Abstract

A procedure for estimating the precipitable water vapor (PWV) distribution around ground-based stations of the global navigation satellite system (GNSS) on a scale of several kilometers is presented. This procedure utilizes the difference between the zenith total delay above a GNSS station and the zenith mapped slant path delay (SPD). This difference can be used to estimate the PWV gradient in each SPD direction by assuming an exponential distribution for the horizontal water vapor gradient.The procedure was tested using an estimation of the PWV variation associated with the parent storm of an F3 Fujita scale tornado that occurred in Ibaraki prefecture on 6 May, 2012. Differential reflectivity observed by a dual-polarimetric radar indicated the existence of a developed parent cloud approximately 1h before the tornado occurred. A high-resolution numerical weather model simulation suggested the existence of a strong PWV gradient around the parent cloud, made evident by the co-existence of a strong updraft and downdraft within an approximately 5-km radius. The PWV gradient, calculated using the GNSS observation network with an average spacing of approximately 17 km, could not detect such a small-scale, strong PWV gradient. The PWV gradient estimated using the proposed procedure revealed a strong PWV gradient and its enhancement. In this case, a higher-order inhomogeneity component of each SPD played a critical role.

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