Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Philippe Cocquerez is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Philippe Cocquerez.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2014

HyMeX-SOP1: The Field Campaign Dedicated to Heavy Precipitation and Flash Flooding in the Northwestern Mediterranean

Véronique Ducrocq; Isabelle Braud; Silvio Davolio; Rossella Ferretti; Cyrille Flamant; Agustin Jansa; N. Kalthoff; Evelyne Richard; Isabelle Taupier-Letage; Pierre-Alain Ayral; Sophie Belamari; Alexis Berne; Marco Borga; Brice Boudevillain; Olivier Bock; Jean-Luc Boichard; Marie-Noëlle Bouin; Olivier Bousquet; Christophe Bouvier; Jacopo Chiggiato; Domenico Cimini; U. Corsmeier; Laurent Coppola; Philippe Cocquerez; Eric Defer; Julien Delanoë; Paolo Di Girolamo; Alexis Doerenbecher; Philippe Drobinski; Yann Dufournet

The Mediterranean region is frequently affected by heavy precipitation events associated with flash floods, landslides, and mudslides that cause hundreds of millions of euros in damages per year and often, casualties. A major field campaign was devoted to heavy precipitation and flash floods from 5 September to 6 November 2012 within the framework of the 10-year international HyMeX (Hydrological cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment) dedicated to the hydrological cycle and related high-impact events. The 2- month field campaign took place over the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea and its surrounding coastal regions in France, Italy, and Spain. The observation strategy of the field experiment was devised to improve our knowledge on the following key components leading to heavy precipitation and flash flooding in the region: i) the marine atmospheric flows that transport moist and conditionally unstable air towards the coasts; ii) the Mediterranean Sea acting as a moisture and energy source; iii) the dynamics and microphysics of the convective systems producing heavy precipitation; iv) the hydrological processes during flash floods. This article provides the rationale for developing this first HyMeX field experiment and an overview of its design and execution. Highlights of some Intense Observation Periods illustrate the potential of the unique datasets collected for process understanding, model improvement and data assimilation.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2008

Estimation of Gravity Wave Momentum Flux and Phase Speeds from Quasi-Lagrangian Stratospheric Balloon Flights. Part II: Results from the Vorcore Campaign in Antarctica

Albert Hertzog; Gillian Boccara; R. A. Vincent; Francois Vial; Philippe Cocquerez

Abstract The stratospheric gravity wave field in the Southern Hemisphere is investigated by analyzing observations collected by 27 long-duration balloons that flew between September 2005 and February 2006 over Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. The analysis is based on the methods introduced by Boccara et al. in a companion paper. Special attention is given to deriving information useful to gravity wave drag parameterizations employed in atmospheric general circulation models. The balloon dataset is used to map the geographic variability of gravity wave momentum fluxes in the lower stratosphere. This flux distribution is found to be very heterogeneous with the largest time-averaged value (28 mPa) observed above the Antarctic Peninsula. This value exceeds by a factor of ∼10 the overall mean momentum flux measured during the balloon campaign. Zonal momentum fluxes were predominantly westward, whereas meridional momentum fluxes were equally northward and southward. A local enhancement of southward flux is ne...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2010

The Concordiasi Project in Antarctica

Florence Rabier; Aurélie Bouchard; Eric Brun; Alexis Doerenbecher; Stéphanie Guedj; Vincent Guidard; Fatima Karbou; V.-H. Peuch; Laaziz El Amraoui; Dominique Puech; Christophe Genthon; Ghislain Picard; Michael Town; Albert Hertzog; F. Vial; Philippe Cocquerez; Stephen A. Cohn; Terry Hock; Jack Fox; Hal Cole; David B. Parsons; Jordan G. Powers; Keith Romberg; Joseph VanAndel; Terry Deshler; J. L. Mercer; Jennifer S. Haase; Linnea M. Avallone; Lars Eriks Kalnajs; C. Roberto Mechoso

The Concordiasi project is making innovative observations of the atmosphere above Antarctica. The most important goals of the Concordiasi are as follows: To enhance the accuracy of weather prediction and climate records in Antarctica through the assimilation of in situ and satellite data, with an emphasis on data provided by hyperspectral infrared sounders. The focus is on clouds, precipitation, and the mass budget of the ice sheets. The improvements in dynamical model analyses and forecasts will be used in chemical-transport models that describe the links between the polar vortex dynamics and ozone depletion, and to advance the under understanding of the Earth system by examining the interactions between Antarctica and lower latitudes. To improve our understanding of microphysical and dynamical processes controlling the polar ozone, by providing the first quasi-Lagrangian observations of stratospheric ozone and particles, in addition to an improved characterization of the 3D polar vortex dynamics. Techni...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2007

