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    The Arm Program's Water Vapor Intensive Observation Periods

    Source: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society:;2003:;volume( 084 ):;issue: 002::page 217
    Author:
    Revercomb, H. E.
    ,
    Turner, D. D.
    ,
    Tobin, D. C.
    ,
    Knuteson, R. O.
    ,
    Feltz, W. F.
    ,
    Barnard, J.
    ,
    Bösenberg, J.
    ,
    Clough, S.
    ,
    Cook, D.
    ,
    Ferrare, R.
    ,
    Goldsmith, J.
    ,
    Gutman, S.
    ,
    Halthore, R.
    ,
    Lesht, B.
    ,
    Liljegren, J.
    ,
    Linné, H.
    ,
    Michalsky, J.
    ,
    Morris, V.
    ,
    Porch, W.
    ,
    Richardson, S.
    ,
    Schmid, B.
    ,
    Splitt, M.
    ,
    Van Hove, T.
    ,
    Westwater, E.
    ,
    Whiteman, D.
    DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-84-2-217
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: A series of water vapor intensive observation periods (WVIOPs) were conducted at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) site in Oklahoma between 1996 and 2000. The goals of these WVIOPs are to characterize the accuracy of the operational water vapor observations and to develop techniques to improve the accuracy of these measurements. The initial focus of these experiments was on the lower atmosphere, for which the goal is an absolute accuracy of better than 2% in total column water vapor, corresponding to ~1 W m-2 of infrared radiation at the surface. To complement the operational water vapor instruments during the WVIOPs, additional instrumentation including a scanning Ramanlidar, microwave radiometers, chilled-mirror hygrometers, a differential absorption lidar, and ground-based solar radiometers were deployed at the ARM site. The unique datasets from the 1996, 1997, and 1999 experiments have led to many results, including the discovery and characterization of a large (> 25%) sonde-to-sonde variability in the water vapor profiles from Vaisala RS-80H radiosondes that acts like a height-independent calibration factor error. However, the microwave observations provide a stable reference that can be used to remove a large part of the sonde-to-sondecalibration variability. In situ capacitive water vapor sensors demonstrated agreement within 2% of chilled-mirror hygrometers at the surface and on an instrumented tower. Water vapor profiles retrieved from two Raman lidars,which have both been calibrated to the ARM microwave radiometer, showed agreement to within 5% for all altitudes below 8km during two WVIOPs. The mean agreement of the total precipitable water vapor from different techniques has converged significantly from early analysis that originally showed differences up to 15%. Retrievals of total precipitablewater vapor (PWV) from the ARM microwave radiometer are now found to be only 3% moister than PWV derived from new GPSresults, and about 2% drier than the mean of radiosonde data after a recently defined sonde dry-bias correction is applied. Raman lidar profiles calibrated using tower-mounted chilled-mirror hygrometers confirm the expected sensitivityof microwave radiometer data to water vapor changes, but is drier than the microwave radiometer (MWR) by 0.95 mm for all PWV amounts. However, observations from different collocated microwave radiometers have shown larger differences than expected and attempts to resolve the remaining inconsistencies (in both calibration andforward modeling) are continuing. The paper concludes by outlining the objectives of the recent 2000 WVIOP and the ARM-First International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) Regional Experiment (FIRE) Water Vapor Experiment (AFWEX), the latter of which switched the focus to characterizing upper-tropospheric humidity measurements.
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      The Arm Program's Water Vapor Intensive Observation Periods

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4214597
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    contributor authorRevercomb, H. E.
    contributor authorTurner, D. D.
    contributor authorTobin, D. C.
    contributor authorKnuteson, R. O.
    contributor authorFeltz, W. F.
    contributor authorBarnard, J.
    contributor authorBösenberg, J.
    contributor authorClough, S.
    contributor authorCook, D.
    contributor authorFerrare, R.
    contributor authorGoldsmith, J.
    contributor authorGutman, S.
    contributor authorHalthore, R.
    contributor authorLesht, B.
    contributor authorLiljegren, J.
    contributor authorLinné, H.
    contributor authorMichalsky, J.
    contributor authorMorris, V.
    contributor authorPorch, W.
    contributor authorRichardson, S.
    contributor authorSchmid, B.
    contributor authorSplitt, M.
    contributor authorVan Hove, T.
    contributor authorWestwater, E.
    contributor authorWhiteman, D.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:42:13Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:42:13Z
    date copyright2003/02/01
    date issued2003
    identifier issn0003-0007
    identifier otherams-72579.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4214597
    description abstractA series of water vapor intensive observation periods (WVIOPs) were conducted at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) site in Oklahoma between 1996 and 2000. The goals of these WVIOPs are to characterize the accuracy of the operational water vapor observations and to develop techniques to improve the accuracy of these measurements. The initial focus of these experiments was on the lower atmosphere, for which the goal is an absolute accuracy of better than 2% in total column water vapor, corresponding to ~1 W m-2 of infrared radiation at the surface. To complement the operational water vapor instruments during the WVIOPs, additional instrumentation including a scanning Ramanlidar, microwave radiometers, chilled-mirror hygrometers, a differential absorption lidar, and ground-based solar radiometers were deployed at the ARM site. The unique datasets from the 1996, 1997, and 1999 experiments have led to many results, including the discovery and characterization of a large (> 25%) sonde-to-sonde variability in the water vapor profiles from Vaisala RS-80H radiosondes that acts like a height-independent calibration factor error. However, the microwave observations provide a stable reference that can be used to remove a large part of the sonde-to-sondecalibration variability. In situ capacitive water vapor sensors demonstrated agreement within 2% of chilled-mirror hygrometers at the surface and on an instrumented tower. Water vapor profiles retrieved from two Raman lidars,which have both been calibrated to the ARM microwave radiometer, showed agreement to within 5% for all altitudes below 8km during two WVIOPs. The mean agreement of the total precipitable water vapor from different techniques has converged significantly from early analysis that originally showed differences up to 15%. Retrievals of total precipitablewater vapor (PWV) from the ARM microwave radiometer are now found to be only 3% moister than PWV derived from new GPSresults, and about 2% drier than the mean of radiosonde data after a recently defined sonde dry-bias correction is applied. Raman lidar profiles calibrated using tower-mounted chilled-mirror hygrometers confirm the expected sensitivityof microwave radiometer data to water vapor changes, but is drier than the microwave radiometer (MWR) by 0.95 mm for all PWV amounts. However, observations from different collocated microwave radiometers have shown larger differences than expected and attempts to resolve the remaining inconsistencies (in both calibration andforward modeling) are continuing. The paper concludes by outlining the objectives of the recent 2000 WVIOP and the ARM-First International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) Regional Experiment (FIRE) Water Vapor Experiment (AFWEX), the latter of which switched the focus to characterizing upper-tropospheric humidity measurements.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleThe Arm Program's Water Vapor Intensive Observation Periods
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume84
    journal issue2
    journal titleBulletin of the American Meteorological Society
    identifier doi10.1175/BAMS-84-2-217
    journal fristpage217
    journal lastpage236
    treeBulletin of the American Meteorological Society:;2003:;volume( 084 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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