Abstract. The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Occultation Sounder (GNOS) is one of the new-generation payloads on board the Chinese FengYun 3 (FY-3) series of operational meteorological satellites for sounding the Earth's neutral atmosphere and ionosphere. FY-3C GNOS, on board the FY-3 series C satellite launched in September 2013, was designed to acquire setting and rising radio occultation (RO) data by using GNSS signals from both the Chinese BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) and the US Global Positioning System (GPS). So far, the GNOS measurements and atmospheric and ionospheric data products have been validated and evaluated and then been used for atmosphere- and ionosphere-related scientific applications. This paper reviews the FY-3C GNOS instrument, RO data processing, data quality evaluation, and preliminary research applications according to the state-of-the-art status of the FY-3C GNOS mission and related publications. The reviewed data validation and application results demonstrate that the FY-3C GNOS mission can provide accurate and precise atmospheric and ionospheric GNSS (i.e., GPS and BDS) RO profiles for numerical weather prediction (NWP), global climate monitoring (GCM), and space weather research (SWR). The performance of the FY-3C GNOS product quality evaluation and scientific applications establishes confidence that the GNOS data from the series of FY-3 satellites will provide important contributions to NWP, GCM, and SWR scientific communities.
The residual ionospheric error (RIE) from higher-order terms in the refractive index is not negligible when using global navigation satellite system (GNSS) radio occultation (RO) data for climate and meteorology applications in the stratosphere. In this study, a new higher-order bending angle RIE correction named “Bi-local correction approach” has been implemented and evaluated, which accounts for the ray path splitting of the dual-frequency GNSS signals, the altitude of the low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite, the ionospheric inbound (GNSS to tangent point) vs. outbound (tangent point to LEO) asymmetry, and the geomagnetic field. Statistical results based on test-day ensembles of RO events show that, over the upper stratosphere and mesosphere, the order of magnitude of the mean total RIE in the bi-local correction approach is 0.01 μrad. Related to this, the so-called electron-density-squared (Ne2) and geomagnetic (BNe) terms appear to be dominant and comparable in magnitude. The BNe term takes negative or positive values, depending on the angle between the geomagnetic field vector and the direction of RO ray paths, while the Ne2 term is generally negative. We evaluated the new approach against the existing “Kappa approach” and the standard linear dual-frequency correction of bending angles and found it to perform well and in many average conditions similar to the simpler Kappa approach. On top of this, the bi-local approach can provide added value for RO missions with low LEO altitudes and for regional-scale applications, where its capacity to account for the ionospheric inbound-outbound asymmetry as well as for the geomagnetic term plays out.
A deeper understanding of how clouds will respond to a warming climate is one of the outstanding challenges in climate science. Uncertainties in the response of clouds, and particularly shallow clouds, have been identified as the dominant source of the discrepancy in model estimates of equilibrium climate sensitivity. As the community gains a deeper understanding of the many processes involved, there is a growing appreciation of the critical role played by fluctuations in water vapor and the coupling of water vapor and atmospheric circulations. Reduction of uncertainties in cloud-climate feedbacks and convection initiation as well as improved understanding of processes governing these effects will result from profiling of water vapor in the lower troposphere with improved accuracy and vertical resolution compared to existing airborne and space-based measurements. This paper highlights new technologies and improved measurement approaches for measuring lower tropospheric water vapor and their expected added value to current observations. Those include differential absorption lidar and radar, microwave occultation between lowEarth orbiters, and hyperspectral microwave remote sensing. Each methodology is briefly
Abstract. The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Occultation Sounder (GNOS) is one of the new-generation payloads onboard the Chinese FengYun 3 (FY-3) series of operational meteorological satellites for sounding the Earth's neutral atmosphere and ionosphere. The GNOS was designed for acquiring setting and rising radio occultation (RO) data by using GNSS signals from both the Chinese BeiDou System (BDS) and the US Global Positioning System (GPS). An ultra-stable oscillator with 1 s stability (Allan deviation) at the level of 10 −12 was installed on the FY-3C GNOS, and thus both zero-difference and singledifference excess phase processing methods should be feasible for FY-3C GNOS observations. In this study we focus on evaluating zero-difference processing of BDS RO data vs. single-difference processing, in order to investigate the zero-difference feasibility for this new instrument, which after its launch in September 2013 started to use BDS signals from five geostationary orbit (GEO) satellites, five inclined geosynchronous orbit (IGSO) satellites and four medium Earth orbit (MEO) satellites. We used a 3-month set of GNOS BDS RO data (October to December 2013) for the evaluation and compared atmospheric bending angle and refractivity profiles, derived from single-and zero-difference excess phase data, against co-located profiles from European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) analyses. We also compared against co-located refractivity profiles from radiosondes. The statistical evaluation against these reference data shows that the results from single-and zero-difference processing are reasonably consistent in both bias and standard deviation, clearly demonstrating the feasibility of zero differencing for GNOS BDS RO observations. The average bias (and standard deviation) of the bending angle and refractivity profiles were found to be about 0.05 to 0.2 % (and 0.7 to 1.6 %) over the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. Zero differencing was found to perform slightly better, as may be expected from its lower vulnerability to noise. The validation results indicate that GNOS can provide, on top of GPS RO profiles, accurate and precise BDS RO profiles both from single-and zero-difference processing. The GNOS observations by the series of FY-3 satellites are thus expected to provide important contributions to numerical weather prediction and global climate change analysis.
