December 1, 2016
Journal Article

Satellite sounder observations of contrasting Troposheric moisture transport regimes: Saharan air layers, Hadley cells, and atmospheric rivers

Abstract

This paper examines the performance of satellite sounder atmospheric vertical moisture proles (AVMP) under tropospheric conditions encompassing moisture contrasts driven by convection and advection transport mechanisms, specifically Atlantic Ocean Saharan air layers (SALs) and Pacific Ocean moisture conveyer belts (MCBs) commonly referred to as atmospheric rivers (ARs), both of these being mesoscale to synoptic meteorological phenomena within the vicinity of subtropical Hadley subsidence zones. Operational AVMP environmental data records retrieved from the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (SNPP) NOAA-Unique Combined Atmospheric Processing System (NUCAPS) are collocated with dedicated radiosonde observations (RAOBs) obtained from ocean-based intensive field campaigns; these RAOBs provide uniquely independent correlative truth data not assimilated into numerical weather prediction models for satellite sounder validation over open ocean. Using these marine-based data, we empirically assess the performance of the operational NUCAPS AVMP product for detecting and resolving these tropospheric moisture features over otherwise RAOB-sparse regions.

Revised: February 16, 2017 | Published: December 1, 2016

Citation

Nalli N.R., C.D. Barnet, T. Reale, Q. Liu, V.R. Morris, J.R. Spackman, and E. Joseph, et al. 2016. Satellite sounder observations of contrasting Troposheric moisture transport regimes: Saharan air layers, Hadley cells, and atmospheric rivers. Journal of Hydrometeorology 17, no. 12:2997-3006. PNNL-SA-121128. doi:10.1175/JHM-D-16-0163.1