28th Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology

P2B.6

O2-band differential absorption radar for sea level pressure barometry: Improvements in hurricane predictions

Bing Lin, NASA/LaRC, Hampton, VA; and Q. Min, Y. Hu, S. Harrah, R. Lawrence, and D. Fralick

Currently, sea surface air pressure measurements can only be obtained from in situ observations including buoy, ship and dropsonde measurements, which are sparse in spatial coverage and expensive to implement. There are no pressure remote sensing methods available even in experimental stages. This study considers use active microwave systems to obtain the differential O2 absorption at 50-56 GHz bands to fill the observational gap. The numerical simulation results for homogeneous sea surface backgrounds show that the rms errors of the instantaneous surface pressure estimates can be as low as 4 mb. With multiple radar measurements the uncertainty in the sea surface pressure estimates would drop to about 1 mb which is similar to conventional in situ buoy measurements. This considered active system will have great potential for weather observations and other meteorological applications, especially for forecasts of hurricanes. Case studies show that with remotely sensed sea surface barometric pressure data, the errors of predicted hurricane center sea level pressures, the most important indicator of hurricane intensity, in weather prediction models would reduce to about 1/3 of the whole range of possible variations of hurricane center pressure. The uncertainties in predicted landfall positions or hurricane tracks would also shrink greatly from ~350 km to within 100 km.

Currently, we have developed a prototype O2-band radar system and integrated it into an aircraft for the test to prove the concept of the differential O2 absorption for the pressure remote sensing measurements. Our first field campaign results of pressure measurements and the simulation of the pressure remote sensing for hurricane predictions will be presented.

Poster Session 2B, Poster Session Remote Sensing of Tropical Cyclones
Thursday, 1 May 2008, 3:30 PM-5:00 PM, Palms ABCD

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