There is a huge consideration in the use of microwave airborne radiometry for remote sensing instead of satellite, the important role of airborne way is how to provide high accuracy real time data. The airborne hurricane tracking is an important method compared with the space borne method, which is developed by NASA Marshall Space Flight center to provide high resolution measurements. By flying special aircraft equipment using synthetic thinned array radiometry technology and included all critical measurements such as hurricane eye location, speed of wind and the pressure. This paper describes the data analysis of best track positions for Hurricane Gonzalo based on the date collected by airborne microwave radiometry. Significant analysis comes from comparing the airborne data with the surface observations from ship reports. The vast majority is to estimate peak intensity and minimum central pressure of Gonzalo from 12 to 19 October 2014, based on blend of SFMR flight-level winds and pressure retrievals from observing brightness temperatures. SFMR: Stepped-Frequency Microwave Radiometer is a highly developed tool developed by the Langley Research Center that is designed to measure the wind speed at the ocean’s surface, and the rain fall rates within the storm accurately and continuously. The work also addresses the realistic details of the locations and the valuable information about the pressure and wind speed, which is very critical to predict the growth and movement to get the idea for future monitoring of the hurricane disasters. Also presents a conceptual of step frequency microwave radiometer in airborne side. The objective of this research is tracking analysis techniques based on comparing the satellite, ship and airborne reports to get higher accuracy. The system operates at four spaced frequencies in the range between 4 GHz and 7 GHz provides wide measurements between ± 45 incidence angle. Gonzalo 2014 is an example; the best results of retrieved wind speed, locations and pressure are presented. There are several national projects have been developed for earth observation, such as fire, hurricane and border surveillance. In this work, the efficient high resolution techniques of C-band, four-frequency, the work also addresses a valuable information comes from the airborne system and the prediction way of the growth and movement of hurricanes. In passive microwave remote sensing from space at C band has the penetrating advantages of atmosphere. Airborne system is able to work in full Polari-metric in four bands, C, X, S, L and P-band, which cover the wavelengths from 3 to 85 cm. The modes of measurement contain single channel operation wavelength and polarization.
This document discusses the procedures and tools used in weather forecasting. It describes how weather data is collected from over 9,500 observation stations and 7,400 ships worldwide and transmitted to analysis centers. Forecasts are made using synoptic charts, computer modeling, and satellite imagery from geosynchronous and low-Earth orbiting satellites. Forecasts can be short-range up to 48 hours, medium-range from 3 days to 3 weeks, or long-range from 2 weeks to a season. The goal of weather forecasting is to continue advancing techniques to better predict high-impact weather events.
This study analyzes how aerosol size and concentration can impact precipitation by serving as cloud condensation nuclei. Data on aerosol particle size distribution from AERONET and vertical profiles from a ceilometer were collected in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico during storms in May and June 2013 that produced over 50 mm of rain. The results suggest that fine aerosols can suppress precipitation while coarse aerosols can trigger more rainfall, as larger particles contain heavier droplets. Clouds with a higher concentration of smaller aerosolic particles rose higher with a greater cloud base height, while clouds with fewer but larger particles produced precipitation earlier.
The document discusses the history and applications of microwave remote sensing. It began with US military research after World War II and studies by NASA in the 1960s to use microwave technology for earth observation. Key developments included airborne and spaceborne sensors to measure surface scattering properties and models to explain microwave interactions with natural targets. Current applications of microwave remote sensing include weather monitoring, navigation, imaging, and mapping for both civilian and military uses.
This document provides information on a group assignment submitted by 16 students for their Introduction to Remote Sensing course. It includes the group number, course details, student names and registration numbers, and the assignment questions. The assignment involves describing the TRMM satellite's owner and location, orbital characteristics, identifying its onboard sensors and providing details on each sensor's specifications and functioning.
1) Satellites provide a new tool for monitoring extreme rainfall events globally, including over oceans where gauges are sparse.
2) Analysis of TRMM satellite data shows that the relationship between maximum rainfall and duration (the Jennings law) exhibits two slopes for short and long durations, unlike the single slope seen in gauge data.
3) Satellites allow identifying regions experiencing the most extreme rainfall over timescales from days to years, such as Vietnam, Northeast India, and Colombia's Pacific coast.
Spatial-temporal Characterization of Hurricane Path using GNSS-derived Precip...CSCJournals
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) precise point positioning (PPP) technique is capable of monitoring Precipitable Water Vapor (PWV) in high accuracy with low cost. As PWV is related to the initiation and development of a severe weather convective system, this study analyzed the characteristics of PWV variations over time and space to monitor and predict the path and the intensity of a severe rainfall during a hurricane. The PWV measurements are obtained by processing ground based GNSS data. The spatial and temporal variation of PWV and other meteorological variables are characterized for the time frames of before, during, and after the severe precipitation. The correlation effect between meteorological variables were mitigated by adapting a principle component analysis (PCA) and multivariate regression analysis. The method allows determining the expected movement of the rainfall up to 24 hours in advance. The proposed method was validated by analyzing the distribution pattern of the predicted PWV residual, its magnitude, and the actual observed PWV in the region. As a case study, we adopted one of the destructive and long-lived hurricane along the Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina coast, namely, Hurricane Matthew, occurred in October 2016. From the experiment, we identified the areas closely fitting the prediction model by computing the residuals between the GNSS derived PWV measurements at each station in the test site. The residual of the predicted model is used for determining the track of extreme hurricane precipitation and potentially applied to evaluate its intensity. This study proved the effectiveness of the statistical model for forecasting the hurricane rainfall path that is potentially applied to a hazard early warning system.
International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) is an open access online peer reviewed international journal that publishes research and review articles in the fields of Computer Science, Neural Networks, Electrical Engineering, Software Engineering, Information Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Plastic Engineering, Food Technology, Textile Engineering, Nano Technology & science, Power Electronics, Electronics & Communication Engineering, Computational mathematics, Image processing, Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering, Environmental Engineering, VLSI Testing & Low Power VLSI Design etc.
This document discusses the procedures and tools used in weather forecasting. It describes how weather data is collected from over 9,500 observation stations and 7,400 ships worldwide and transmitted to analysis centers. Forecasts are made using synoptic charts, computer modeling, and satellite imagery from geosynchronous and low-Earth orbiting satellites. Forecasts can be short-range up to 48 hours, medium-range from 3 days to 3 weeks, or long-range from 2 weeks to a season. The goal of weather forecasting is to continue advancing techniques to better predict high-impact weather events.
This study analyzes how aerosol size and concentration can impact precipitation by serving as cloud condensation nuclei. Data on aerosol particle size distribution from AERONET and vertical profiles from a ceilometer were collected in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico during storms in May and June 2013 that produced over 50 mm of rain. The results suggest that fine aerosols can suppress precipitation while coarse aerosols can trigger more rainfall, as larger particles contain heavier droplets. Clouds with a higher concentration of smaller aerosolic particles rose higher with a greater cloud base height, while clouds with fewer but larger particles produced precipitation earlier.
