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CIMO ET on Upgrading the Global Radiosonde Network – Geneva 3-7 November 2003. Upper Air Network UK National Report. Tim Oakley & John Nash Met Office, Exeter, UK. Network early 2001 8 ‘Core’ stations, manned 24/7 Defence and Boundary layer sites, when available.
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CIMO ET on Upgrading the Global Radiosonde Network – Geneva 3-7 November 2003 Upper Air Network UK National Report. Tim Oakley & John Nash Met Office, Exeter, UK
Network early 2001 • 8 ‘Core’ stations, manned 24/7 • Defence and Boundary layer sites, when available
Current Upper-Air Network 2003 2 Manned Radiosonde Sites 4 Autosonde Sites Supplementary Radiosonde sites, ascents as required 5 Wind-Profiler Sites
Upper-Air Network (Met Office) • Lerwick Manned DigiCora III RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Camborne Manned DigiCora III RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Castor Bay Autosonde MW15 RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Albemarle Autosonde MW15 RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Watnall Autosonde MW15 RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Herstmonceux Autosonde MW15 RS80H Loran 00 , 12 • Larkhill(defence) Manned DigiCora III RS80H Loran IRREG • Aberporth(defence) Manned DigiCora III RS80H Loran IRREG • W.Freugh(defence) Manned DigiCora III RS80H Loran IRREG • S.Uist(defence) Manned PC-Cora RS80H Loran IRREG • Supplementary(8) Manned PC-Cora RS80H Loran IRREG • Gibraltar Manned DigiCora III RS80H GPS 00 , 12 • Falklands Manned DigiCora III RS80H GPS 00 , 12 • St Helena Manned DigiCora III RS80H GPS 12 Additional radiosonde ascents at the request of the National Met Centre.
DigiCORA III - Ground System • Operational from June 01 • Able to interface with the continuing evolution of operational radiosondes & different wind finding. • COTS Processor using Windows NT • Remote or local interrogation • Service Level Agreement with manufacturer
Autosonde at 4 UK Sites Autosonde trialled for operationally feasible Radiosondes Tested Proved successful for operations at inland sites. From 2002 - operational at 4 Met. Office sites, UK Plans to upgrade Autosondes to DigiCORA III during 03/04
UK Radiosonde Trials 2002 • Jan 2002 - Radar v Graw v Sippican v Vaisala RS90 Test of GPS systems for both wind measurements & GPS heights as possible reference system to replace COSSOR radar. • Feb 2002 – Vaisala RS90 v RS80 Comparison of alternative RS90 humidity measurements (i.e. cap/no cap) • May 2002 – Vaisala RS90 v RS80 v Snow-whites Continuing evaluation of the RS90 humidity measurements + comparison with Microwave Radiometer measurements. • August 2002 – Radar v Graw v Sippican v Vaisala RS90 Final test for systems to replace the COSSOR radar. • October 2002 – Vaisala RS92 (High Power) v RS80 First trials on DigiCORA III, comparisons with the operational ascent.
UK Radiosonde Trials 2003 • May 2003 - Vaisala RS92 (Low Power) v RS80 First trials on DigiCORA III of the low power radiosonde + necessary hardware upgrades. Comparisons with the operational ascent. • July 2003 – Meteorlabor SPC/Snow-whites v RS80/RS92 Trial of complete Meteolabor system with Snow-whites as possible reference radiosonde system for 2004+. • October 2003 – Vaisala RS92 v RS80 Acceptance test for Pristina airport installation. Further evaluation of the RS92 GPS measurements. • December 2003 – Vaisala RS80 v RS92 (L&H) v S/Whites Pre-acceptance test for the RS92 radiosonde.
Next Generation Radiosonde • RS80 radiosonde is considered obsolete by Vaisala, and production will gradually be reduced over 4 to 5 years. • The radiofrequency transmitter is out of date and needs to be improved to meet requirements for reduced spectrum occupation and hence spectrum charges. • The RS90 radiosonde had improved sensors, but the transmitter and internal electronics were not optimised. • The RS90 relative humidity sensor package failed the Met Office acceptance test [ Sensor calibration errors, sensor instability and inadequate protection in cloud]
Future RS92 work • Vaisala are proposing that the Met Office use the newly developed RS92 radiosonde , built using dedicated ASIC’s not only for GPS winds but also for processing PTU information during flight and for digital data transmissions to the ground • The mechanical design of the RS92 has been changed to make the deployment of the temperature and relative humidity sensor exposure more reproducible, as suggested by Met Office.
Future work [2] • RS92 Acceptance testing 2003/04 Sensor performance ( i.e. humidity – pulse heating) Digital transmitter/receiver (low & high power) Complete ‘system’ acceptance test – Spring 04 • Handover of RS92 to operations • Implementation of BUFR coding • Implementation of one software suite for Autosondes + DigiCora III
BUFR Code • DC III system has the capability to produce BUFR. • Test and evaluate the BUFR. (Content, communications, storage) • Implement operationally. Benefits • Transmission of complete Radiosonde archive • No need for manual editing of selected points • Inline with CBS recommendations to change to BUFR • Archive of high resolution data for verification/research
BUFR findings to date. • BUFR encoding on DigiCORA III has been tested to Met Office satisfaction. (Decoded successfully by operational database.) • Some inconsistencies between the encoded and decode data. • Questions about the necessary level of data QC flagging. • Concerns over the size of the BUFR message and the ability of the operational databases to archive/access the data. • Project in Met Office tasked with delivering BUFR messages for the future.
Quality monitoring of RH sensor performance. • 12 year archive of ‘high resolution’ radiosonde measurements from 4 UK sites. • Using surface observation to identify ascents that have passed through cloud. • Monthly/annual statistics used to monitor the performance of the RH sensor. • Information/results feedback to manufacturer. • Used to detect changes from A & H Humicap , also batch performances and manufacture & calibration problems.
Wind Profiler Network • 4 systems are operational components of the UK network. • Wind data from these systems being assimilated into the UK NWP models. • New 64MHz system under final acceptance and hand-over to operations. • Collaboration with WINPROF (European network)
GPS Water Vapour Network • Project has demonstrated the feasibility and usefulness of a ‘real-time’ GPS IWV network. • Working with Nottingham University to develop a Met Office system to provide real-time IWV in < 2 hours from observation. • Planned x10 increase in UK network by collaborations with other services. • Aim to deliver an operational network of IWV measurements by 2005.
Upper Air Networks – The Future. • Further Automation. • Integration. • Increased use of high temporal & high resolution data. • Use of other measurements ( i.e. Signal to Noise)
Summary • Integrated wind data already being used operationally and changing observing networks in the UK. • Usefulness and potential benefits of IWV networks accepted by users and will be introduced into operations in next 2-3 years. • Significant progress in exploiting the high resolution capabilities of remote sensing systems. • Progress in the techniques necessary to integrate different remote sensing system for temperature and humidity profiling.