Abstract.14 The rapid advancement of global navigation satellite system (GNSS) occultation technology in recent years has 15 made it one of the most advanced space detection technologies of the 21st century. GNSS radio occultation has 16 many advantages, including all-weather operation, global coverage, high vertical resolution, high precision, 17 long-term stability, and self-calibration. Data products from GNSS occultation sounding can greatly enhance 18 ionospheric observations and contribute to space weather monitoring, forecasting, modeling, and research. In this 19 study, GNSS occultation sounder (GNOS) results from a radio occultation sounding payload aboard the Fengyun 20 3-C (FY3-C) satellite were compared with ground-based ionosonde observations. Correlation coefficients for 21 peak electron density (NmF2) derived from GNOS Global Position System (GPS) and Beidou navigation system 22 (BDS) products with ionosonde data were higher than 0.9, and standard deviations were less than 20 %. Global 23 ionospheric effects of the strong magnetic storm event in March 2015 were analyzed using GNOS results 24supported by ionosonde observations. The magnetic storm caused a significant disturbance in NmF2 and hmF2 25 levels. Suppressed daytime and nighttime NmF2 levels indicated mainly negative storm conditions. In the zone 26 of geomagnetic inclination between 40-80°, average NmF2 during the geomagnetic storm showed the same 27 basic trends in GNOS measurements, and in observations from 17 ground-based ionosonde stations, and 28 confirmed the negative effect of the event on the ionosphere. The analysis demonstrates the reliability of the 29 GNSS radio occultation sounding instrument GNOS aboard the FY3-C satellite, and confirms the utility of 30 ionosphere products from GNOS for statistical and event-specific ionospheric physical analyses. Future FY3
Abstract. The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) radio occultation (RO) technique is widely used to observe the atmosphere for applications such as numerical weather prediction and global climate monitoring. The ionosphere is a major error source to RO at upper stratospheric altitudes, and a linear dual-frequency bending angle correction is commonly used to remove the first-order ionospheric effect. However, the higher-order residual ionospheric error (RIE) can still be significant, so it needs to be further mitigated for high-accuracy applications, especially from 35 km altitude upward, where the RIE is most relevant compared to the decreasing magnitude of the atmospheric bending angle. In a previous study we quantified RIEs using an ensemble of about 700 quasi-realistic end-to-end simulated RO events, finding typical RIEs at the 0.1 to 0.5 µrad noise level, but were left with 26 exceptional events with anomalous RIEs at the 1 to 10 µrad level that remained unexplained. In this study, we focused on investigating the causes of the high RIE of these exceptional events, employing detailed along-ray-path analyses of atmospheric and ionospheric refractivities, impact parameter changes, and bending angles and RIEs under asymmetric and symmetric ionospheric structures. We found that the main causes of the high RIEs are a combination of physics-based effects – where asymmetric ionospheric conditions play the primary role, more than the ionization level driven by solar activity – and technical ray tracer effects due to occasions of imperfect smoothness in ionospheric refractivity model derivatives. We also found that along-ray impact parameter variations of more than 10 to 20 m are possible due to ionospheric asymmetries and, depending on prevailing horizontal refractivity gradients, are positive or negative relative to the initial impact parameter at the GNSS transmitter. Furthermore, mesospheric RIEs are found generally higher than upper-stratospheric ones, likely due to being closer in tangent point heights to the ionospheric E layer peaking near 105 km, which increases RIE vulnerability. In the future we will further improve the along-ray modeling system to fully isolate technical from physics-based effects and to use it beyond this work for additional GNSS RO signal propagation studies.
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