The document discusses the history and applications of microwave remote sensing. It began with US military research after World War II and studies by NASA in the 1960s to use microwave technology for earth observation. Key developments included airborne and spaceborne sensors to measure surface scattering properties and models to explain microwave interactions with natural targets. Current applications of microwave remote sensing include weather monitoring, navigation, imaging, and mapping for both civilian and military uses.
This document provides information on a group assignment submitted by 16 students for their Introduction to Remote Sensing course. It includes the group number, course details, student names and registration numbers, and the assignment questions. The assignment involves describing the TRMM satellite's owner and location, orbital characteristics, identifying its onboard sensors and providing details on each sensor's specifications and functioning.
1) Satellites provide a new tool for monitoring extreme rainfall events globally, including over oceans where gauges are sparse.
2) Analysis of TRMM satellite data shows that the relationship between maximum rainfall and duration (the Jennings law) exhibits two slopes for short and long durations, unlike the single slope seen in gauge data.
3) Satellites allow identifying regions experiencing the most extreme rainfall over timescales from days to years, such as Vietnam, Northeast India, and Colombia's Pacific coast.
Spatial-temporal Characterization of Hurricane Path using GNSS-derived Precip...CSCJournals
Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) precise point positioning (PPP) technique is capable of monitoring Precipitable Water Vapor (PWV) in high accuracy with low cost. As PWV is related to the initiation and development of a severe weather convective system, this study analyzed the characteristics of PWV variations over time and space to monitor and predict the path and the intensity of a severe rainfall during a hurricane. The PWV measurements are obtained by processing ground based GNSS data. The spatial and temporal variation of PWV and other meteorological variables are characterized for the time frames of before, during, and after the severe precipitation. The correlation effect between meteorological variables were mitigated by adapting a principle component analysis (PCA) and multivariate regression analysis. The method allows determining the expected movement of the rainfall up to 24 hours in advance. The proposed method was validated by analyzing the distribution pattern of the predicted PWV residual, its magnitude, and the actual observed PWV in the region. As a case study, we adopted one of the destructive and long-lived hurricane along the Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina coast, namely, Hurricane Matthew, occurred in October 2016. From the experiment, we identified the areas closely fitting the prediction model by computing the residuals between the GNSS derived PWV measurements at each station in the test site. The residual of the predicted model is used for determining the track of extreme hurricane precipitation and potentially applied to evaluate its intensity. This study proved the effectiveness of the statistical model for forecasting the hurricane rainfall path that is potentially applied to a hazard early warning system.
International Journal of Engineering Research and Applications (IJERA) is an open access online peer reviewed international journal that publishes research and review articles in the fields of Computer Science, Neural Networks, Electrical Engineering, Software Engineering, Information Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Plastic Engineering, Food Technology, Textile Engineering, Nano Technology & science, Power Electronics, Electronics & Communication Engineering, Computational mathematics, Image processing, Civil Engineering, Structural Engineering, Environmental Engineering, VLSI Testing & Low Power VLSI Design etc.
Unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) were used to assess damage from a tornado in Morgan County, Alabama on March 31, 2016 as part of the VORTEX-Southeast field campaign. Two UAS platforms - a DJI S-1000 octocopter operated by NOAA and a fixed-wing UAS operated by a commercial group - captured high-resolution aerial imagery of the tornado's path. The imagery will help researchers compare observations and better understand the tornado's behavior through varying topography.
This document discusses using k-means clustering to detect minerals from remote sensing images. It begins with an abstract describing using k-means clustering on hyperspectral images to segment and extract features to detect minerals like giacomo. It then provides background on remote sensing, k-means clustering algorithms, and describes the giacomo mineral deposit in Peru that contains silicon dioxide and titanium dioxide. It concludes with discussing using sobel edge detection as part of the mineral detection process from remote sensing images.
Weather balloons are high-altitude meteorological balloons particularly used for carrying scientific payloads into the upper atmosphere. These data are obtained by using an instrument called as radiosonde which is attached to the helium filled weather balloon to measure the meteorological data as it ascends up into the atmosphere. For more than 100 years, weather balloons have given valuable information for climate and meteorological research. In this paper, the radiosonde module is designed with negligible risk of failure and cost effectiveness. The instruments to be fixed along with the weather balloon are logging camera, temperature sensor, pressure sensor, humidity sensor, global positioning system (GPS) module and a power source. This module is used to measure and log the basic weather parameters such as pressure, temperature, humidity and this also captures the picture of a particular locality with the help of a microcontroller. This proposed work is useful for observing high altitude weather data which is essential for predicting natural disasters. Further more, it is helpful to analyze the climatological and weather details of a particular region it also plays an important role in estimating agricultural models.
Ionospheric Behaviour Analysis over Thailand Using Radio Occultation TechniqueIJERA Editor
With the advent in the development of science and technology in the field of space and atmospheric science in
order to obtain accurate result, hence the use of radio occultation technique in the investigation of the amount of
electron density and Total Electron Content presence in equatorial region particularly over Thailand. In this
research, radio occultation data obtained from UCAR/CDAAC was used to observe daily, monthly, seasonal and
the entire year 2013 Ionospheric TEC and electron density variation due to changes and instability of solar
activities from time to time. It was observed that TEC was high (ionosphere was more disturbed or violent) in
May and spread over a wide range of altitude and summer season has the highest TEC value for the year 2013
which means at this period GNSS measurements was more prone to error. It was noted that ionospheric
variations or fluctuations was maximum between 200km and 450km altitude. The results of the study show that
ionospheric perturbation effects or irregularities depend on season and solar activity.
1) Stratospheric balloons equipped with GPS radio occultation systems and dropsonde payloads were used to profile the Antarctic atmosphere as part of the Concordiasi campaign. Over 700 occultation profiles and 647 dropsonde profiles were collected.
2) Comparisons were made between refractivity profiles derived from GPS occultation data near the Antarctic Peninsula, dropsonde measurements, and the ARPEGE model. Generally good agreement within 2% was found between the occultation and model data, and within 1% between occultation and dropsonde data.
3) This demonstration of high quality occultation data from balloons indicates potential for assimilating such data into models to improve analyses of the Antarctic
This document discusses remote sensing and meteorology. It defines remote sensing as obtaining information about physical objects through non-contact sensors. Meteorology is the study of atmospheric phenomena like weather. Meteorological satellites and weather radars are important tools for monitoring weather. Satellites provide global coverage of cloud patterns and weather systems from space. They capture visible, infrared, and water vapor images to study cloud formations, temperatures, and moisture in the atmosphere. Radar emits microwaves that bounce off water droplets in clouds to measure precipitation and cloud locations. Satellite weather monitoring improves forecasts, especially over oceans with sparse weather station data.