Stratéole/Vorcore—Long-duration, Superpressure Balloons to Study the Antarctic Lower Stratosphere during the 2005 Winter

Albert Hertzog; Philippe Cocquerez; René Guilbon; Jean-Noël Valdivia; Stephanie Venel; Claude Basdevant; Gillian Boccara; Jérôme Bordereau; Bernard Brioit; F. Vial; Alain Cardonne; Alain Ravissot; Éric Schmitt

Abstract In September and October 2005, the Strateole/Vorcore campaign flew 27 superpressure balloons from McMurdo, Antarctica, into the stratospheric polar vortex. Long-duration flights were successfully achieved, 16 of those flights lasting for more than 2 months. Most flights were terminated because they flew out of the authorized flight domain or because of energy shortage in the gondola. The atmospheric pressure (1-Pa precision) was measured every minute during the flights, whereas air temperature observations (0.25-K accuracy) and balloon positions (absolute GPS observations, 10-m accuracy) were obtained every 15 min. Fifteen-minute-averaged horizontal velocities of the wind were deduced from the successive balloon positions with a corresponding accuracy ≲0.1 m s−1. The collected dataset (more than 150 000 independent observations) provides a thorough high-resolution sampling of the polar lower stratosphere in the Southern Hemisphere from its wintertime state up to the establishment of the summer ci...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2002

Quasi‐Lagrangian measurements in the lower stratosphere reveal an energy peak associated with near‐inertial waves

Albert Hertzog; F. Vial; Carlos R. Mechoso; Claude Basdevant; Philippe Cocquerez

[1] In March 2001, three superpressure balloons were launched from Kiruna, Sweden (67.9°N, 21.1°E). The balloons drifted for several weeks in the stratospheric polar vortex at about 19 km. The corresponding trajectories exhibit cycloid-like patterns due to the presence of near-inertial waves. Consistently, it is found that the intrinsic-frequency spectra of the horizontal velocity components are enhanced around the inertial frequency in reference to the generally assumed power-law distribution. A large spectral gap is also found between gravity waves and Rossby waves in the polar stratosphere, in contrast to the continuum found in the equatorial lower stratosphere.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2013

The Concordiasi Field Experiment over Antarctica: First results from innovative atmospheric measurements

Florence Rabier; Steve Cohn; Philippe Cocquerez; Albert Hertzog; Linnea M. Avallone; Terry Deshler; Jennifer S. Haase; Terry Hock; Alexis Doerenbecher; Junhong Wang; Vincent Guidard; Jean-Noël Thépaut; Rolf H. Langland; Andrew Tangborn; Gianpaolo Balsamo; Eric Brun; David B. Parsons; Jérôme Bordereau; Carla Cardinali; F. Danis; Jean-Pierre Escarnot; Nadia Fourrié; Ron Gelaro; Christophe Genthon; Kayo Ide; Lars Eriks Kalnajs; Charlie Martin; Louis-François Meunier; Jean-Marc Nicot; Tuuli Perttula

Florence Rabier , Steve Cohn , Philippe Cocquerez , Albert Hertzog, Linnea Avallone, Terry Deshler, Jennifer Haase , Terry Hock, Alexis Doerenbecher , Junhong Wang , Vincent Guidard, Jean-Noël Thépaut , Rolf Langland, Andrew Tangborn , Gianpaolo Balsamo , Eric Brun, David Parsons , Jérôme Bordereau , Carla Cardinali , François Danis , Jean-Pierre Escarnot , Nadia Fourrié, Ron Gelaro, Christophe Genthon , Kayo Ide, Lars Kalnajs, Charlie Martin, LouisFrançois Meunier , Jean-Marc Nicot , Tuuli Perttula, Nicholas Potts , Patrick Ragazzo , David Richardson, Sergio Sosa-Sesma , André Vargas 3


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2013

Driftsondes: Providing In Situ Long-Duration Dropsonde Observations over Remote Regions

