Debbie Clifford
University of Reading
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Featured researches published by Debbie Clifford.
International Journal of Remote Sensing | 2010
Debbie Clifford
Snow properties have been retrieved from satellite data for many decades. While snow extent is generally felt to be obtained reliably from visible-band data, there is less confidence in the measurements of snow mass or water equivalent derived from passive microwave instruments. This paper briefly reviews historical passive microwave instruments and products, and compares the large-scale patterns from these sources to those of general circulation models and leading reanalysis products. Differences are seen to be large between the datasets, particularly over Siberia. A better understanding of the errors in both the model-based and measurement-based datasets is required to exploit both fully. Techniques to apply to the satellite measurements for improved large-scale snow data are suggested.
international conference theory and practice digital libraries | 2013
Jon Blower; Raquel Alegre; Victoria Bennett; Debbie Clifford; Philip Kershaw; Bryan N. Lawrence; Jp Lewis; Kevin Marsh; Maurizio Nagni; Alan O’Neill; Rhona Phipps
We describe the CHARMe project, which aims to link climate datasets with publications, user feedback and other items of “commentary metadata”. The system will help users learn from previous community experience and select datasets that best suit their needs, as well as providing direct traceability between conclusions and the data that supported them. The project applies the principles of Linked Data and adopts the Open Annotation standard to record and publish commentary information. CHARMe contributes to the emerging landscape of “climate services”, which will provide climate data and information to influence policy and decision-making. Although the project focuses on climate science, the technologies and concepts are very general and could be applied to other fields.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016
Debbie Clifford; Raquel Alegre; Victoria Bennett; Jonathan D. Blower; Cecelia DeLuca; Philip Kershaw; Christopher Lynnes; Chris A. Mattmann; Rhona Phipps; Iryna Rozum
AbstractFor users of climate services, the ability to quickly determine the datasets that best fit one’s needs would be invaluable. The volume, variety, and complexity of climate data makes this judgment difficult. The ambition of CHARMe (Characterization of metadata to enable high-quality climate services) is to give a wider interdisciplinary community access to a range of supporting information, such as journal articles, technical reports, or feedback on previous applications of the data. The capture and discovery of this “commentary” information, often created by data users rather than data providers, and currently not linked to the data themselves, has not been significantly addressed previously. CHARMe applies the principles of Linked Data and open web standards to associate, record, search, and publish user-derived annotations in a way that can be read both by users and automated systems. Tools have been developed within the CHARMe project that enable annotation capability for data delivery systems ...
Journal of Climate | 2009
Debbie Clifford; Robert J. Gurney; Keith Haines
Abstract Understanding links between the El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and snow would be useful for seasonal forecasting, as well as for understanding natural variability and interpreting climate change predictions. Here, a 545-yr run of the third climate configuration of the Met Office Unified Model (HadCM3), with prescribed external forcings and fixed greenhouse gas concentrations, is used to explore the impact of ENSO on snow water equivalent (SWE) anomalies. In North America, positive ENSO events reduce the mean SWE and skew the distribution toward lower values, and vice versa during negative ENSO events. This is associated with a dipole SWE anomaly structure, with anomalies of opposite sign centered in western Canada and the central United States. In Eurasia, warm episodes lead to a more positively skewed distribution and the mean SWE is raised. Again, the opposite effect is seen during cold episodes. In Eurasia the largest anomalies are concentrated in the Himalayas. These correlations with Fe...
Remote Sensing | 2012
Alex Hoffmann; Debbie Clifford; Josep Aulinas; James G. Carton; Florian Deconinck; Berivan Esen; Jakob Hüsing; Katharina Kern; Stephan Kox; David Krejci; Thomas Krings; Steffen Lohrey; Patrick Romano; Ricardo Topham; Claudia Weitnauer
We propose a new satellite mission to deliver high quality measurements of upper air water vapour. The concept centres around a LiDAR in limb sounding by occultation geometry, designed to operate as a very long path system for differential absorption measurements. We present a preliminary performance analysis with a system sized to send 75 mJ pulses at 25 Hz at four wavelengths close to 935 nm, to up to 5 microsatellites in a counter-rotating orbit, carrying retroreflectors characterized by a reflected beam divergence of roughly twice the emitted laser beam divergence of 15 µrad. This provides water vapour profiles with a vertical sampling of 110 m; preliminary calculations suggest that the system could detect concentrations of less than 5 ppm. A secondary payload of a fairly conventional medium resolution multispectral radiometer allows wide-swath cloud and aerosol imaging. The total weight and power of the system are estimated at 3 tons and 2,700 W respectively. This novel concept presents significant challenges, including the performance of the lasers in space, the tracking between the main spacecraft and the retroreflectors, the refractive effects of turbulence, and the design of the telescopes to achieve a high signal-to-noise ratio for the high precision measurements. The mission concept was conceived at the Alpbach Summer School 2010.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015
Alex Boon; Grégoire Broquet; Debbie Clifford; F. Chevallier; David M. Butterfield; I. Pison; Michel Ramonet; Jean-Daniel Paris; Philippe Ciais
Archive | 2014
Debbie Clifford; Jonathan D. Blower; Raquel Alegre; Rhona Phipps; Victoria Bennett; Philip Kershaw
Archive | 2014
Jonathan D. Blower; Debbie Clifford; Pedro Gonçalves; Manolis Koubarakis
Archive | 2013
Debbie Clifford; Ellie Creed; Tim Woollings
Archive | 2013
Debbie Clifford; Jonny Day