TU2.L10 - NEXT-GENERATION GLOBAL PRECIPITATION PRODUCTS AND THEIR APPLICATIONSgrssieee
The document summarizes the goals and capabilities of the upcoming Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission. GPM will provide next-generation global precipitation data products through a constellation of passive microwave sensors calibrated to the GPM Core Observatory's radar and radiometer. This will improve accuracy for light rain and snow and provide higher resolution and more frequent observations. Ground validation efforts and applications research are important to maximize the scientific and societal benefits of GPM precipitation data.
This document summarizes research on measuring all-weather wind speeds using both passive microwave radiometers and active microwave scatterometers. It discusses the challenges of high wind speeds (>20 m/s) and winds in rain, and improvements made to wind retrieval algorithms. An improved Ku-band geophysical model function (GMF) for QuikSCAT was developed using WindSat winds for validation. Comparisons show WindSat provides more accurate winds than QuikSCAT in rain. The study concludes that while passive radiometers have strengths at high winds and in rain, scatterometers remain impacted without dual-frequency capabilities.
This document compares in situ wind speed observations from Wave Glider deployments in the Southern Ocean to several satellite-derived and reanalysis wind products. The study finds that the ECMWF reanalysis product best represents the temporal variability of winds compared to in situ data. However, the NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis II product matches observed trends in deviation from the mean wind speed and best depicts the mean wind state, especially during high wind periods. Overall, the high-resolution ECMWF product performs best during lower wind conditions with lower wind speed biases across categories.
1) Advances in radar techniques have allowed for continuous observation of the Earth's atmosphere from the lower to upper atmosphere. 2) The latest techniques include active phased array radars like the MU radar in Japan which can rapidly scan beams to accurately measure wind velocity. 3) Atmospheric radars provide high resolution continuous data on winds and have revealed processes like gravity wave propagation, saturation and their influence on mean flows.
Estimation of satellite link’s fade margin using non-meteorological techniqu...IJECEIAES
Satellite technology is shifting to higher frequencies such as Q or V-band to cater to greater bandwidth and higher data rates applications such as videoconferencing, internet of things (IoT) and telemedicine. The main challenge in deploying high-frequency bands in heavy precipitation areas is severe rain attenuation. In this paper, a frequency scaling technique was developed to estimate the fade margin at a higher frequency. The worst month analysis was also conducted since the analysis is also important in determining dependable fade margin. The result was evaluated and analyzed using root mean square error (RMSE) and percentage error. The proposed model offers the smallest RMSE and lowest percentage error when compared to all existing prediction models. A dependable fade margin acquired from high-accuracy rain attenuation estimation is very important. This is to apply the best mitigation technique in overcoming rain attenuation in the satellite-Earth link so that, the best system performance can be delivered.
The document describes the development of an adaptive weather sensing framework using phased array radar. The framework consists of four main processes: 1) storm cell identification using reflectivity data, 2) storm cell tracking to associate cells over time, 3) task configuration to determine optimal update times, and 4) scheduling of tasks. Simulated phased array radar observations were generated from operational WSR-88D data to test the framework. Results demonstrated the feasibility of adaptively scanning regions of interest with different update times while maintaining surveillance, allowing for higher temporal resolution compared to conventional radar sensing.
The document summarizes results from the High Altitude MMIC Sounding Radiometer (HAMSR) during the 2010 GRIP Hurricane Field Campaign. HAMSR is a microwave radiometer flown on the Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle to observe the 3D temperature and water vapor structure of hurricanes. Key findings include detailed observations of the inner-core thermodynamic structure and intensity evolution of Hurricanes Earl and Karl, which helped improve intensity forecasting. HAMSR data is publicly available and was also used to time dropsonde releases during atmospheric river flights in the 2011 WISPAR campaign.
The aerosol measurements have been carried out at
Kolhapur (16°42′N, 74°14′E) by using twilight technique. Newly
designed Semiautomatic Twilight Photometer was operated
during the period 1 January 2009 to 30 December 2011 to study
the vertical distribution of the mesospheric aerosol number
density per cubic decimeter (dm3
). Here after aerosol number
density per cubic decimeter (dm3
) is abbreviated as ‘AND’. In the
present study vertical distribution of AND during strong meteor
showers days is discussed. In the present work an attempt is
made to calculate the mesospheric aerosol number density per
cubic decimeter (AND) using Twilight Sounding Method (TSM),
for the first time in India. The dust particles during strong
meteor showers intrude in the Earth’s atmosphere below 120
Km. The dust particles of strong meteor showers penetrate the
lower atmosphere and also act as cloud condensation nuclei
(CCN).
Meteorology is a discipline concerned with observational earth sciences and theoretical physics. It has the task of providing an accurate knowledge of the state of the atmosphere. Before the advent of weather satellites the weathermen had been severely handicapped by having only a very limited knowledge of the state of the atmosphere at any given time. Meteorological satellites have to a large extent has enabled to overcome this deficiency.
Doppler radars can be used to study turbulence in air masses within clouds. This is done by analyzing spectra of scattered radar signals, which can provide information about average wind speed and the variation in speed. Understanding turbulence is important for aviation safety, as wind shear and unstable atmospheric conditions can cause bumpy flights or endanger planes. The proposed method aims to reconstruct turbulent pulsations and wind shear using characteristics of radar signals scattered by hydrometeors.
Doppler radars can be used to study turbulence in air masses within clouds. This is done by analyzing spectra of scattered radar signals, which can provide information about average wind speed and the variation in speed. Understanding turbulence is important for aviation safety, as wind shear and unstable atmospheric conditions can cause bumpy flights or endanger planes. The proposed method aims to reconstruct turbulent pulsations and wind shear using characteristics of radar signals scattered by hydrometeors.
This document discusses using high resolution maps and 3D reconstructions of the atmosphere to study meteorological phenomena. It outlines various remote sensing techniques and datasets that can be used, including synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) and GPS tomography. InSAR phase measurements contain contributions from topography, atmospheric water vapor, and surface deformation. The document explores how the atmospheric signal in InSAR data is related to the precipitable water vapor content integrated along the radar signal path. This information could help identify patterns in atmospheric dynamics and types of clouds.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) were used to assess damage from a tornado in Morgan County, Alabama on March 31, 2016 as part of the VORTEX-Southeast field campaign. Two UAS platforms - a DJI S-1000 octocopter operated by NOAA and a fixed-wing UAS operated by a commercial group - captured high-resolution aerial imagery of the tornado's path. The imagery will help researchers compare observations and better understand the tornado's behavior through varying topography.