Stephen A. Cohn; Terry Hock; Philippe Cocquerez; Junhong Wang; Florence Rabier; David B. Parsons; Patrick A. Harr; Chun-Chieh Wu; Philippe Drobinski; Fatima Karbou; Stephanie Venel; Andre Vargas; Nadia Fourrié; Nathalie Saint-Ramond; Vincent Guidard; Alexis Doerenbecher; Huang-Hsiung Hsu; Po-Hsiung Lin; Ming-Dah Chou; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Charlie Martin; Jack Fox; Nick Potts; Kathryn Young; Hal Cole

Constellations of driftsonde systems— gondolas floating in the stratosphere and able to release dropsondes upon command— have so far been used in three major field experiments from 2006 through 2010. With them, high-quality, high-resolution, in situ atmospheric profiles were made over extended periods in regions that are otherwise very difficult to observe. The measurements have unique value for verifying and evaluating numerical weather prediction models and global data assimilation systems; they can be a valuable resource to validate data from remote sensing instruments, especially on satellites, but also airborne or ground-based remote sensors. These applications for models and remote sensors result in a powerful combination for improving data assimilation systems. Driftsondes also can support process studies in otherwise difficult locations—for example, to study factors that control the development or decay of a tropical disturbance, or to investigate the lower boundary layer over the interior Antarct...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

Low-Atmosphere Drifting Balloons: Platforms for Environment Monitoring and Forecast Improvement

Alexis Doerenbecher; Claude Basdevant; Philippe Drobinski; P. Durand; C. Fesquet; F. Bernard; Philippe Cocquerez; N. Verdier; Andre Vargas

AbstractBalloons are one of the key observing platforms for the atmosphere. Radiosounding is the most commonly used technique and provides over a thousand vertical profiles worldwide every day. These data represent an essential cornerstone of data assimilation for numerical weather prediction systems. Although less common (but equally interesting for the in situ investigation of the atmosphere), drifting boundary layer pressurized balloons (BLPBs) offer rare observational skills. These balloons collect meteorological and/or chemical measurements at isopycnal height as they drift in a quasi-Lagrangian way. The BLPB system presented in this paper was developed by the French Space Agency [Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales (CNES)] and has been used in field experiments focusing on precipitation in Africa [African Monsoon Multiscale Analysis (AMMA)] and the Mediterranean [Hydrological Cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment (HyMeX)] as well as on air pollution in India [Indian Ocean Experiment (INDOEX)] and the...


Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2013

Driftsonde Observations to Evaluate Numerical Weather Prediction of the Late 2006 African Monsoon

Philippe Drobinski; Fatima Karbou; Peter Bauer; Philippe Cocquerez; Christophe Lavaysse; Terry Hock; David B. Parsons; Florence Rabier; Jean-Luc Redelsperger; Stephanie Venel

AbstractDuring the international African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis (AMMA) project, stratospheric balloons carrying gondolas called driftsondes capable of dropping meteorological sondes were deployed over West Africa and the tropical Atlantic Ocean. The goals of the deployment were to test the technology and to study the African easterly waves, which are often the forerunners of hurricanes. Between 29 August and 22 September 2006, 124 sondes were dropped over the seven easterly waves that moved across Africa into the Atlantic between about 10° and 20°N, where almost no in situ vertical information exists. Conditions included waves that developed into Tropical Storm Florence and Hurricanes Gordon and Helene. In this study, a selection of numerical weather prediction model outputs has been compared with the dropsondes to assess the effect of some developments in data assimilation on the quality of analyses and forecasts. By comparing two different versions of the Action de Recherche Petite Echelle G...


Archive | 2013

Hurricane and Monsoon Tracking with Driftsondes

Philippe Drobinski; Philippe Cocquerez; Alexis Doerenbecher; Terrence Hock; C. Lavaysse; Dave Parsons; Jean-Luc Redelsperger

Tropical cyclones (TCs) are a typical weather threat. The threat can apply to humans, their properties, and activities. Their prediction, particularly their trajectory and intensity, remains difficult. In addition, TCs develop above the tropical oceans where the coverage by in situ observations is poor and within cloud clusters (mesoscale convective systems MCS) that limit the ability of numerical weather prediction (NWP) models to assimilate satellite data [18]. Improved forecast of TCs trajectories is a huge benefit in terms of material costs of evacuations and damage, not being able to quantify saved life.

Collaboration


Dive into the Philippe Cocquerez's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claude Basdevant

École Normale Supérieure

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Vial

École Polytechnique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David B. Parsons

National Center for Atmospheric Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lars Eriks Kalnajs

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Terry Hock

National Center for Atmospheric Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge