Title :
Hurricane Imaging Radiometer wind speed and rain rate retrievals during the 2010 GRIP flight experiment
Author :
Sahawneh, Saleem ; Farrar, Spencer ; Johnson, Jamie ; Jones, W. Linwood ; Roberts, John ; Biswas, Santosh ; Cecil, Daniel
Author_Institution :
Dept. of EECS, Univ. of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
Abstract :
Microwave remote sensing observations of hurricanes, from NOAA and USAF hurricane surveillance aircraft, provide vital data for hurricane research and operations, for forecasting the intensity and track of tropical storms. The current operational standard for hurricane wind speed and rain rate measurements is the Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer (SFMR), which is a nadir viewing passive microwave airborne remote sensor [1]. The Hurricane Imaging Radiometer, HIRAD, will extend the nadir viewing SFMR capability to provide wide swath images of wind speed and rain rate, while flying on a high altitude aircraft. HIRAD was first flown in the Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes, GRIP, NASA hurricane field experiment in 2010. This paper reports on geophysical retrieval results and provides hurricane images from GRIP flights. An overview of the HIRAD instrument and the radiative transfer theory based, wind speed/rain rate retrieval algorithm is included. Results are presented for hurricane wind speed and rain rate for Earl and Karl, with comparison to collocated SFMR retrievals and WP3D Fuselage Radar images for validation purposes.
Keywords :
atmospheric techniques; rain; storms; weather forecasting; wind; AD 2010; GRIP flight experiment; GRIP flights; HIRAD instrument; Hurricane Imaging Radiometer; NASA hurricane field experiment; NOAA hurricane surveillance aircraft; Rapid Intensification Processes; USAF hurricane surveillance aircraft; WP3D Fuselage Radar images; hurricane images; hurricane imaging radiometer; hurricane operations; hurricane research; hurricane wind speed measurement; microwave remote sensing observations; radiative transfer theory; rain rate measurement; rain rate retrieval; stepped frequency microwave radiometer; storm intensity forecasting; tropical storm track; wind speed retrieval; Hurricanes; Legged locomotion; Maximum likelihood estimation; Microwave radiometry; Rain; Storms; Wind speed; Brightness Temperature; HIRAD; Microwave radiometry; SFMR; synthetic aperture radiometry;
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Radiometry and Remote Sensing of the Environment (MicroRad), 2014 13th Specialist Meeting on
Conference_Location :
Pasadena, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4645-7
DOI :
10.1109/MicroRad.2014.6878914