Abstract
Abstract. The possibility of extracting useful information about the state of the lower troposphere from the surface reflections
that are often detected during GPS radio occultations (GPSRO) is explored. The clarity of the reflection is
quantified, and can be related to properties of the surface and the low troposphere. The reflected signal is often clear
enough to show good phase coherence, and can be tracked and processed as an extension of direct non-reflected GPSRO
atmospheric profiles. A profile of bending angle vs. impact parameter can be obtained for these reflected signals,
characterized by impact parameters that are below the apparent horizon, and that is a continuation at low altitude of the
standard non-reflected bending angle profile. If there were no reflection, these would correspond to tangent altitudes
below the local surface, and in particular below the local mean sea level. A forward operator is presented, for the
evaluation of the bending angle of reflected GPSRO signals, given atmospheric properties as described by a numerical
weather prediction system. The operator is an extension, at lower impact parameters, of standard bending angle operators,
and reproduces both the direct and reflected sections of the measured profile. It can be applied to the assimilation of
the reflected section of the profile as supplementary data to the direct section. Although the principle is also applicable
over land, this paper is focused on ocean cases, where the topographic height of the reflecting surface, the sea
level, is better known a priori.
Funder
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Cited by
7 articles.
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