Abstract

Abstract. Water vapour is one of the most important greenhouse gases. Long-term changes in the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere need to be monitored not only for its direct role as a greenhouse gas but also because of its role in amplifying other feedbacks such as clouds and albedo. In recent decades, monitoring of water vapour on a regular and continuous basis has become possible as a result of the steady increase in the number of deployed global positioning satellite (GPS) ground-based receivers. However, the Horn of Africa remained a data-void region in this regard until recently, when some GPS ground-receiver stations were deployed to monitor tectonic movements in the Great Rift Valley. This study seizes this opportunity and the installation of a Fourier transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR) at Addis Ababa to assess the quality and comparability of precipitable water vapour (PWV) from GPS, FTIR, radiosonde and interim ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-Interim) over Ethiopia. The PWV from the three instruments and the reanalysis show good correlation, with correlation coefficients in the range from 0.83 to 0.92. On average, GPS shows the highest PWV followed by FTIR and radiosonde observations. ERA-Interim is higher than all measurements with a bias of 4.6 mm compared to GPS. The intercomparison between GPS and ERA-Interim was extended to seven other GPS stations in the country. Only four out of eight GPS stations included simultaneous surface pressure observations. Uncertainty in the model surface pressure of 1 hPa can cause up to 0.35 mm error in GPS PWV. The gain obtained from using observed surface pressure in terms of reducing bias and strengthening correlation is significant but shows some variations among the GPS sites. The comparison between GPS and ERA-Interim PWV over the seven other GPS stations shows differences in the magnitude and sign of bias of ERA-Interim with respect to GPS PWV from station to station. This feature is also prevalent in diurnal and seasonal variabilities. The spatial variation in the relationship between the two data sets is partly linked to variation in the skill of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) model over different regions and seasons. This weakness in the model is related to poor observational constraints from this part of the globe and sensitivity of its convection scheme to orography and land surface features. This is consistent with observed wet bias over some highland stations and dry bias over few lowland stations. The skill of ECMWF in reproducing realistic PWV varies with time of the day and season, showing large positive bias during warm and wet summer at most of the GPS sites.

Highlights

  • Water vapour is one of the most important greenhouse gases

  • The quality and consistency of different observational and reanalysis precipitable water vapour (PWV) data sets are investigated, and the different error sources impacting the data taken over Addis Ababa are characterized

  • The PWV from Fourier transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR), global positioning satellite (GPS) and radiosondes is characterized in terms of different sources of error

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Summary

Introduction

Water vapour is one of the most important greenhouse gases. Its radiative characteristics play a great role in determining the magnitude of the greenhouse effect and the planetary albedo. Most efforts to validate satellite and model estimates of precipitable water over Africa are hindered due to lack of GPS and other ground-based atmospheric observing systems as well as large data gaps Bock et al (2007a) have used some scattered GPS receiver stations over Africa and compared them to independent observations, and to 40-year ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40) and National Centers for Environmental Prediction reanalysis 2 (NCEP2) model simulations While these studies hardly represent the whole of Africa, they have made important contributions to filling the existing data gaps and to understanding of water vapour variability. 4. The observations of atmospheric precipitable water vapour over Addis Ababa are performed using ground-based GPS receivers, FTIR, and radiosondes. The respective data sets and methodologies used in acquiring them from these instruments are described

FTIR observations
GPS observations
Radiosonde soundings
ERA-Interim data
Results and discussion
Diurnal and seasonal variability of ERA-Interim and GPS PWV
Conclusions
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