Multi-LEO Satellite Stereo Winds

Author:

Carr James L.1ORCID,Wu Dong L.2ORCID,Friberg Mariel D.3ORCID,Summers Tyler C.4

Affiliation:

1. Carr Astronautics Corporation, Greenbelt, MD 20770, USA

2. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA

3. Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740, USA

4. Science Systems and Application Inc., Lanham, MD 20706, USA

Abstract

The stereo-winds method follows trackable atmospheric cloud features from multiple viewing perspectives over multiple times, generally involving multiple satellite platforms. Multi-temporal observations provide information about the wind velocity and the observed parallax between viewing perspectives provides information about the height. The stereo-winds method requires no prior assumptions about the thermal profile of the atmosphere to assign a wind height, since the height of the tracked feature is directly determined from the viewing geometry. The method is well developed for pairs of Geostationary (GEO) satellites and a GEO paired with a Low Earth Orbiting (LEO) satellite. However, neither GEO-GEO nor GEO-LEO configurations provide coverage of the poles. In this paper, we develop the stereo-winds method for multi-LEO configurations, to extend coverage from pole to pole. The most promising multi-LEO constellation studied consists of Terra/MODIS and Sentinel-3/SLSTR. Stereo-wind products are validated using clear-sky terrain measurements, spaceborne LiDAR, and reanalysis winds for winter and summer over both poles. Applications of multi-LEO polar stereo winds range from polar atmospheric circulation to nighttime cloud identification. Low cloud detection during polar nighttime is extremely challenging for satellite remote sensing. The stereo-winds method can improve polar cloud observations in otherwise challenging conditions.

Funder

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Atmospheres, Modeling, and Data Assimilation

NASA High-End Computing (HEC) Program

NASA Center for Climate Simulation

NASA’s Terra Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Reference76 articles.

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