The atmospheric dynamics mission for global wind field measurement

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Abstract

The prime aim of the Atmospheric Dynamics Mission is to demonstrate measurements of vertical wind profiles from space. Extensive studies conducted by the European Space Agency over the past 15 years have culminated in the selection of a high-performance Dopper wind lidar based on direct-detection interferometric techniques. Such a system, with a pulsed laser perating at 355-nm wavelength, would utilize both Rayleigh scattering from molecules and Mie scattering from thin cloud and aerosol particles; measurement of the residual Dopler shift from successive levels in the atmosphere provides the vertical wind profiles. The lidar would be accommodated on a satellite flying in a sun-synchronous orbit, at an altitute of ∼400 km, providing near-global coverage; target date for launch is in 2007. Processing of the backscatter signals will provide about 3000 globally distributed wind profiles per day, above thick clouds or down to the surface in clear air, at typically 200-km separation along the satellite track. Such improved knowledge of the global wind field is crucial to many aspects of climate research and weather prediction. Knowledge over large parts of the Tropics and major oceans is presently quite incomplete-leading to major difficulties in studying key processes in the climate system and in improving numerical simulations and predictions; progress in climate modeling is indeed intimately linked to progress in numerical weather prediction. The background studies, potential impact on climate and weather prediction, choice of measurement specifications, and the lidar technology are discussed. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.

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Stoffelen, A., Pailleux, J., Källén, E., Vaughan, J. M., Isaksen, L., Flamant, P., … Ingmann, P. (2005). The atmospheric dynamics mission for global wind field measurement. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 86(1), 73–87. https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-86-1-73

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