2007
DOI: 10.1175/jtech1982.1
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Analysis of Radiosonde and Ground-Based Remotely Sensed PWV Data from the 2004 North Slope of Alaska Arctic Winter Radiometric Experiment

Abstract: During 9 March-9 April 2004, the North Slope of Alaska Arctic Winter Radiometric Experiment was conducted at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program's (ARM) "Great White" field site near Barrow, Alaska. The major goals of the experiment were to compare microwave and millimeter wavelength radiometers and to develop forward models in radiative transfer, all with a focus on cold (temperature from 0°to Ϫ40°C) and dry [precipitable water vapor (PWV) Ͻ 0.5 cm] conditions. To supplement the remote sensors, seve… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…1 bright-band detection method of White et al (2002); the bright band typically resides ;200 m below the 08C freezing level (Stewart et al 1984;White et al 2002). A collocated dual-channel GPS receiver gathered 30-min tropospheric measurements of IWV with ;1 mm accuracy (Duan et al 1996;Mattioli et al 2007). The wind profiler site also featured a 10-m tower that measured standard surface meteorological parameters (i.e., temperature, relative humidity, surface pressure, wind velocity, and precipitation) every 2 min.…”
Section: Instrumentation and Datasetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 bright-band detection method of White et al (2002); the bright band typically resides ;200 m below the 08C freezing level (Stewart et al 1984;White et al 2002). A collocated dual-channel GPS receiver gathered 30-min tropospheric measurements of IWV with ;1 mm accuracy (Duan et al 1996;Mattioli et al 2007). The wind profiler site also featured a 10-m tower that measured standard surface meteorological parameters (i.e., temperature, relative humidity, surface pressure, wind velocity, and precipitation) every 2 min.…”
Section: Instrumentation and Datasetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An early uncertainty analysis of GPS analysis methods (Bevis et al, 1994) indicated that estimates of PW with an accuracy of better than 2 mm plus 1 % of the total PW amount are readily achievable using GPS observations. Continual improvements in data analysis methods have reduced this uncertainty to less than 1.0-1.5 mm (Mattioli et al, 2007;Thomas et al, 2011).…”
Section: Global Positioning System (Gps)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All factors affecting longwave and shortwave fluxes around the sensor influence the bias, including sensor physical characteristics and mounting, and environmental factors including surface temperature, solar elevation angle (SEA), temperature lapse rate, ventilation velocity, and clouds [e.g., McMillin et al, 1992;Luers andEskridge, 1995, 1998;Fitzgibbon, 2003, 2004;Mattioli et al, 2007].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%