This document discusses using k-means clustering to detect minerals from remote sensing images. It begins with an abstract describing using k-means clustering on hyperspectral images to segment and extract features to detect minerals like giacomo. It then provides background on remote sensing, k-means clustering algorithms, and describes the giacomo mineral deposit in Peru that contains silicon dioxide and titanium dioxide. It concludes with discussing using sobel edge detection as part of the mineral detection process from remote sensing images.
Weather balloons are high-altitude meteorological balloons particularly used for carrying scientific payloads into the upper atmosphere. These data are obtained by using an instrument called as radiosonde which is attached to the helium filled weather balloon to measure the meteorological data as it ascends up into the atmosphere. For more than 100 years, weather balloons have given valuable information for climate and meteorological research. In this paper, the radiosonde module is designed with negligible risk of failure and cost effectiveness. The instruments to be fixed along with the weather balloon are logging camera, temperature sensor, pressure sensor, humidity sensor, global positioning system (GPS) module and a power source. This module is used to measure and log the basic weather parameters such as pressure, temperature, humidity and this also captures the picture of a particular locality with the help of a microcontroller. This proposed work is useful for observing high altitude weather data which is essential for predicting natural disasters. Further more, it is helpful to analyze the climatological and weather details of a particular region it also plays an important role in estimating agricultural models.
Ionospheric Behaviour Analysis over Thailand Using Radio Occultation TechniqueIJERA Editor
With the advent in the development of science and technology in the field of space and atmospheric science in
order to obtain accurate result, hence the use of radio occultation technique in the investigation of the amount of
electron density and Total Electron Content presence in equatorial region particularly over Thailand. In this
research, radio occultation data obtained from UCAR/CDAAC was used to observe daily, monthly, seasonal and
the entire year 2013 Ionospheric TEC and electron density variation due to changes and instability of solar
activities from time to time. It was observed that TEC was high (ionosphere was more disturbed or violent) in
May and spread over a wide range of altitude and summer season has the highest TEC value for the year 2013
which means at this period GNSS measurements was more prone to error. It was noted that ionospheric
variations or fluctuations was maximum between 200km and 450km altitude. The results of the study show that
ionospheric perturbation effects or irregularities depend on season and solar activity.
1) Stratospheric balloons equipped with GPS radio occultation systems and dropsonde payloads were used to profile the Antarctic atmosphere as part of the Concordiasi campaign. Over 700 occultation profiles and 647 dropsonde profiles were collected.
2) Comparisons were made between refractivity profiles derived from GPS occultation data near the Antarctic Peninsula, dropsonde measurements, and the ARPEGE model. Generally good agreement within 2% was found between the occultation and model data, and within 1% between occultation and dropsonde data.
3) This demonstration of high quality occultation data from balloons indicates potential for assimilating such data into models to improve analyses of the Antarctic
This document discusses remote sensing and meteorology. It defines remote sensing as obtaining information about physical objects through non-contact sensors. Meteorology is the study of atmospheric phenomena like weather. Meteorological satellites and weather radars are important tools for monitoring weather. Satellites provide global coverage of cloud patterns and weather systems from space. They capture visible, infrared, and water vapor images to study cloud formations, temperatures, and moisture in the atmosphere. Radar emits microwaves that bounce off water droplets in clouds to measure precipitation and cloud locations. Satellite weather monitoring improves forecasts, especially over oceans with sparse weather station data.
TU2.L10 - NEXT-GENERATION GLOBAL PRECIPITATION PRODUCTS AND THEIR APPLICATIONSgrssieee
The document summarizes the goals and capabilities of the upcoming Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission. GPM will provide next-generation global precipitation data products through a constellation of passive microwave sensors calibrated to the GPM Core Observatory's radar and radiometer. This will improve accuracy for light rain and snow and provide higher resolution and more frequent observations. Ground validation efforts and applications research are important to maximize the scientific and societal benefits of GPM precipitation data.
This document summarizes research on measuring all-weather wind speeds using both passive microwave radiometers and active microwave scatterometers. It discusses the challenges of high wind speeds (>20 m/s) and winds in rain, and improvements made to wind retrieval algorithms. An improved Ku-band geophysical model function (GMF) for QuikSCAT was developed using WindSat winds for validation. Comparisons show WindSat provides more accurate winds than QuikSCAT in rain. The study concludes that while passive radiometers have strengths at high winds and in rain, scatterometers remain impacted without dual-frequency capabilities.
This document compares in situ wind speed observations from Wave Glider deployments in the Southern Ocean to several satellite-derived and reanalysis wind products. The study finds that the ECMWF reanalysis product best represents the temporal variability of winds compared to in situ data. However, the NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis II product matches observed trends in deviation from the mean wind speed and best depicts the mean wind state, especially during high wind periods. Overall, the high-resolution ECMWF product performs best during lower wind conditions with lower wind speed biases across categories.
1) Advances in radar techniques have allowed for continuous observation of the Earth's atmosphere from the lower to upper atmosphere. 2) The latest techniques include active phased array radars like the MU radar in Japan which can rapidly scan beams to accurately measure wind velocity. 3) Atmospheric radars provide high resolution continuous data on winds and have revealed processes like gravity wave propagation, saturation and their influence on mean flows.
Estimation of satellite link’s fade margin using non-meteorological techniqu...IJECEIAES
Satellite technology is shifting to higher frequencies such as Q or V-band to cater to greater bandwidth and higher data rates applications such as videoconferencing, internet of things (IoT) and telemedicine. The main challenge in deploying high-frequency bands in heavy precipitation areas is severe rain attenuation. In this paper, a frequency scaling technique was developed to estimate the fade margin at a higher frequency. The worst month analysis was also conducted since the analysis is also important in determining dependable fade margin. The result was evaluated and analyzed using root mean square error (RMSE) and percentage error. The proposed model offers the smallest RMSE and lowest percentage error when compared to all existing prediction models. A dependable fade margin acquired from high-accuracy rain attenuation estimation is very important. This is to apply the best mitigation technique in overcoming rain attenuation in the satellite-Earth link so that, the best system performance can be delivered.
The document describes the development of an adaptive weather sensing framework using phased array radar. The framework consists of four main processes: 1) storm cell identification using reflectivity data, 2) storm cell tracking to associate cells over time, 3) task configuration to determine optimal update times, and 4) scheduling of tasks. Simulated phased array radar observations were generated from operational WSR-88D data to test the framework. Results demonstrated the feasibility of adaptively scanning regions of interest with different update times while maintaining surveillance, allowing for higher temporal resolution compared to conventional radar sensing.
