Sea-Surface Specular Multipath for Surface-Level Antennas: Phase 1

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Allen ◽  
R. E. Goshorn ◽  
B. Zeidler ◽  
A. A. Beex
Keyword(s):  
Phase 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao Dong ◽  
Jiangbo Jin ◽  
Hailong Liu ◽  
He Zhang ◽  
Minghua Zhang ◽  
...  

AbstractAs a member of the Chinese modeling groups, the coupled ocean-ice component of the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Earth System Model, version 2.0 (CAS-ESM2.0), is taking part in the Ocean Model Intercomparison Project Phase 1 (OMIP1) experiment of phase 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). The simulation was conducted, and monthly outputs have been published on the ESGF (Earth System Grid Federation) data server. In this paper, the experimental dataset is introduced, and the preliminary performances of the ocean model in simulating the global ocean temperature, salinity, sea surface temperature, sea surface salinity, sea surface height, sea ice, and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) are evaluated. The results show that the model is at quasi-equilibrium during the integration of 372 years, and performances of the model are reasonable compared with observations. This dataset is ready to be downloaded and used by the community in related research, e.g., multi-ocean-sea-ice model performance evaluation and interannual variation in oceans driven by prescribed atmospheric forcing.


2004 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Fretwell ◽  
I. R. Peterson ◽  
D. E. Smith

SynopsisThe behaviour of the Earth's continental crust and mantle may be modelled as a buoyant floating plate on a viscous liquid, and the variations of load imposed by an ice sheet may be modelled as a time-dependent force. In recent work it has been shown that the mathematical solution of this problem can be subdivided into a propagating far-field forebulge term and a non-propagating near-field term. The latter often dominates and can be approximated satisfactorily by a generalized Gaussian function. Here we fit empirical data from the Main Postglacial Shoreline of northern Britain to a Gaussian trend surface. We show that the fit is significantly better than that of a polynomial trend surface previously published, and that the method has the potential to predict the likely sea surface level offshore at the zero isobase for the shoreline.


2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (15) ◽  
pp. 5891-5906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Becker ◽  
Huug van den Dool ◽  
Qin Zhang

Abstract Forecast skill and potential predictability of 2-m temperature, precipitation rate, and sea surface temperature are assessed using 29 yr of hindcast data from models included in phase 1 of the North American Multimodel Ensemble (NMME) project. Forecast skill is examined using the anomaly correlation (AC); skill of the bias-corrected ensemble means (EMs) of the individual models and of the NMME 7-model EM are verified against the observed value. Forecast skill is also assessed using the root-mean-square error. The models’ representation of the size of forecast anomalies is also studied. Predictability was considered from two angles: homogeneous, where one model is verified against a single member from its own ensemble, and heterogeneous, where a model’s EM is compared to a single member from another model. This study provides insight both into the physical predictability of the three fields and into the NMME and its contributing models. Most of the models in the NMME have fairly realistic spread, as represented by the interannual variability. The NMME 7-model forecast skill, verified against observations, is equal to or higher than the individual models’ forecast ACs. Two-meter temperature (T2m) skill matches the highest single-model skill, while precipitation rate and sea surface temperature NMME EM skill is higher than for any single model. Homogeneous predictability is higher than reported skill in all fields, suggesting there may be room for some improvement in model prediction, although there are many regional and seasonal variations. The estimate of potential predictability is not overly sensitive to the choice of model. In general, models with higher homogeneous predictability show higher forecast skill.


Ocean Science ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 655-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Esnaola ◽  
J. Sáenz ◽  
E. Zorita ◽  
A. Fontán ◽  
V. Valencia ◽  
...  

Abstract. The combination of remotely sensed gappy Sea surface temperature (SST) images with the missing data filling DINEOF (data interpolating empirical orthogonal functions) technique, followed by a principal component analysis of the reconstructed data, has been used to identify the time evolution and the daily scale variability of the wintertime surface signal of the Iberian Poleward Current (IPC), or Navidad, during the 1981–2010 period. An exhaustive comparison with the existing bibliography, and the vertical temperature and salinity profiles related to its extremes over the Bay of Biscay area, show that the obtained time series accurately reflect the IPC-Navidad variability. Once a time series for the evolution of the SST signal of the current over the last decades is well established, this time series is used to propose a physical mechanism in relation to the variability of the IPC-Navidad, involving both atmospheric and oceanic variables. According to the proposed mechanism, an atmospheric circulation anomaly observed in both the 500 hPa and the surface levels generates atmospheric surface level pressure, wind-stress and heat-flux anomalies. In turn, those surface level atmospheric anomalies induce mutually coherent SST and sea level anomalies over the North Atlantic area, and locally, in the Bay of Biscay area. These anomalies, both locally over the Bay of Biscay area and over the North Atlantic, are in agreement with several mechanisms that have separately been related to the variability of the IPC-Navidad, i.e. the south-westerly winds, the joint effect of baroclinicity and relief (JEBAR) effect, the topographic β effect and a weakened North Atlantic gyre.


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