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LWG briefing to NESDIS/OSD and NWS/OST

LWG briefing to NESDIS/OSD and NWS/OST. Lars Peter Riishojgaard, JCSDA Mike Hardesty, NOAA/OAR/ESRL Co-chairs, US Working Group on Space-Based Lidar Winds. Background.

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LWG briefing to NESDIS/OSD and NWS/OST

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  1. LWG briefing to NESDIS/OSD and NWS/OST Lars Peter Riishojgaard, JCSDA Mike Hardesty, NOAA/OAR/ESRL Co-chairs, US Working Group on Space-Based Lidar Winds

  2. Background • Destin, February 2010: Plans to propose ISS-based wind lidar mission contingent on mission and instrument studies, e.g. at the Goddard Integrated Design Center; total costs estimated at $240K • George Komar (ESTO) willing to put down $60K if other interested parties within NASA, US Air Force and NOAA would do likewise • Kirtland AFB, April 2010 • Wayman Baker, Dave Emmitt briefed Air Force on plans; commitment to co-fund IDC studies at the level of $60K subsequently obtained • Washington DC, June 2010 • Ramesh Kakar (Weather Focus Lead for NASA’s Earth Science Division) commitment to contribute $60K • Washington DC, July 2010 • Briefing to NESDIS/OSD (was originally planned for May, but had to be rescheduled).

  3. LWG Briefing to NOAA • Rescheduled briefing took place July 22 in Silver Spring • From NESDIS/OSD: John Pereira, Rich Fulton, Steve Mango • From NWS/OST: J.C. Duh, Mike Johnson, Bill Sjoberg • Briefers: Lars Peter Riishojgaard, Mike Hardesty (phone)

  4. Briefing Outline • Objective of this briefing • Current Upper Air Mass and Wind Data Coverage; the need for Wind Lidar Observations • Forecast Impact Results with Airborne DWL Data • Need for Improved Accuracy of Transport Estimates for Climate Applications • Missions • ESA’s ADM/Aeolus; NOAA role in ADM • NASA’s Wind Lidar plans • ISS opportunity • The Lidar Working Group • Concluding Remarks

  5. Briefing Objectives • Update on activities of the Working Group on Space-Based Lidar Winds • Provide current status of global wind measurement activities in Europe and the US • Introduce opportunity to advance global wind measurement demonstration through NASA Venture Class proposal • Current wind mission categorized as a Tier 3 mission, launch scheduled for 2030+ (15 year winds gap after ADM) • NASA Venture Class offers opportunity for International Space Station winds mission within next 6 – 8 years • Cost of Venture Class design and feasibility study = $240K, with $120K to be provided by NASA and $60K to be provided by the Air Force • A NOAA contribution of $60K would ensure that this effort goes forward

  6. Current Upper Air Mass & Wind Data Coverage Vertically resolved Mass Observations Vertically resolved Wind Observations

  7. Forecast Impact Using Actual Aircraft Lidar Winds in ECMWF Global Model (Weissmann and Cardinali, 2007) • DWL measurements reduced the 72-hour forecast error by ~3.5% • This amount is ~10% of that realized at the oper. NWP centers worldwide in the past 10 years from all the improvements in modelling, observing systems, and computing power • Total information content of the lidar winds was 3 times higher than for dropsondes Green denotes a positive impact Mean (29 cases) 96 h 500 hPa height forecast error difference (Lidar Exper minus Control Exper) for 15 - 28 November 2003 with actual airborne DWL data. The green shading means a reduction in the error with the Lidar data compared to the Control. The forecast impact test was performed with the ECMWF global model.

  8. ADM-Aeolus • Doppler Wind Lidar • Cross-track HLOS winds • sHLOS (z) = 2-3 m/s • Profiles 0–30 km@0.5-2 km • Once every 200 km length • Aerosol and molecular measurement channel • Dawn-dusk polar-orbiter • Launch date June 2011 (now late 2012, LPR) • www.esa.int/esaLP/LPadmaeolus.html • (Stoffelen et al., BAMS, 2005) Slide from A. Stoffelen

  9. Why should NOAA care (about ADM) ? • ADM provides an opportunity to gain experience with the first-ever direct wind measurements from space • ADM wind data are expected be of high quality and could potentially improve the NCEP operational model forecasts, especially in the tropics • ESA is investing more than $400M in ADM and providing the data to the NOAA (and other WMO members) at no cost • ADM serves as a learning experience for the processing and assimilation of data from the subsequent U.S. Decadal Survey Wind Lidar mission

  10. ADM/Aeolus demo mission will end in 2014/15 (EUMETSAT was considering DWL for post-EPS; this is currently at the top of the list of unfunded requirements; funding tied up by continuity missions) NPOESS IPO sponsored Goddard IDL study in 2007 regarding potential adaptation of NASA Decadal Survey GWOS concept for next-generation NPOESS 2030+? => In the best case there is a likely temporal gap in space-based wind profiling of 15+ years Prospects for operational follow-on to ADM

  11. Mission opportunity • The International Space Station (ISS) provides a potential NASA Venture Class opportunity to get a slimmed down GWOS/NWOS-based US pre-operational demonstration wind lidar in orbit • Low altitude, low inclination orbit, suitable for active sensing of tropics and mid-latitude region • Strong push from NASA and Air Force to explore this option • Concept studies needed to verify feasibility and identify potential tall poles • Instrument Design Laboratory $100K • Mission Design Laboratory $100K • Mission Definition Team support $40K • Air Force, NASA ESTO, and NASA HQ have agreed to contribute $60K each, or $180K of the $240K needed • If NESDIS/OSD can contribute the final $60K we can move ahead with the ISS feasibility study

  12. Summary • Direct measurements of vertical profiles of the horizontal winds away from the major developed regions (covered by radiosondes) are at the top of the priority list for the NWP community • Wind Lidar technology is ready to be demonstrated in space • ADM scheduled to launch in late 2012 • No follow-on planned (“first measurement below the line” for post-EPS) • No current US plans for deployments in space this side of 2030 • Lidar Working Group provides a national forum to develop and coordinate various aspects of wind lidar technology, data impact experiments, measurement campaigns, international outreach (and advocacy) • ISS/ NASA EV provides a unique opportunity for an early US demonstration mission • Study funds requested from NESDIS/OSD as the final piece in a cost-sharing partnership with NASA and the Air Force

  13. Summary of briefing • Briefing received positively • NWS/OST concurred with our assessment that the space-based GOS is severely out of balance • NESDIS/OSD subsequently agreed to sponsor IDC study at the $60K level • NESDIS/OSD also agreed to continue to fund LWG (one meeting per year) • Action on LPR and MH: Brief NASA HQ and seek NASA funding for the other meeting

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