The document summarizes results from the High Altitude MMIC Sounding Radiometer (HAMSR) during the 2010 GRIP Hurricane Field Campaign. HAMSR is a microwave radiometer flown on the Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle to observe the 3D temperature and water vapor structure of hurricanes. Key findings include detailed observations of the inner-core thermodynamic structure and intensity evolution of Hurricanes Earl and Karl, which helped improve intensity forecasting. HAMSR data is publicly available and was also used to time dropsonde releases during atmospheric river flights in the 2011 WISPAR campaign.
The aerosol measurements have been carried out at
Kolhapur (16°42′N, 74°14′E) by using twilight technique. Newly
designed Semiautomatic Twilight Photometer was operated
during the period 1 January 2009 to 30 December 2011 to study
the vertical distribution of the mesospheric aerosol number
density per cubic decimeter (dm3
). Here after aerosol number
density per cubic decimeter (dm3
) is abbreviated as ‘AND’. In the
present study vertical distribution of AND during strong meteor
showers days is discussed. In the present work an attempt is
made to calculate the mesospheric aerosol number density per
cubic decimeter (AND) using Twilight Sounding Method (TSM),
for the first time in India. The dust particles during strong
meteor showers intrude in the Earth’s atmosphere below 120
Km. The dust particles of strong meteor showers penetrate the
lower atmosphere and also act as cloud condensation nuclei
(CCN).
Meteorology is a discipline concerned with observational earth sciences and theoretical physics. It has the task of providing an accurate knowledge of the state of the atmosphere. Before the advent of weather satellites the weathermen had been severely handicapped by having only a very limited knowledge of the state of the atmosphere at any given time. Meteorological satellites have to a large extent has enabled to overcome this deficiency.
Doppler radars can be used to study turbulence in air masses within clouds. This is done by analyzing spectra of scattered radar signals, which can provide information about average wind speed and the variation in speed. Understanding turbulence is important for aviation safety, as wind shear and unstable atmospheric conditions can cause bumpy flights or endanger planes. The proposed method aims to reconstruct turbulent pulsations and wind shear using characteristics of radar signals scattered by hydrometeors.
Doppler radars can be used to study turbulence in air masses within clouds. This is done by analyzing spectra of scattered radar signals, which can provide information about average wind speed and the variation in speed. Understanding turbulence is important for aviation safety, as wind shear and unstable atmospheric conditions can cause bumpy flights or endanger planes. The proposed method aims to reconstruct turbulent pulsations and wind shear using characteristics of radar signals scattered by hydrometeors.
This document discusses using high resolution maps and 3D reconstructions of the atmosphere to study meteorological phenomena. It outlines various remote sensing techniques and datasets that can be used, including synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) and GPS tomography. InSAR phase measurements contain contributions from topography, atmospheric water vapor, and surface deformation. The document explores how the atmospheric signal in InSAR data is related to the precipitable water vapor content integrated along the radar signal path. This information could help identify patterns in atmospheric dynamics and types of clouds.
Similar to TRACKING ANALYSIS OF HURRICANE GONZALO USING AIRBORNE MICROWAVE RADIOMETER (20)
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
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TRACKING ANALYSIS OF HURRICANE GONZALO USING AIRBORNE MICROWAVE RADIOMETER
1. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
DOI:10.5121/Jmicro.2016.1203 17
TRACKING ANALYSIS OF HURRICANE GONZALO
USING AIRBORNE MICROWAVE RADIOMETER
Ruaa.A.S.Alsabah, Ali.A.J.Al-Sabbagh, Josko Zec and Ivica Kostanic
WiCE Lab, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, Florida Institute of
Technology, Melbourne, Florida, USA
ABSTRACT
There is a huge consideration in the use of microwave airborne radiometry for remote sensing instead of
satellite, the important role of airborne way is how to provide high accuracy real time data. The airborne
hurricane tracking is an important method compared with the space borne method, which is developed by
NASA Marshall Space Flight center to provide high resolution measurements. By flying special aircraft
equipment using synthetic thinned array radiometry technology and included all critical measurements
such as hurricane eye location, speed of wind and the pressure. This paper describes the data analysis of
best track positions for Hurricane Gonzalo based on the date collected by airborne microwave radiometry.
Significant analysis comes from comparing the airborne data with the surface observations from ship
reports. The vast majority is to estimate peak intensity and minimum central pressure of Gonzalo from 12
to 19 October 2014, based on blend of SFMR flight-level winds and pressure retrievals from observing
brightness temperatures. SFMR: Stepped-Frequency Microwave Radiometer is a highly developed tool
developed by the Langley Research Center that is designed to measure the wind speed at the ocean’s
surface, and the rain fall rates within the storm accurately and continuously. The work also addresses the
realistic details of the locations and the valuable information about the pressure and wind speed, which is
very critical to predict the growth and movement to get the idea for future monitoring of the hurricane
disasters. Also presents a conceptual of step frequency microwave radiometer in airborne side. The
objective of this research is tracking analysis techniques based on comparing the satellite, ship and
airborne reports to get higher accuracy. The system operates at four spaced frequencies in the range
between 4 GHz and 7 GHz provides wide measurements between ±45 incidence angle. Gonzalo 2014 is an
example; the best results of retrieved wind speed, locations and pressure are presented. There are several
national projects have been developed for earth observation, such as fire, hurricane and border
surveillance. In this work, the efficient high resolution techniques of C-band, four-frequency, the work also
addresses a valuable information comes from the airborne system and the prediction way of the growth and
movement of hurricanes. In passive microwave remote sensing from space at C band has the penetrating
advantages of atmosphere. Airborne system is able to work in full Polari-metric in four bands, C, X, S, L
and P-band, which cover the wavelengths from 3 to 85 cm. The modes of measurement contain single
channel operation wavelength and polarization.
KEYWORDS
Passive microwave radiometer, airborne instrument, remote sensing, SFMR and Hurricane tracking
1. INTRODUCTION
The airborne hurricane tracking and surveillance is a very significant method compared with
space borne method which is developed by NASA and improved the accuracy by about 50%
since last decade greatly by using special remote sensing techniques. Because it provides a real
time data by flying special aircraft equipment included all critical measurements such as
hurricane eye location, wind speed, directions and the pressure value. These reports are done by
(NOAA) National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Hurricane research Division.
2. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
18
According to the NOAA National Hurricane Center, Hurricanes caused more destruction in the
US than any other kind of natural disaster. The accomplishment is to minimize the social and
economic impact of hurricanes is over a variety of measurement techniques, such as using
airborne and space borne. This is the best way to predict the growth and movement of hurricane
as they develop and make landfall. In 2014 airborne devices are effectively taken all the details
observations of Hurricane Gonzalo over three consecutive days. At that time satellite observations
specify that Hurricane Gonzalo underwent two complete eyewall replacement cycles. These
observations verify past observations of secondary, the second secondary eyewall developed a
similar circulation as seen on the day before but with weaker winds. Airborne radar measured
valuable information in Gonzalo area about the actual precipitation, wind speed and pressure, thus
reducing the spin-up problem that usually impacts the beginning of the forecast period. Figure 1
shows the hurricane airborne radiometer. [1]
Figure 1, the airborne microwave radiometer.
