Abstract

Abstract. FengYun-3C (FY-3C) is an operational polar-orbiting satellite carrying the new-generation microwave sounding instruments in China. This paper describes the assimilation of the FY-3C Microwave Temperature Sounder-2 (MWTS-2) radiances in the Global and Regional Assimilation and PrEdiction System (GRAPES) of China Meteorological Administration. A quality control (QC) procedure for the assimilation of MWTS-2 radiance is proposed. Extensive monitoring before assimilation shows that MWTS-2 observations exhibit a clear striping pattern. A technique combining principal component analysis (PCA) and ensemble empirical mode decomposition (EEMD) is applied to the observations to remove the striping noise. Cloudy field-of-views (FOVs) are identified by applying the Visible and InfrarRed Radiometer (VIRR) cloud fraction threshold of 76 %. Other QC steps are conducted in the follow order: (i) coastal FOVs are removed, (ii) eight outmost FOVs are not used, (iii) channel 5 data over sea ice and land are not used, (iv) channel 6 observations are not used if the terrain altitudes are higher than 500 m, and (v) outliers with large differences between observations and model simulations are removed. Approximately 83, 75, 40, and 40 % of the observations are removed by the proposed QC for channels 5–8, respectively. After QC, the global biases and standard deviations are reduced significantly. The assimilation of the MWTS-2 radiances shows a positive impact when the control experiment assimilates only conventional observations. The experiments also show that the analysis and forecast errors are slightly reduced when the striping noise is removed from the observations. The quality control scheme of extracting the striping noise may contribute to the analysis and forecast accuracy. The impact of MWTS-2 is neutral when the conventional data and other satellite data are all assimilated.

Highlights

  • Satellite radiance data have become a critical component in the numerical weather prediction (NWP) system

  • Adjoint-based estimates of observation impact on NWP (Baker and Daley, 2000) have further demonstrated that the greatest decrease in forecast error is due to Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-A (AMSU-A), which was launched as part of ATOVS and is used primarily for global atmospheric temperature sounding (Fourrié et al, 2002; Langland and Baker, 2004; Cardinali, 2009; Gelaro et al, 2010)

  • CRTM is chosen here to make the O-B of Microwave Temperature Sounder-2 (MWTS-2) comparable to those of Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder (ATMS) provided by Qin et al (2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Satellite radiance data have become a critical component in the numerical weather prediction (NWP) system. Adjoint-based estimates of observation impact on NWP (Baker and Daley, 2000) have further demonstrated that the greatest decrease in forecast error is due to Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-A (AMSU-A), which was launched as part of ATOVS and is used primarily for global atmospheric temperature sounding (Fourrié et al, 2002; Langland and Baker, 2004; Cardinali, 2009; Gelaro et al, 2010). Observations from Microwave Temperature Sounder-1 (MWTS-1) onboard Fengyun-3A (FY-3A) and Fengyun-3B (FY-3B) have positive impacts on NWP forecasts (Lu et al, 2010; Lu and Bell, 2012; Li and Zou, 2013, 2014; Li and Liu, 2015)

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