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COSMIC: Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate. Status and Results with Emphasis on the Ionosphere Christian Rocken, Stig Syndergaard, Zhen Zeng UCAR COSMIC Project. FORMOSAT-3. Outline. COSMIC Introduction Results Some neutral Atmosphere Results Ionosphere
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COSMIC: Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate Status and Results with Emphasis on the Ionosphere Christian Rocken, Stig Syndergaard, Zhen Zeng UCAR COSMIC Project FORMOSAT-3
Outline • COSMIC Introduction • Results • Some neutral Atmosphere Results • Ionosphere • GPS TEC Arcs • GPS Electron Density Profiles • Scintillation • Validation / Comparison to Models • TIP • TBB • Latency and Data Distribution • Summary
COSMIC (Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate) • 6 Satellites launched • 01:40 UTC 15 April 2006 • Three instruments: • GPS receiver, TIP, Tri-band beacon • Weather + Space Weather data • Global observations of: • Pressure, Temperature, Humidity • Refractivity • Ionospheric Electron Density • Ionospheric Scintillation • Demonstrate quasi-operational GPS limb sounding with global • coverage in near-real time • Climate Monitoring
Tangent point The LEO tracks the GPS phase while the signal is occulted to determine the Doppler vGPS LEO vleo The velocity of GPS relative to LEO must be estimated to ~0.2 mm/sec (velocity of GPS is ~3 km/sec and velocity of LEO is ~7 km/sec) to determine precise temperature profiles
Tangent point The LEO tracks the GPS phase while the signal is occulted to determine the Doppler vGPS LEO vleo The velocity of GPS relative to LEO must be estimated to ~0.2 mm/sec (20 ppb) to determine precise temperature profiles
COSMIC Soundings in 1 Day COSMIC Radiosondes Sec 3, Page 10
Atmospheric refractive index where is the light velocity in a vacuum and is the light velocity in the atmosphere Refractivity (1) (2) (3) • Hydrostatic dry (1) and wet (2) terms dominate below 70 km • Wet term (2) becomes important in the troposphere and can • constitute up to 30% of refractivity at the surface in the tropics • In the presence of water vapor, external information information is needed to obtain temperature and water vapor • Liquid water and aerosols are generally ignored • Ionospheric term (3) dominates above 70 km
Launch on April 14, 2006, Vandenberg AFB, CA • All six satellites stacked and launched on a Minotaur rocket • Initial orbit altitude ~500 km; inclination ~72° • Will be maneuvered into six different orbital planes for optimal global coverage (at ~800 km altitude) • Satellites are in good health and providing data-up to 2200 soundings per day to NOAA COSMIC launch picture provided by Orbital Sciences Corporation
COSMIC - Final Deployment • 6 Planes • 71 Degrees inclination • 800 Km • 2500 Soundings per day • Latency 50-140 minutes from observation to NOAA
00:07 UTC 23 April 2006, eight days after launch Vertical profiles of “dry” temperature (black and red lines) from two independent receivers on separate COSMIC satellites (FM-1 and FM-4) at 00:07 UTC April 23, 2006, eight days after launch. The satellites were about 5 seconds apart, which corresponds to a distance separation at the tangent point of about 1.5 km. The latitude and longitude of the soundings are 20.4°S and 95.4°W.
Using COSMIC for Hurricane Ernesto Prediction With COSMIC Without COSMIC Results from Hui Liu, NCAR
Using COSMIC for Hurricane Ernesto Prediction With COSMIC GOES Image GOES Image from Tim Schmitt, SSEC
Southern Hemisphere Forecast Improvements from COSMIC Data Sean Healey, ECMWF
Northern Hemisphere Forecast Improvements from COSMIC Data Sean Healey, ECMWF
2 Antennas for orbits, TEC_pod (1-sec), EDP COSMIC s/c Vleo High-gain occultation antennas for atmospheric profiling (50 Hz) GPS Antennas on COSMIC Satellites Nadir
Total electron content data (podTEC) • COSMIC generates 2500 - 3000 TEC arcs per day • Sampling rate is 1 -sec
Absolute TEC processing • Correct Pseudorange for local multipath • Fix cycle slips and outliers in carrier phase data • Phase-to-pseudorange leveling • Differential code bias correction
Satellite Multipath and Solar Panel Orientation P1 Multipath P2 Multipath
COSMIC DCBs for ~ 1 year Quality of absolute TEC from COSMIC ~2 TECU
Profile retrieval method TEC = solid - dashed [Schreiner et al., 1999] • Inverted via onion-peeling approach to obtain electron density N(r) • Assumption of spherical symmetry
First collocated ionospheric profiles From presentation by Stig Syndergaard, UCAR/COSMIC
Comparisons with ISR data[Lei et al., submitted to JGR 2007]
Comparison of Ne(h) between COSMIC (red), Ionosondes (green)and TIEGCM (black) on Aug. 17 - 21nd COSMIC agree well with ionosonde obs, especially the HmF2; Vertical structures from COSMIC coincide well with TIEGCM in the mid-lat, but not in the tropics. TIEGCM shows a bit higher HmF2 compared with obs.
From presentation by Ludger Scherliess, Utah State University Comparisons during quiet and disturbed Conditions COSMIC #2 GAIM Quiet COSMIC #2 GAIM Storm
From presentation by Zhen Zeng, NCAR/HAO Comparison of NmF2 and HmF2 between COSMIC and GAIM during Apr. 21-28, 2006 Good agreement of NmF2 between COSMIC and GAIM; Higher peak heights from GAIM than those from COSMIC
Using GAIM to correct for gradients From presentation by Stig Syndergaard, UCAR/COSMIC Courtesy of Zhen Zeng
Scintillation Sensing with COSMIC No scintillation S4=0.005 Scintillation S4=0.113 Where is the source Region of the scintillation? GPS/MET SNR data
Formosat-3/COSMIC Observations of Scintillations From presentation by Chin S. Lin, AFRL RED = COSMIC sat BLUE = GPS sat
TIP 135.6-nm passes 14 Sep 2006FM1 FM3 FM6 0-24 UT (2100 LT) From presentation by Clayton Coker, NRL
Chung-Li COSMIC TBB/CERTOTEC and Elevation Angle From presentation by Paul A. Bernhardt, NRL
Getting COSMIC Results to Weather Centers Neutral Atmosphere Operational Processing TACC JCSDA NCEP Input Data NESDIS CDAAC ECMWF CWB GTS UKMO BUFR Files WMO standard 1 file / sounding JMA Canada Met. Science & Archive NRL Data available to weather centers within < 180 minutes of on-orbit collection
Summary • COSMIC generates large amount of high quality space weather data • Data available for real-time (significant amount of data with less than 60 min latency) and for post-processing • Data are used for model comparison /improvement • Global scintillation data will be available within months