In the U.S, the weather events, such as hurricane location is very important natural threats to
coastal areas and maritime interests. There are several tropical storms formed and some of them
became hurricanes, which are developed to category three or higher up to five, monitoring and
tracking at high resolution are critically needed for research on hurricane and for improvement in
intensity forecasting. The airborne radiometer is one of the dominant methods because the space
borne cannot fully overcome the difficulty. Although the WindSat and QuikSCAT instruments
are provide wind speed measurements on a global scale, but they are partially limited to ocean
surface wind measurements. The big challenge in the implementation of Doppler wind is the
retrieval algorithms for space borne radars. Also the space borne measurements has a low spatial
resolution compared with the airborne method. Due to these limitations of spaceborne which are
not covered in this paper, now the attentions of most researchers over the past decade on either an
airborne system which is great interest or an orbit satellite. A large number of radiometer systems
have been developed and work in various aircraft to provide the full wind vector, pressure and
cloud regions. Such as NOAA and NASA operate several aircraft to sample and observe the
hurricanes. [2] The airborne techniques works at C-band microwave frequency range at 4-6
discrete C band frequencies as shown in figure 2. The passive remote sensing approach is to
measure the emissivity, or the temperature that emitted from surface of the water foam coverage
which is a parameter for wind and the rain. These physical characteristics permit to be derived
from emissivity measurements, wind speed and rain retrievals are derived from empirical
correlation of measured emissivity at working incidence angles. The value of the measured wind
is approximately invariant with frequency while at the same time rainfall emissivity is a strong
function of frequency. Which is accepted functional relations for the attenuation of frequency vs
rain and wind emissivity. [3]
3. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
19
There are measurements available at specific times in the Atlantic basin from sensors attached on
research aircraft, but not in other hurricane basins have ability of aircraft exploration. Even the
hurricanes in the Atlantic are out of range of the aircraft for most of their lifetimes.
Figure 2, Microwave region of the electromagnetic spectrum
Currently the measurements of the surface wind and pressure with high resolution, wide swath
would strongly improve model initialization and result analysis. The goal is daily mapping of the
surface wind field from the center of the storm in the distance of maximum winds located in the
eyewall. This will be the most key contribution that could be made from airborne microwave
remote sensing. [4] For the past two decades, the only way of remote sensing that can provide a
real time continuous measurement is Airborne Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer, which
is providing wind speed and rain rates in hurricanes including category 5 conditions. But the
narrow measurement swath below the aircraft is present disadvantage of SFMR. Hurricane
Research Division of NOAA uses the Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer, to provide
measurements of the maximum one minute sustain wind. This is the dominant factor in hurricane
category. Currently SFMR is the most reliable surface wind speed measuring instrument in
hurricane surveillance. That makes NASA developed several airborne and spaceborne projects for
that target such as HiRAD. SFMR will be allowed to measure wind speeds up to 85 m/s (category
5 hurricane and utilizes six different frequencies in the C-band region to perform its
measurements as shown in figure 3. Which is presents the all parameters.
Figure 3, NASA - Parameters of the airborne system [5].
The collaboration with NOAA’s, Atlantic Meteorological Laboratory leds The NASA aircraft
instrument has been developed over the past years under Marshall Space Flight Center. This work
deals with the data analysis of remotely sensed wind speed and pressure, which is second object
in hurricanes, based on data given by MSFC. This project is an airborne passive microwave
synthetic aperture radiometer designed to provide wide swath images of ocean surface wind speed
under heavy precipitation.
4. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
20
This aircraft flew on high-altitude aircraft over hurricanes Gonzalo Dec 2014, the instrument
operates at C band 4, 5, 6 and 6.6 GHz and uses the interferometric signal processing with no
mechanical scanning. There is a planar antenna is composed of linear arrays of multi-resonant
radiators, And can provide four-frequency images of brightness temperature about 60 km swath
width with 3 km spatial resolution. Each linear array viewed as an individual element of beam
antenna. After each beam element there is an individual receiver contain internal calibration for
both hot and cold loads. Also, it distributed a single noise diode to all receivers for correlation and
to calibrate the interferometric measurements. [5], [6]
2. PASSIVE VERSUS ACTIVE MICROWAVE SENSING
The microwave sensing can be divided into two major types: passive, known as radiometers, and
active, known as radars, see Figure 4. Both classes of sensors have been used on aircraft and
spacecraft to study the Earth and the other planets.
Figure 4, major classes of microwave remote sensors.
First of the active (radar) is divided into two general types the first one is the real aperture which
is divided in to; scatterometers altimeters, and weather radars. The second synthetic aperture radar
(SAR) systems SAR systems are radars designed to make high resolution radar images. They
operate by transmitting modulated pulses and using Doppler/range processing to construct
backscatter images. Typically, they are not as well calibrated as scatterometers. Scatterometers
are designed to measure radar backscatter very precisely, but typically have lower resolution than
SARs. They tend to be less complicated than SARs. Altimeters are radars designed to measure
height or distance, though other information such as radar backscatter is extracted from the echo.
Weather radars are specially designed scatterometers which have ranged capability.
They are designed to measure rainfall and other meteorological phenomena. On the other hand,
for the Passive radiometers, it deals with the thermal emission which produced by the microwave
signals comes from objects. The emission is comes from the electrical properties, physical
temperature that is sensed from the surface. In addition the passive sensors cost less power since
it does not contain transmitter [7], [8].
3. AIRBORNE VERSUS SPACEBORNE SENSING
There are many operational differences between airborne and spaceborne platforms. Each type of
platform has important strengths and weaknesses which must be considered when designing a
remote sensing-base solution to a particular problem The first microwave sensors were ground-
based, but aircraft-based applications quickly followed. Microwave radar systems were first
deployed on aircraft in World War II and microwave sensors flew aboard spacecraft early in the
space age. Ground-based microwave sensors have been widely used in astronomy and weather.
Currently, some of the most important Earth sensing microwave instruments is based on
spacecraft.
