Collection of Published Calls for Global Wind Observations

(Steve Greco and Dave Emmitt)

Simpson Weather Associates

 

1) "Importance of Global Doppler Lidar Wind Profiles From Space For Global Change Studies" by Robert Sadourny , Sixth. Symp. On Global Change Studies, Preprints, Amer. Meteor. Soc., (1995)

 

 

2) "Importance of Global Doppler Lidar Wind Profiles From Space For Global Change Studies" by Robert Sadourny , Sixth. Symp. On Global Change Studies, Preprints, Amer. Meteor. Soc., (1995)

 

 

3) "Impact of analysis uncertainty upon regional atmospheric moisture flux" by Muyin Wang and Jan Paegle ; J. of Geophys. Res., Vol. 101, No. D3 (1996)

 

 

4) "The Impact of Omega Dropwindsondes on Operational Hurricane Track Forecast Models" by Burpee et al., Bull. Am. Meterol. Soc., Vol. 77, No. 5. (1996)

 

 

5) "An Observing System Simulation Experiment for the Laser Atmospheric Wind Sounder (LAWS)" by Rohaly and Krishnamurti; J. Appl. Meteor., Vol. 32, (1993)

 

 

6) "Assessment of the Impact of Simulated Lidar Wind and Retrieved 183 GHz Water Vapor Observations on a Global Data Assimilation System" by Hoffman et al., Mon. Wea. Rev., Vol. 118, (1990)

 

 

7) "The Relative Importance of Mass and Wind Data in the FGGE Observing System" by Kalnay et al., Proceedings of the NASA Symposium on Global Wind Measurements, (1985)

 

 

8) "Upper-Tropospheric Winds Derived from Geostationary Satellite Water Vapor Observations" by Veldin et al., Bull. Am. Meteorol. Soc., Vol. 78, No. 2, (1997)

 

 

9) "The Impact of Multispectral GOES-8 Wind Information on Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Track Forecasts in 1995. Part II: NOGAPS Forecasts" by Goerss et al., Mon. Wea. Rev., Vol. 126, (1998)

 

 

10) " Observations in Aid of Weather Prediction for North America: Report of Prospectus Development Team Seven" (Meeting Summary) by Emanuel et al., Bull. Am. Meteorol. Soc., Vol. 78, No. 12 (1997)

 

 

11) " Atmospheric Observations and Experiments to Assess Their Usefulness in Data Assimilation" by Robert Atlas, Journ. Meteor. Soc. Japan, Vol. 75, No. 1B, (1996)

 

 

12) " Atmospheric Observations and Experiments to Assess Their Usefulness in Data Assimilation" by Robert Atlas, Journ. Meteor. Soc. Japan, Vol. 75, No. 1B, (1996)

 

 

13) "Lidar-Measured Winds from Space: A Key Component for Weather and Climate Prediction" by Baker et al., Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., Vol 76, No. 6, (1995)

 

 

14) "Lidar-Measured Winds from Space: A Key Component for Weather and Climate Prediction" by Baker et al., Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., Vol 76, No. 6, (1995)

 

15) "A Simulated Future Atmospheric Observation Database Including ATOVS, ASCAT, and DWL" by Becker et al., Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., Vol. 77, No. 10, (1996)

 

 

16) "Study on the Utility of Doppler Wind Lidar Data for Numerical Weather Prediction and Climate" by Ad Stoffelen and Gert-Jan Marseille, KNMI ESA Study Contract Report, (1998)

 

 

17) Address to the American Geophysical Union by NASA Administrator Daniel S. Goldin (December 6, 1998)

 

 

18) "Use and Impact of Satellite Atmospheric Motion Winds on ECMWF Analyses and Forecasts" by Tomassini et. Al., Mon. Wea. Rev., Vol. 127, No. 6. ( June 1999)

"The new satellite wind products available in real time on the global telecommunication system (e.g., GOES WVWM and Meteosat HVIS) improve the coverage of the AMW (atmospheric motion winds) product over the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans and have been found to bring consistent benefits in the quality of analyses and short-range forecasts in data sparse regions (e.g., southeast Pacific Ocean and the southeast Atlantic Ocean)."

"The results of global observation system experiments, where all the AMW are withheld from the analysis, indicate that they do play an important role also in the medium-range forecast over regions of good data coverage. In particular over North America the experiment withholding ALL satellite winds was found to lose almost half a day of forecast skill at 5 days."

So NASA is developing lidars and radars to reveal the 3-D structure of the atmosphere and measure winds in the troposphere—which would be a major step forward in weather prediction."





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