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- Title
Feasibility Study for Future Spaceborne Coherent Doppler Wind Lidar, Part 2: Measurement Simulation Algorithms and Retrieval Error Characterization.
- Authors
BARON, Philippe; ISHII, Shoken; Kozo OKAMOTO; Kyoka GAMO; Kohei MIZUTANI; Chikako TAKAHASHI; Toshikazu ITABE; Toshiki IWASAKI; Takuji KUBOTA; Takashi MAKI; Riko OKI; Satoshi OCHIAI; Daisuke SAKAIZAWA; Masaki SATOH; Yohei SATOH; TANAKA, Taichu Y.; Motoaki YASUI
- Abstract
A feasibility study of tropospheric wind measurements using a coherent Doppler lidar aboard a super low altitude satellite is being conducted in Japan. The considered lidar uses a 2.05 µm laser light source of 3.75 W. In order to assess the measurement performances, simulations of wind measurements were conducted. The mission definition is presented in a companion paper (Part 1) while, in this paper, we describe the measurement simulator and characterize the errors on the retrieved line-of-sight (LOS) winds. Winds are retrieved from the Doppler-shift of the noisy backscattered signal with a horizontal resolution of 100 km along the orbit track and a vertical resolution between 0.5 and 2 km. Cloud and wind fields are the pseudo-truth of an Observing System Simulation Experiment while aerosol data are from the Model-of-Aerosol-Species-IN-the-Global-AtmospheRe (MASINGAR) constrained with the pseudo-truth wind. We present the results of the analysis of a full month of data in summer time for a near-polar orbiting satellite and a LOS nadir angle of 35°. Below ≈ 8 km, the ratio of good retrievals is 30 - 55 % and the median LOS wind error is better than 0.6 m s-1 (1.04 m s-1 for the horizontal wind). In the upper troposphere, the ratio is less than 15 % in the southern hemisphere and high-latitudes. However, the ratio is still 35 % in the northern Tropics and mid-latitudes where ice-clouds frequently occur. The upper-tropospheric median LOS-wind measurement error is between 1 - 2 m s-1 depending on the latitude (1.74 - 3.5 m s-1 for the horizontal wind). These errors are dominated by uncertainties induced by spatial atmospheric inhomogeneities.
- Subjects
LIDAR; BACKSCATTERING; FEASIBILITY studies; WIND measurement; COMPUTER simulation; ATMOSPHERIC aerosols
- Publication
Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan, 2017, Vol 95, Issue 5, p319
- ISSN
0026-1165
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2151/jmsj.2017-018