A study of surface winds in tropical storms using modified near real-time processing of QuikSCAT measurements

Research output: AbstractPaperpeer-review

Abstract

Performance of the NOAA/NESDIS near real-time QuickSCAT wind retrieval algorithm was assessed in the case of tropical cyclone IRIS, that occurred in Northern Atlantic, in October 2001. For this storm, the estimated wind field failed to produce a circular structure characteristic of tropical cyclones. We established that the Aviation Forecasting Field that was used to initialize ambiguity removal process was the primary cause of error, since it completely missed this feature. We proposed an initialization process that uses the information available from backscatter data to estimate possible regions of tropical cyclones. The proposed procedure allows estimation of wind fields that are less influenced by an external field. However, in the case of tropical storm IRIS the wind retrieval algorithm failed to generate solutions that would allow ambiguity removal to close circulation even when clustered errors in the initial field were broken by the new initialization procedure.

Original languageEnglish
Pages2153-2155
Number of pages3
StatePublished - 2002
Event2002 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS 2002) - Toronto, Ont., Canada
Duration: Jun 24 2002Jun 28 2002

Conference

Conference2002 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS 2002)
Country/TerritoryCanada
CityToronto, Ont.
Period06/24/0206/28/02

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