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Dive into the research topics where Steven Businger is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Businger.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1992

GPS meteorology: Remote sensing of atmospheric water vapor using the global positioning system

Michael Bevis; Steven Businger; Thomas A. Herring; Christian Rocken; Richard A. Anthes; Randolph Ware

We present a new approach to remote sensing of water vapor based on the global positioning system (GPS). Geodesists and geophysicists have devised methods for estimating the extent to which signals propagating from GPS satellites to ground-based GPS receivers are delayed by atmospheric water vapor. This delay is parameterized in terms of a time-varying zenith wet delay (ZWD) which is retrieved by stochastic filtering of the GPS data. Given surface temperature and pressure readings at the GPS receiver, the retrieved ZWD can be transformed with very little additional uncertainty into an estimate of the integrated water vapor (IWV) overlying that receiver. Networks of continuously operating GPS receivers are being constructed by geodesists, geophysicists, government and military agencies, and others in order to implement a wide range of positioning capabilities. These emerging GPS networks offer the possibility of observing the horizontal distribution of IWV or, equivalently, precipitable water with unprecedented coverage and a temporal resolution of the order of 10 min. These measurements could be utilized in operational weather forecasting and in fundamental research into atmospheric storm systems, the hydrologic cycle, atmospheric chemistry, and global climate change. Specially designed, dense GPS networks could be used to sense the vertical distribution of water vapor in their immediate vicinity. Data from ground-based GPS networks could be analyzed in concert with observations of GPS satellite occultations by GPS receivers in low Earth orbit to characterize the atmosphere at planetary scale.


Journal of Applied Meteorology | 1994

GPS meteorology: mapping zenith wet delays onto precipitable water

Michael Bevis; Steven Businger; Steven R. Chiswell; Thomas A. Herring; Richard A. Anthes; Christian Rocken; Randolph Ware

Abstract Emerging networks of Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers can be used in the remote sensing of atmospheric water vapor. The time-varying zenith wet delay observed at each GPS receiver in a network can be transformed into an estimate of the precipitable water overlying that receiver. This transformation is achieved by multiplying the zenith wet delay by a factor whose magnitude is a function of certain constants related to the refractivity of moist air and of the weighted mean temperature of the atmosphere. The mean temperature varies in space and time and must be estimated a priori in order to transform an observed zenith wet delay into an estimate of precipitable water. We show that the relative error introduced during this transformation closely approximates the relative error in the predicted mean temperature. Numerical weather models can be used to predict the mean temperature with an rms relative error of less than 1%.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1996

GPS Sounding of the Atmosphere from Low Earth Orbit: Preliminary Results

Randolph Ware; Christian Rocken; Fredrick Solheim; M. Exner; William S. Schreiner; Richard A. Anthes; D. Feng; Benjamin M. Herman; Michael E. Gorbunov; Sergey Sokolovskiy; K. Hardy; Ying-Hwa Kuo; Xiaolei Zou; Kevin E. Trenberth; Thomas K. Meehan; W. Melbourne; Steven Businger

Abstract This paper provides an overview of the methodology of and describes preliminary results from an experiment called GPS/MET (Global Positioning System/Meteorology), in which temperature soundings are obtained from a low Earth-orbiting satellite using the radio occultation technique. Launched into a circular orbit of about 750-km altitude and 70° inclination on 3 April 1995, a small research satellite, MicroLab 1, carried a laptop-sized radio receiver. Each time this receiver rises and sets relative to the 24 operational GPS satellites, the GPS radio waves transect successive layers of the atmosphere and are bent (refracted) by the atmosphere before they reach the receiver, causing a delay in the dual-frequency carrier phase observations sensed by the receiver. During this occultation, GPS limb sounding measurements are obtained from which vertical profiles of atmospheric refractivity can be computed. The refractivity is a function of pressure, temperature, and water vapor and thus provides informat...


