climate applications of ground-based global navigation satellite systems (gnss ) measurements

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Climate Applications of ground- based Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) measurements Junhong (June) Wang Dept. of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY Earth Observing Laboratory, NCAR, Boulder, CO

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Climate Applications of ground-based Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements. Junhong (June) Wang Dept. of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY Earth Observing Laboratory, NCAR, Boulder, CO. Outline. Motivation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Climate Applications of ground-based Global

Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) measurements

Junhong (June) WangDept. of Atmospheric and Environmental

SciencesUniversity at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY

Earth Observing Laboratory, NCAR, Boulder, CO

Page 2: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Outline

1. Motivation

2.GNSS precipitable water (PW) data

3.Climate applications:

• Validations of radiosonde and other data

• PW Variabilities: Diurnal cycle, annual anomaly, inter-annual variability, long-term trends and extremes

4. Other water cycle products from GNSS & other geodetic techniques

5. Summary

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Page 3: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Gaffen et al. (1995)

Challenge: Large variability

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Page 4: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

How does GNSS estimate precipitable water?

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Total delay = Ionosphere + dry + wet

Meteorological data (Ps, Ts) & estimated Tm

Dual-frequency GNSS mea.:GNSS EphemerisStation position

Timing

Atmospheric delay (ZTD = ZHD+ZWD)

Precipitable Water (PW)ZWD = ZTD - ZHD

ZHD = f(Ps)PW = * ZWD = f (Tm)

Forward modelGeodetic Noise to Meteorological signals

Page 5: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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GNSS Radiosonde Satellite

Availability all weather Difficulty in thunderstorms

IR: clearMW: ocean

Temporal resolution

High (5 min-2 hourly)

1-2/daily >12-hourly

Temporal coverage

<~20 years >50 years ~30 years

Spatial coverage

~1000 stations ~1000 stations globe

Accuracy High (< 3mm) Low, various, bias Low, depending on radiosonde

Long-term stability

Stable Significant temporal inhomogeneity

Significant temporal inhomogeneity

Why GNSS for Climate Research?

• Diurnal variation• Climate extremes

Validations of other measurements

Climate trends

Page 6: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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GNSS Networks

Page 7: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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GNSS Satellites & Network Expansion

Number of GNSS Satellites

Page 8: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

How good are GNSS measurements?

Orbit Accuracy of GPS Satellites: ~2 cm

1994

2012

Page 9: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

NCAR global, 2-hourly GNSS-PW data (1995-present) • Jan. 1995 to Dec. 2012• 2 hourly (0100, 0300, …, 2300 UTC)• 380 IGS, 169 SuomiNet, 1223 GEONET

• Accuracy: < 3 mm• Ps, Tm, ZHD and ZWD also available• http://dss.ucar.edu/datasets/ds721.1/

Wang et al. (2007)

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Page 10: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

GNSS-PW Data Highlights

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Page 11: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Hurricane Ernesto (Miami, 8/28-8/31/2006)

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75

240 241 242 243 244

Julian days

PW (m

m)

1005

1006

1007

1008

1009

1010

1011

1012

1013

1014

1015

Surf

ace

pres

sure

(hPa

)

PWPs

8/28 8/318/308/29

Hurricane Ernesto (24 Aug – 1 Sep. 2006)

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Page 12: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Radiosonde validation: Systematic errors

Comparisons of PW (IGRA-GPS 1997-2006 106 stations)(only significant ones)

-11-10

-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-10123456789

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PW (m

m IG

RA

-GPS

)

RS80A RS80H RS90 RS92Modem Meisei VIZ-type IM-MK3MSS Shang MRZ/Mars

CapacitiveCarbon Hygristor

Goldbeater's skin

1.934.151.72S.D.0.811.97-1.67median

Goldbeater’s skinCarbon hygristorCapacitive

Wang and Zhang (2008a)

Page 13: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Temporal inhomogeneity of radiosonde PW data

Wang and Zhang (2008)

Miami, U.S.A

Suwon-Shi, Korea

Beijing, China

carbon hygristor

carbon hygristor

Goldbeater’s skin Carbon

hygristor

capacitive

capacitive with cover

Rel

ativ

e PW

diff

eren

ces

(% R

adio

sond

e-G

PS)

Page 14: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Diurnal Variations (Lindenberg)Radiosonde before corr.GNSS

Vaisala RS92

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Radiosonde after corr.

ERA-Interim Japanese Reanalysis

Wang et al. (2013)

Page 15: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Global PW diurnal anomaly from GNSS

• The diurnal cycle is less than 5% of annual mean PW• Larger magnitude in summer than in winter• Peak around late afternoon to early evening • An order of magnitude smaller than seasonal variation

GlobeS. H.N. H.

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Page 16: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

PW Anomaly in 2010 (GPS v.s. Microwave satellite)

Mears et al. (2010)Mears et al. (2011)

Mears et al. (2011)

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Page 17: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Inter-annual and Long-Term PW Variability

El NinoLa Nina

Land

Ocean

Mears et al. (2012) 17

Page 18: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Land: X Radiosonde; O GPS Ocean: MWR satellites

Page 19: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Comparisons of Day & Night Trends (GPS)

Page 20: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Correlation between monthly anomaly PW and Ts

Page 21: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Variations of PW with Ts, Tmax and Tmin

Clausius-Clapeyron

Page 22: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

PLATTEVILLE (PLTC)Akronar

pt (P044)

ALTERNATE MASTER (AMC2)

SA62

2013 CO Flooding

Page 23: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements
Page 24: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements
Page 25: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Tropical Strom Fay, Aug 17-29, 2008• Fatalities: 13 dir./23 indirect• $560 million• Area affected: Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Cuba, Bahamas, South Eastern USFay Dumps Record-Breaking Rain; Flood Victims Warned Of Alligator Swimming In Streets Homeowners Forced To Use Canoes POSTED: August 20, 2008

Page 26: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements
Page 27: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Tropical Strom Fay, Aug 17-29, 2008

http://xenon.colorado.edu/spotlight/index.php?product=spotlight&station=sg05

Page 28: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Reflected GPS Signals

http://xenon.colorado.edu/portal/

Page 29: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

2012 AnomalyNMRI: Vegetation Water Content

NDVI: photosynthesis

NLDAS: precipitation PW: Water Vapor

Page 30: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

http://xenon.colorado.edu/portal/index.php

Soil Moisture Variability at Marshall, CO

Page 31: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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DORIS (Doppler Orbitography and Radiopositioning Integrated by Satellite)

Page 32: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

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Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)

Page 33: Climate Applications of ground-based Global  Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS ) measurements

Summary1. The ground-based GNSS PW data have been approved very

useful for studying water vapor diurnal, inter-annual and long-term variations, and extreme events, and play an important role in various climate studies.

2. Other potential applications and other techniques of GNSS measurements to climate should be explored, GPS-RO, 3-D water vapor retrieval, other geodetic techniques.

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http://www.eol.ucar.edu/homes/junhong/homepage.htm

http://xenon.colorado.edu/portal/