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Dive into the research topics where Anna Agusti-Panareda is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Agusti-Panareda.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2008

THE AMMA RADIOSONDE PROGRAM AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE OF ATMOSPHERIC MONITORING OVER AFRICA

Douglas J. Parker; Andreas H. Fink; Serge Janicot; Jean-Blaise Ngamini; Michael W. Douglas; Ernest Afiesimama; Anna Agusti-Panareda; Anton Beljaars; Francis Didé; Arona Diedhiou; Thierry Lebel; Jan Polcher; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Chris D. Thorncroft; George Wilson

In the face of long-term decline, the AMMA research program has reactivated the radiosonde network over West Africa. The lessons learned in AMMA have significance for the upper-air network throughout the continent.


Weather and Forecasting | 2010

Impacts of Assimilating AMMA Soundings on ECMWF Analyses and Forecasts

Anna Agusti-Panareda; Anton Beljaars; Carla Cardinali; Iliana Genkova; Chris D. Thorncroft

The field experiment of the African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis (AMMA) project during the 2006 wet monsoon season provided an unprecedented amount of radiosonde/dropsonde data over the West African region. This paper explores the usage and impacts of this invaluable dataset in the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts analyses and forecasts. These soundings are the only source of data that can provide 3D information on the thermodynamic and dynamic structures of the lower troposphere over continental West Africa. They are particularly important for the Sahel region located between 128 and 208N, which is characterized by large gradients in temperature and moisture in the lower troposphere. An assimilation experiment comparison between the pre-AMMA and AMMA radiosonde networks shows that the extra AMMA soundings have a significant analysis impact on the low-level temperature over the Sahel and on the structure of the African easterly jet. However, the impacts of the extra AMMA data on the forecast disappear after 24 h. The soundings reveal large model biases in boundary layer temperature over the northern and eastern Sahel, which are consistent with the well-known model biases in cloud, rainfall, and radiation. Large analysis increments in temperature lead to increments in divergence and subsidence, which act to suppress convection. Thus, the analysis increments appear to have an undesirable feedback on the cloud and temperature model biases. The impact of the AMMA soundings on the African easterly jet is to enhance and extend the jet streak to 158E, that is, toward the eastern part of the Sahel. No observations are assimilated east of 158E at the level of the African easterly jet to support the jet enhancement farther east. Comparisons with independent atmospheric cloud motion vectors indicate that the African easterly jet in the analysis is too weak over this data-sparse region. This could have implications for the development of African easterly waves in the model forecast. Further experimentation by assimilating atmospheric motion vectors—currently not used—could address this problem.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2008

Correction of Humidity Bias for Vaisala RS80-A Sondes during the AMMA 2006 Observing Period

Mathieu Nuret; Jean-Philippe Lafore; Françoise Guichard; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Olivier Bock; Anna Agusti-Panareda; Jean-Blaise N’Gamini

Abstract During the African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses (AMMA) program, which included a special observing period that took place over West Africa in 2006, a major effort was devoted to monitor the atmosphere and its water cycle. The radiosonde network was upgraded and enhanced, and GPS receivers deployed. Among all sondes released in the atmosphere, a significant number were Vaisala RS80-A sondes, which revealed a significant dry bias relative to Vaisala RS92 (a maximum of 14% in the lower atmosphere, reaching 20% in the upper levels). This paper makes use of a simple but robust statistical approach to correct the bias. Comparisons against independent GPS data show that the bias is almost removed at night, whereas for daytime conditions, a weak dry bias (5%) still remains. The correction enhances CAPE by a factor of about 4 and, thus, becomes much more in line with expected values over the region.