Journal of Applied Meteorology | 1996

GPS Meteorology: Direct Estimation of the Absolute Value of Precipitable Water

Jingping Duan; Michael Bevis; Peng Fang; Yehuda Bock; Steven R. Chiswell; Steven Businger; Christian Rocken; Frederick Stuart Solheim; Terasa van Hove; Randolph Ware; Simon McClusky; Thomas A. Herring; Robert W. King

Abstract A simple approach to estimating vertically integrated atmospheric water vapor, or precipitable water, from Global Positioning System (GPS) radio signals collected by a regional network of ground-based geodetic GPS receiver is illustrated and validated. Standard space geodetic methods are used to estimate the zenith delay caused by the neutral atmosphere, and surface pressure measurements are used to compute the hydrostatic (or “dry”) component of this delay. The zenith hydrostatic delay is subtracted from the zenith neutral delay to determine the zenith wet delay, which is then transformed into an estimate of precipitable water. By incorporating a few remote global tracking stations (and thus long baselines) into the geodetic analysis of a regional GPS network, it is possible to resolve the absolute (not merely the relative) value of the zenith neutral delay at each station in the augmented network. This approach eliminates any need for external comparisons with water vapor radiometer observation...


Geophysical Research Letters | 1993

Sensing atmospheric water vapor with the global positioning system

Christian Rocken; Randolph Ware; Teresa Van Hove; Fredrick Solheim; Chris Alber; James R. Johnson; Michael Bevis; Steven Businger

Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers, water vapor radiometers (WVRs), and surface meteorological equip- ment were operated at both ends of a 50-kin baseline in Colorado to measure the precipitable water vapor (PWV) and wet delay in the line-of-sight to GPS satellites. Using high pre- cision orbits, WVR-measured and GPS-inferred PWV differences between the two sites usually agreed to better than 1 min. Using less precise on-line broadcast orbits increased the discrepancy by 30%. Data simulations show that GPS mea- surements can provide ram-level separate PWV estimates for the two sites, as opposed to just their difference, if baselines exceed 500 km and the highest accuracy GPS orbits are used.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1996

The Promise of GPS in Atmospheric Monitoring

Steven Businger; Steven R. Chiswell; Michael Bevis; Jingping Duan; Richard A. Anthes; Christian Rocken; Randolph Ware; M. Exner; Teresa M. Vanhove; Fredrick Solheim

Abstract This paper provides an overview of applications of the Global Positioning System (GPS) for active measurement of the Earths atmosphere. Microwave radio signals transmitted by GPS satellites are delayed (refracted) by the atmosphere as they propagate to Earth-based GPS receivers or GPS receivers carried on low Earth orbit satellites. The delay in GPS signals reaching Earth-based receivers due to the presence of water vapor is nearly proportional to the quantity of water vapor integrated along the signal path. Measurement of atmospheric water vapor by Earth-based GPS receivers was demonstrated during the GPS/STORM field project to be comparable and in some respects superior to measurements by ground-based water vapor radiometers. Increased spatial and temporal resolution of the water vapor distribution provided by the GPS/STORM network proved useful in monitoring the moisture-flux convergence along a dryline and the decrease in integrated water vapor associated with the passage of a midtropospheri...


Weather and Forecasting | 1989

Cyclogenesis in Cold Air Masses

Steven Businger; Richard J. Reed

Abstract The small-scale and rapid development of polar lows over relatively data-sparse areas results in a special forecast challenge for the operational forecasting community. This paper constitutes a review of recent advances in our understanding of cyclogenesis in polar air masses. The review is primarily comprised of a survey of the observed features of polar lows as documented in a number of case studies presented in the recent literature. The review is organized on the basis of a combination of observational and physical considerations and is aimed at diagnosing common types of developments. Theoretical ideas concerning the origins of polar lows and results of numerical modeling experiments aimed at simulating their development are also summarized. Finally, a discussion of approaches to the operational problem of forecasting polar lows is given.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2005

An Observational Case for the Prevalence of Roll Vortices in the Hurricane Boundary Layer

Ian Morrison; Steven Businger; Frank D. Marks; Peter Dodge; Joost A. Businger

Abstract Doppler velocity data from Weather Surveillance Radar-1988 Doppler (WSR-88D) radars during four hurricane landfalls are analyzed to investigate the presence of organized vortices in the hurricane boundary layer (HBL). The wavelength, depth, magnitude, and track of velocity anomalies were compiled through analysis of Doppler velocity data. The analysis reveals alternating bands of enhanced and reduced azimuthal winds closely aligned with the mean wind direction. Resulting statistics provide compelling evidence for the presence of organized secondary circulations or boundary layer rolls across significant areas during four hurricane landfalls. The results confirm previous observations of the presence of rolls in the HBL. A potential limitation of the study presented here is the resolution of the WSR-88D data. In particular, analysis of higher-resolution data (e.g., from the Doppler on Wheels) is needed to confirm that data aliasing has not unduly impacted the statistics reported here. Momentum flux...


