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Satellite "radiance" data from cloudy regions in forecast models improved hurricane monitoring

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radiance observations from the Special Sensor Microwave Imager and Sounder instrumentScientists in NESDIS and the Environmental Modeling Center of the National Weather Service have come a long way in assimilating satellite data into global and regional weather forecast models. Instead of converting what the satellite observes into quantities that the model "knows" how to use, newer models can now assimilate what the satellite actually measures. For example, the Community Radiative Transfer Model can directly use measurements of radiances, a property that an instrument on a satellite readily "sees" at a point in space, from a particular direction, and at a moment in time. As a human eye can see the "brightness" of light coming from a particular direction and from a region of the sky, so can an instrument detect the radiance of electromagnetic radiation coming from a particular direction. Radiance observations from cloudy and rainy areas can now be assimilated into the Weather Research and Forecast model. In the figure at right, the new technique produces a temperature field in Hurricane Katrina that is more detailed, and that better resolves the warm core of the hurricane. The Joint Center for Satellite Data Assimilation, in which both NESDIS and the NWS participate, uses these satellite observations to enable better forecasts of severe weather.

For the first time, observations of microwave radiances are assimilated into a weather forecast model. Here, the radiance observations are from the Special Sensor Microwave Imager and Sounder instrument on the Defense Satellite Meteorology Program satellite. The new data assimilation technique improves the analysis of temperature fields (shown in the right panels) at two levels in Hurricane Katrina, compared with the same fields in the control run, in the left panels.

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