensors. Our X-SAR analysis of precipitation effects has been carried out using both a TerraSAR-X (TSX) case study of Hurricane "Gustav" in 2008 over Mississippi (USA) and a COSMO-SkyMed (CSK) X-SAR case study of orographic rainfall over Central Italy in 2009. For the TSX case study the near-surface rain rate has been retrieved from the normalized radar cross section by means of a modified regression empirical algorithm (MREA). A relatively simple method to account for the geometric effect of X-SAR observation on estimated rainfall rate and first-order volumetric effects has been developed and applied. The TSX-retrieved rain fields have been compared to those estimated from the Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD) in Mobile (AL, USA). The rainfall detection capability of X-SAR has been tested on the CSK case study using the repeat-pass coherence response and qualitatively comparing its signature with ground-based Mt. Midia C-band radar in central Italy. A numerical simulator to represent the effect of the spatial resolution and the antenna pattern of TRMM satellite Precipitation Radar (PR) and Microwave Imager (TMI), using high-resolution TSX-retrieved rain images, has been also set up in order to evaluate the rainfall beam filling phenomenon. As expected, the spatial average can modify the statistics of the high-resolution precipitation fields, strongly reducing its dynamics in a way non-linearly dependent on the rain rate local average value
Potential of High-resolution Detection and Retrieval of Precipitation Fields from X-band Spaceborne Synthetic Aperture Radar over land
X-band Synthetic Aperture Radars (X-SARs),
able to image the Earth’s surface at metric resolution, may
provide a unique opportunity to measure rainfall over land
with spatial resolution of about few hundred meters, due to
the atmospheric moving-target degradation effects. This capability
has become very appealing due to the recent launch
of several X-SAR satellites, even though several remote sensing
issues are still open. This work is devoted to: (i) explore
the potential of X-band high-resolution detection and
retrieval of rainfall fields from space using X-SAR signal
backscattering amplitude and interferometric phase; (ii) evaluate
the effects of spatial resolution degradation by precipitation
and inhomogeneous beam filling when comparing to
other satellite-based sensors. Our X-SAR analysis of precipitation
effects has been carried out using both a TerraSAR-X
(TSX) case study of Hurricane “Gustav” in 2008 over Mississippi
(USA) and a COSMO-SkyMed (CSK) X-SAR case
study of orographic rainfall over Central Italy in 2009. For
the TSX case study the near-surface rain rate has been retrieved
from the normalized radar cross section by means of
a modified regression empirical algorithm (MREA). A relatively
simple method to account for the geometric effect
of X-SAR observation on estimated rainfall rate and firstorder
volumetric effects has been developed and applied. The
TSX-retrieved rain fields have been compared to those estimated
from the Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD)
in Mobile (AL, USA). The rainfall detection capability of
X-SAR has been tested on the CSK case study using the
Correspondence to: F. S. Marzano
([email protected])
repeat-pass coherence response and qualitatively comparing
its signature with ground-based Mt. Midia C-band radar in
central Italy. A numerical simulator to represent the effect of
the spatial resolution and the antenna pattern of TRMMsatellite
Precipitation Radar (PR) and Microwave Imager (TMI),
using high-resolution TSX-retrieved rain images, has been
also set up in order to evaluate the rainfall beam filling phenomenon.
As expected, the spatial average can modify the
statistics of the high-resolution precipitation fields, strongly
reducing its dynamics in a way non-linearly dependent on the
rain rate local average value
The evaluation of a shuttle borne lidar experiment to measure the global distribution of aerosols and their effect on the atmospheric heat budget
A shuttle-borne lidar system is described, which will provide basic data about aerosol distributions for developing climatological models. Topics discussed include: (1) present knowledge of the physical characteristics of desert aerosols and the absorption characteristics of atmospheric gas, (2) radiative heating computations, and (3) general circulation models. The characteristics of a shuttle-borne radar are presented along with some laboratory studies which identify schemes that permit the implementation of a high spectral resolution lidar system
Multiple scattering of laser beams in dense hydrosols
The multiple scattering of laser beams is usually described within the framework of small-angle scattering theory. The validity of this approximation as well as improvements due to the incorporation of diffusion theory in the calculations were studied
A Physical Model to Estimate Snowfall over Land using AMSU-B Observations
In this study, we present an improved physical model to retrieve snowfall rate over land using brightness temperature observations from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Advanced Microwave Sounder Unit-B (AMSU-B) at 89 GHz, 150 GHz, 183.3 +/- 1 GHz, 183.3 +/- 3 GHz, and 183.3 +/- 7 GHz. The retrieval model is applied to the New England blizzard of March 5, 2001 which deposited about 75 cm of snow over much of Vermont, New Hampshire, and northern New York. In this improved physical model, prior retrieval assumptions about snowflake shape, particle size distributions, environmental conditions, and optimization methodology have been updated. Here, single scattering parameters for snow particles are calculated with the Discrete-Dipole Approximation (DDA) method instead of assuming spherical shapes. Five different snow particle models (hexagonal columns, hexagonal plates, and three different kinds of aggregates) are considered. Snow particle size distributions are assumed to vary with air temperature and to follow aircraft measurements described by previous studies. Brightness temperatures at AMSU-B frequencies for the New England blizzard are calculated using these DDA calculated single scattering parameters and particle size distributions. The vertical profiles of pressure, temperature, relative humidity and hydrometeors are provided by MM5 model simulations. These profiles are treated as the a priori data base in the Bayesian retrieval algorithm. In algorithm applications to the blizzard data, calculated brightness temperatures associated with selected database profiles agree with AMSU-B observations to within about +/- 5 K at all five frequencies. Retrieved snowfall rates compare favorably with the near-concurrent National Weather Service (NWS) radar reflectivity measurements. The relationships between the NWS radar measured reflectivities Z(sub e) and retrieved snowfall rate R for a given snow particle model are derived by a histogram matching technique. All of these Z(sub e)-R relationships fall in the range of previously established Z(sub e)-R relationships for snowfall. This suggests that the current physical model developed in this study can reliably estimate the snowfall rate over land using the AMSU-B measured brightness temperatures
Flushing History as a Hydrogeological Control on the Regional Distribution of Arsenic in Shallow Groundwater of the Bengal Basin
Whereas serious health consequences of widespread consumption of
groundwater elevated in As have been documented in several South Asian
countries, the mechanisms responsible for As mobilization in reducing
aquifers remain poorly understood. We document here a previously unrecognized
and consistent relationship between dissolved As concentrations in
reducing groundwater and the phosphate-mobilizable As content of aquifer
sediment for a set of precisely depth-matched samples from across
Bangladesh. The relationship holds across nearly 3 orders of magnitude
in As concentrations and suggests that regional as well as local patterns
of dissolved As in shallow groundwater are set by the solid phase
according to a remarkably constant ratio of ∼250 μg/L
dissolved As per 1 mg/kg P-mobilizable As. We use this relationship
in a simple model of groundwater recharge to propose that the distribution
of groundwater As in shallow aquifers of the Bengal Basin could primarily
reflect the different flushing histories of sand formations deposited
in the region over the past several thousand years
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