Tellus B | 2000

An overview of the Lagrangian experiments undertaken during the North Atlantic regional Aerosol Characterisation Experiment (ACE‐2)

D. W. Johnson; S. Osborne; Robert Wood; Karsten Suhre; Randy Johnson; Steven Businger; Patricia K. Quinn; Alfred Wiedensohler; Philip A. Durkee; Lynn M. Russell; Meinrat O. Andreae; Colin D. O'Dowd; Kevin J. Noone; Brian J. Bandy; J. Rudolph; Spyros Rapsomanikis

One of the primary aims of the North Atlantic regional Aerosol Characterisation Experiment (ACE-2) was to quantify the physical and chemical processes affecting the evolution of the major aerosol types over the North Atlantic. The best, practical way of


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2000

Hydrological Aspects of Weather Prediction and Flood Warnings: Report of the Ninth Prospectus Development Team of the U.S. Weather Research Program

Kelvin K. Droegemeier; Jim Dungan Smith; Steven Businger; Charles A. Doswell; James D. Doyle; Christopher J. Duffy; Efi Foufoula-Georgiou; T. Graziano; L. D. James; V. Krajewski; Margaret A. LeMone; Dennis P. Lettenmaier; Roger A. Pielke; Steven A. Rutledge; John C. Schaake; Edward J. Zipser

Among the many natural disasters that disrupt human and industrial activity in the United States each year, including tornadoes, hurricanes, extreme temperatures, and lightning, floods are among the most devastating and rank second in the loss of life. Indeed, the societal impact of floods has increased during the past few years and shows no sign of abating. Although the scientific questions associated with flooding and its accurate prediction are many and complex, an unprecedented opportunity now exists—in light of new observational and computing systems and infrastructures, a much improved understanding of small-scale meteorological and hydrological processes, and the availability of sophisticated numerical models and data assimilation systems—to attack the flood forecasting problem in a comprehensive manner that will yield significant new scientific insights and corresponding practical benefits. The authors present herein a set of recommendations for advancing our understanding of floods via the creation of natural laboratories situated in a variety of local meteorological and hydrological settings. Emphasis is given to floods caused by convection and cold season events, fronts and extratropical cyclones, orographic forcing, and hurricanes and tropical cyclones following landfall. Although the particular research strategies applied within each laboratory setting will necessarily vary, all will share the following principal elements: (a) exploitation of those couplings important to flooding that exist between meteorological and hydrological processes and models; (b) innovative use of operational radars, research radars, satellites, and rain gauges to provide detailed spatial characterizations of precipitation fields and rates, along with the use of this information in hydrological models and for improving and validating microphysical algorithms in meteorological models; (c) comparisons of quantitative precipitation estimation algorithms from both research (especially multiparameter) and operational radars against gauge data as well as output produced by meso- and storm-scale models; (d) use of data from dense, temporary river gauge networks to trace the fate of rain from its starting location in small basins to the entire stream and river network; and (e) sensitivity testing in the design and implementation of separate as well as coupled meteorological and hydrologic models, the latter designed to better represent those nonlinear feedbacks between the atmosphere and land that are known to play an important role in runoff prediction. Vital to this effort will be the creation of effective and sustained linkages between the historically separate though scientifically related disciplines of meteorology and hydrology, as well as their observational infrastructures and research methodologies.

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Tiziana Cherubini

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Christian Rocken

University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

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Randolph Ware

University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

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Andre Pattantyus

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Richard A. Anthes

University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

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Fredrick Solheim

University Corporation for Atmospheric Research

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Randy Johnson

Air Resources Laboratory

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