Microwave Sensors
Active (Radars) Passive
(Radiometers)
Real Aperture Synthetic Aperture
(SAR)
Real Aperture Synthetic Aperture
(Interferometers)
5. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
21
Spacecraft basing offers a number of advantages over aircraft-basing, including much broader
spatial (often global) and temporal coverage. Airborne platforms can respond easily to changes in
weather and cloud cover. On a day-by-day basis, flight planners can modify flight plans to
accommodate these changing, uncontrollable conditions. Multiple aircraft can easily work on a
single project, ensuring that over large contiguous areas, the size of counties and even states,
remotely sensed data can be acquired in a matter of days or weeks. Acquired data can be
reviewed on a near-real-time basis by crews in the field; areas requiring reflight can be discovered
before the platform leaves the project area. Finally, any problems that may occur with the sensor,
or upgrades that may become available from the sensor manufacturer during the lifetime of the
sensor can be easily implemented during downtime between projects. This ensures that
consumers of remotely sensed data always have access to the most current technological
advancements. Satellite-based remote sensing was initiated during the 1950's and was originally
proposed for military and defense-related applications. Scientific instruments, such as Landsat
and Modis, developed and maintained by civilian government agencies, collect low to medium
resolution imagery for a myriad of research and operational applications, including
environmental, resource management, planning, and disaster response. Commercial high-
resolution satellite-borne systems, such as SPOT, IKONOS and QuickBird, now contribute
panchromatic and multi-spectral imagery at up to .60 cm GSD to the broad remote sensing
community. One could jump to the conclusion that the future of airborne remote sensing is
limited, and that satellites are the dominant sensor platform of the day. That, in fact, has not been
the case, and a basic understanding of the operational mechanics of satellite platforms will reveal
the reason [9]. Figure 5, shows the main difference between the airborne and the spacebourne.
Figure 5, airborne and the spacebourne instrument.
4. PASSIVE MICROWAVE SENSING RADIOMETRY
The passive Microwave radiometers measure the thermal emission, sometimes called the Plank
radiation, radiating from natural objects see figure 6. As passive sensors they require no
transmitter, but are receive-only. As a result, radiometers require less power to operate than
radars. The passive radiometry is related more to the IR sensors and classical optical more than to
radar, it is also called radiometers which can be divided into three categories such as, surface
feature profiles, imagers of surface features, and sounders of atmospheric profiles of
temperature, The energy detected by a radiometer at microwave frequencies comes from two
source the first one is emission of the target in addition to that, thermal emission that arrives at
the radiometer is the reflection of the target after it goes through the sky. The main difference
between the thermal emission and microwave frequencies, the first one depends on the product of
6. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
22
the target emissivity and its absolute temperature. On the other hand, the microwave frequencies
depend on is the changing in emissivity but not the change in temperature [7].
Figure 6, basics of passive microwave radiometry.
4.1 Brightness temperature
The brightness temperature or it can be called radiometric temperature of the source is the most
important parameter to be measured in passive radiometry. The brightness temperature of an
object is the temperature of a blackbody with the same brightness as the object sensed.
In order to explain the emissions from the earth, it is important to describe the main reflected
temperatures through the earth and the atmosphere. Figure 7, shows the main reflected
temperatures. The temperature, which is seen by a microwave radiometer apparent brightness
temperature T
app
is a result of the following temperatures
1. T
sur
: is the sea surface brightness temperature.
2. T
refl
: is the sum of the cosmic background (T
cos
) contribution, the reflection from
the sea surface and the down welling brightness temperature (T
DOWN
).
3. T
UP
: the upwelling atmospheric brightness temperature
While at the radiometer antenna the T
b
components represent the combination of the non-
coherent (powers add).
Where, represent the total one-way atmospheric transmissivity. Figure (7) shows the three
components of brightness temperatures described above.
7. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
23
Where SST represents the sea surface temperature, which calculated in Kelvin, T
cos
= 2.7 K is the
cosmic microwave background and ε is the sea surface emissivity [11][12].
Figure 7, Brightness temperature reaches airborne radiometer.
4.2 Polarization
Polarization is an inherent characteristic of microwave sensors. This is convenient, since the
emissivity is also strongly dependent on polarization. Polarization for microwave sensing is
generally described as vertical or horizontal (rather than parallel or perpendicular). As illustrated
in Figure 8. Vertical polarization is essentially equivalent to parallel polarization (the electric
vector is in the plane of the incident radiation and the normal to the target surface) and horizontal
polarization is basically equivalent to perpendicular polarization
Figure 8, the orientation of polarization for microwave sensing.
8. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
24
The Emissivity varies with polarization. This is particularly true when moisture content is a
consideration, but is also an issue even in dry a condition. As is illustrated in Figure 9, emissivity
varies both with polarization and frequency. It also varies with look angle, further complicating
the problem [12], [13].
Figure 9, Sensitivity of emissivity to polarization
5. STEPPED-FREQUENCY MICROWAVE RADIOMETER
The Stepped-Frequency Microwave Radiometer is a highly developed tool developed by the
Langley Research Center that is designed to measure the wind speed at the ocean’s surface, and
the rain fall rates within the storm accurately and continuously. When the plane flies through a
storm, has a downward pointing antenna, this antenna will read the microwave radiation which is
coming from the ocean surface. Assumptions will be made about the vertical structure of the
atmosphere together with sea surface temperature measurements by a downward-looking airborne
infrared radiometer in order to find accurate measurements. Then the computers will be able to
determine wind speeds according to the levels of microwave radiation which is detected by the
SFMR. Figure 10, shows an example of the SFMR.
Figure 10, Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometry
SFMR used to measure microwave brightness temperature, Tb as a nadir-viewing instrument, at
six C-band frequencies (4.7 – 7.1 GHz). The surface wind speed and columnar rain rate are well
recorded from these data by using a statistical regression algorithm. Estimation of the rainfall rate
9. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
25
below the aircraft also can be calculated, because the attenuation of some frequencies of the
rainfall is more than the other [11], [13].
6. HURRICANE GONZALO
Hurricane Gonzalo is a tropical storm that hits the Leeward Islands and Bermuda in October
2014. Then it quickly turned into a hurricane which was a very strong hurricane in the Atlantic
since Igor in 2010, When Hurricane Gonzalo hit Bermuda on Friday, it was still a Category 3
hurricane with 115 mph winds. But by the time the eye of the storm passed over the island, it had
been downgraded to a Category 2 with 110 mph winds. According to catastrophe modelling firm
AIR worldwide, the eye passed over Bermuda at 8:30 p.m. AST, and the eye was twice the size
the length of the island. It caused a huge damage and left a landfall on the island, table 1, shows
the scale categories of the hurricanes and the difference between them in the damage they cause
Table 1, scale categories of the hurricanes
On Oct. 15 an aircraft named WB-57 flew over Hurricane Gonzalo. This aircraft was carrying
two HS3 mission instruments. The aircraft microwave images and data showed concentric
eyewalls in addition to the inner radius of maximum winds which is about 4-5 nautical miles from
the centre. Later in the Oct. 15, Gonzalo's the wind increased to 130 mph. The aircraft reported
that the peak intensity of Gonzalo based on SFMP 125 kt at 1200 and 1800 UTC and the level of
wind that is measured 1200 UTC 16 October. Also the aircraft estimate an SFMR wind of 135 kt,
and the peak 700 mb for the flight-level wind of 127 kt. The last scouting for the aircraft mission
for Gonzalo done about 4-6 hours before the hurricane cause the landfall in Bermuda, and with
limited sampling reported peak 700 mb flight-level winds of 124 kt and based on these data,
Gonzalo’s intensity is analysed to have been 105 kt in 17 October. After that the hurricane
became weaker that afternoon and its intensity become 95 kt, category 2 Hurricane Wind Scale at
landfall on Bermuda Hurricane Wind Scale. On the other hand the estimated amounts of Rainfall
which relate to Gonzalo also reported. Where the highest rainfall recorded was in the Leeward
Islands which is 5.70 inches at St. Martin, while in Antigua the amount of rainfall was 1.28
inches. Also Gonzalo had 2 to 3 inches of the amount of rainfall in Bermuda in addition to
Canada and over portions of southeastern Newfoundland. Figure (11) shows the exact trucking
positions for Hurricane Gonzalo [14].
10. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
26
Figure 11, Path categories of Hurricane Gonzalo, 12-19 October, 2014. [Source:NASA]
7. RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
In this section included the results of the main two factors of hurricane Gonzalo 2014, which are
the wind speed and the pressure based on the data collected by airborne instrument. As shown in
the previous section about the growing, map and some general information about Gonzalo, the
wind speed and pressure in 16 October was the important time to track the hurricane. According
to the analysis of all data collected in 3 consecutive days for several hours we have found the best
track time based on pressure and wind speed with respect to longitude and latitude as shown in
the figure 12 below:
Figure 12, Wind speed and Pressure verses longitude and latitude.
This figure shows clearly the maximum wind speed related to the position to estimate the peak
intensity based on SFMR and this occurred about 4-6 hours before the hurricane end arrival in
Bermuda, also Gonzalo was absorbed over the North Atlantic after it became an extratropical
cyclone, this cause a fierce wind gusts over portions of Europe and specifically in the UK on 21
October, now clearly the figure shows a continuous decrease in the magnitude of the pressure
versus increasing in the wind speed both entering and exiting the eye-wall. Before going into
more details it’s important to know the categories of any hurricane, for future tracking models,
11. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
27
which give an exact idea about how much the hurricane, could cause a damage base on the speed
of wind as shown in the figure below:
Figure 12, Hurricane categories 1,2,3,4 and 5 based on wind speed.
This section will give a scheduling to apply our experience of studies in the North Atlantic, to the
early detection of tropical hurricanes based on airborne data instrument. Below in figure 13, is
the result of deep analysis of Gonzalo hurricane that shows the linear model of the best time track
with respect to pressure and wind speed. That gives a better scene with respect to location and
how the movement of hurricane is behaves. The future desired target is to calculate the error in
the pressure consider as a function of spatial resolution on each side of the eye wall,
Figure 13, linear trajectories of hurricane Gonzalo.
Our study is to use the data of airborne remote sensing compare with satellite and ship reports, for
detecting the start point of hurricanes based on statistical and imperial models seems to be good.
This result will extend for future models and simulations based on location, pressure and wind
speed. This information is much related so it should be collected as soon as possible with higher
resolution in all steps and adjacent locations to the eyewall of the hurricane. Figure 14, shows the
Gonzalo 2014 case for best tracking data location based on three flight days.
Figure 14, Directional and map positions (E+N) of hurricane Gonzalo.
12. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
28
Basically Gonzalo accelerated toward the waters of the North Atlantic as we have shown the map
in the previous section; Hurricane Gonzalo was a powerful Atlantic tropical cyclone that shaped
in Bermuda. To do right monitoring of hurricane or any other natural disaster, deep study should
apply to all previous ones to build perfect data sets. This one goal of this work to avoid surprising
attack or avoiding delay time for hurricane detection like in Katrina case were 31 hour delay of
detection. Gonzalo 2014 tracked as category 4 hurricane, which is the first season in history to
feature two hurricane landfalls. But as shown in our airborne results it peaked with maximum
sustained wind speed about 140 mph. The airborne hurricane tracking is an important method
compared with the space borne method, which is developed by NASA Marshall Space Flight
center to provide high resolution measurements. By flying special aircraft equipment using
synthetic thinned array radiometry technology and included all critical measurements such as
hurricane eye location, speed of wind and the pressure. This airborne system designed to measure
pressure and wind by collecting doppler profiles with better resolution and the fastest continuous
real time data.
8. CONCLUSION
There is a massive attention in the use of microwave airborne radiometry for remote sensing
instead of satellite, the recent trend of hurricane tracking techniques is described in this paper. We
have presented the best track analysis of hurricane Gonzalo 2014 based on data collected by
airborne microwave radiometer, using the stepped frequency. The important role of airborne way
is how to provide high accuracy real time data, to track the natural disasters such as hurricane.
There is no doubt that the existing techniques which are the spaceborne and ship reports are so
limited. A hurricane is a severe tropical cyclone that forms in the Atlantic Ocean, which is
starting to form in the atmosphere when the vapour water plus heat are being released at the ocean
surface. Last decade, airborne microwave radiometry is an integral part of NASA’s Earth
Observations. In this work two empirical hurricane factors pressure and wind speed have been
used to get best tracking locations for Gonzalo 2014. These data collected in three consecutive
flight days, which is developed by NASA. Also we have described the physical characteristics of
hurricanes. This paper also presented the design details and analysed the data of airborne
microwave radiometer of Gonzalo, Also we have showed a good result of the best track 12-19
Oct 2014. In the future we hope to improve the accuracy of retrieval wind and pressure.
Data from Hurricane Gonzalo 2014 are available for further study, modelling and analysis. This
chance will give the best way for future tracking of hurricanes or any other natural disasters. The
airborne techniques have successfully demonstrated the capability for more robustness in remote
sensing with respect to satellite and ship reports. Finally, the airborne techniques have
successfully demonstrated the capability for more robustness in remote sensing with respect to
satellite and ship reports. The airborne hurricane tracking is to provide high resolution
measurements by flying special aircraft equipment using synthetic thinned array radiometry
technology and included all critical measurements such as hurricane eye location, speed of wind
and the pressure. Last decade, airborne microwave radiometry is an integral part of NASA’s
Earth Observations. As a future work the determination of the thermal controller is very
significant for long stability measurement and to build a prediction models and correction
mechanism.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors wish to acknowledge the collaboration with Dr. B.Sayak at NASA / MSFC Marchall
Space Flight Center, USA who provided the data. Ali and Ruaa wish to thank (HCED) higher
committee for education development for financial support.
13. International Journal Of Microwave Engineering (JMICRO) Vol.1, No.2, April 2016
29
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