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PDF Views: 160
Authors
A. K. Mathur
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
R. K. Gangwar
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
B. S. Gohil
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
Sanjib K. Deb
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
Prashant Kumar
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
Munn V. Shukla
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
B. Simon
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
P. K. Pal
Atmosphere and Oceanic Sciences Group (EPSA), Space Applications Centre (ISRO), Ahmedabad 380 015, India
Abstract
The Megha-Tropiques (MT) satellite, a joint Indo- French mission, was launched by ISRO's PSLV-C18 on 12 October 2011 from Sriharikota, India. SAPHIR, a microwave humidity sounder on-board Megha Tropiques operates in six channels with frequencies around 183.31 GHz. A radiative transfer simulationbased operational algorithm has been developed to retrieve layer-averaged relative-humidity (LARH) for six atmospheric layers from the surface to nearly 12 km using SAPHIR observations over land and ocean under non-rainy conditions. SAPHIR-derived LARH for the period July to November 2012 has been validated with concurrent quality-controlled radiosonde observations as well as with ECMWF analysis data. Global validation with radiosonde and ECMWF data shows that ischolar_main mean square deviation in LARH for all the six layers is nearly 20% and 15% respectively, after bias correction.
Keywords
Atmospheric Layers, Humidity Sounder, Radiosonde Observations, Relative Humidity.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv104%2Fi12%2F1650-1655