Monthly Weather Review | 2005

The Extratropical Transition of Tropical Cyclone Lili (1996) and Its Crucial Contribution to a Moderate Extratropical Development

Anna Agusti-Panareda; Suzanne L. Gray; George C. Craig; Chris D. Thorncroft

Abstract The transition that a tropical cyclone experiences as it moves into the extratropical environment (known as extratropical transition) can result in the decay or intensification of a baroclinic cyclone. The extratropical transition (ET) of Tropical Cyclone Lili (1996) in the North Atlantic resulted in a moderate extratropical development of a baroclinic cyclone. The impact of Lili in the extratropical development that occurred during its ET is investigated. Numerical experiments are performed using potential vorticity inversion and the Met Office Unified Model to forecast the extratropical development with and without the tropical cyclone in the initial conditions. In contrast with other case studies in the literature, Lili is shown to play a crucial role during its ET in the development of a baroclinic cyclone that occurred in the same region. A hypothesis of the possible scenarios of ET is presented that links the case-to-case variability of ET case studies in the literature with a classificatio...


Weather and Forecasting | 2009

The Impacts of AMMA Radiosonde Data on the French Global Assimilation and Forecast System

C. Faccani; Florence Rabier; N. Fourrié; Anna Agusti-Panareda; Fatima Karbou; P. Moll; Jean-Philippe Lafore; Mathieu Nuret; F. Hdidou; Olivier Bock

Abstract The high vertical density soundings recorded during the 2006 African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis (AMMA) campaign are assimilated into the French numerical weather prediction Action de Recherche Petite Echelle Grande Echelle (ARPEGE) four-dimensional variational data assimilation (4DVAR) system, with and without a bias correction for relative humidity. Four different experiments are carried out to assess the impacts of the added observations. The analyses and forecasts from these different scenarios are evaluated over western Africa. For the full experiment using all data together with a bias correction, the humidity analysis is in better agreement with surface observations and independent GPS observations than it was for the other experiments. AMMA data also improve the African easterly jet (AEJ) on its southeasterly side, and when they are used with an appropriate bias correction, the daily and monthly averaged precipitation results are in relatively good agreement with the satellite-base...


Monthly Weather Review | 2008

The Contribution of Ex–Tropical Cyclone Gert (1999) toward the Weakening of a Midlatitude Cyclogenesis Event

Anna Agusti-Panareda

Abstract Tropical Cyclone Gert (1999) experienced an extratropical transition while it merged with an extratropical cyclone upstream. The upstream extratropical cyclone had started to intensify before it merged with the transitioning tropical cyclone, and it continued intensifying afterward (12 hPa in 12 h, according to the Met Office analysis). The question addressed in this paper is the following: what was the impact of the transitioning tropical cyclone on this intensification of the upstream extratropical cyclone? Until now, in the literature, tropical cyclones that experience extratropical transition have been found to have either no impact or a positive impact on the development of extratropical cyclogenesis events. The positive impact involves either a triggering of the development of the extratropical cyclone or simply a contribution to its deepening. However, the case studied here proves to have a negative impact on the developing extratropical cyclone upstream by diminishing its intensification....


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2007

Comparison of ground‐based GPS precipitable water vapour to independent observations and NWP model reanalyses over Africa

Olivier Bock; Marie-Noëlle Bouin; A. Walpersdorf; Jean-Philippe Lafore; S. Janicot; Françoise Guichard; Anna Agusti-Panareda


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2004

The extratropical transition of hurricane Irene (1999): A potential‐vorticity perspective

Anna Agusti-Panareda; Chris D. Thorncroft; George C. Craig; Suzanne L. Gray


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2009

Radiosonde humidity bias correction over the West African region for the special AMMA reanalysis at ECMWF

Anna Agusti-Panareda; Drasko Vasiljevic; Anton Beljaars; Olivier Bock; Françoise Guichard; Mathieu Nuret; Antonio Garcia Mendez; Erik Andersson; Peter Bechtold; Andreas H. Fink; Hans Hersbach; Jean-Philippe Lafore; Jean-Blaise Ngamini; Douglas J. Parker; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Adrian M. Tompkins


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2010

Structure and dynamics of the Saharan atmospheric boundary layer during the West African monsoon onset: observations and analyses from the research flights of 14 and 17 July 2006

Christophe Messager; Douglas J. Parker; Oliver Reitebuch; Anna Agusti-Panareda; Christopher M. Taylor; Juan Cuesta

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Anton Beljaars

European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts

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S. Massart

European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts

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F. Chevallier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philip Cameron-Smith

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Ronald G. Prinn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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S. R. Kawa

Goddard Space Flight Center

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