Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns

This research grant was a revised version of an original proposal. The period of the grant was for three years with a six-month no-cost extension; thus, it was from 20 July 1990 to 19 January 1994. The objectives of the grant were to identify periods and locations of active convection centers, prima...

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Main Author: Vincent, Dayton G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940020012
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19940020012 2023-05-15T17:36:29+02:00 Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns Vincent, Dayton G. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available Jan 19, 1994 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940020012 unknown Document ID: 19940020012 Accession ID: 94N24485 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940020012 No Copyright CASI METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY NASA-CR-195148 NAS 1.26:195148 1994 ftnasantrs 2019-07-21T03:36:31Z This research grant was a revised version of an original proposal. The period of the grant was for three years with a six-month no-cost extension; thus, it was from 20 July 1990 to 19 January 1994. The objectives of the grant were to identify periods and locations of active convection centers, primarily over the Southern Hemisphere tropical Indian and Pacific Oceans; determine reasons for any periodic behavior found in the first objective; identify cases where subtropical jets over the South Pacific persisted for several days and examine the influences of tropical versus extra-tropical mechanisms in maintaining them; obtain estimates of precipitation by Q(sub 1) and Q(sub 2) budgets, including the importance of terms in each of the respective budgets, and compare these estimates to those obtained by other methods; and diagnose the distributions of moisture and precipitable water over the North Atlantic Ocean using routine analyses and satellite microwave data. To accomplish these objectives, we used grant funds to purchase several data sets, including the Global Precipitation Climate Project (GPCP) observations of station precipitation, ECMWF WCRP/TOGA archive two analyses for January 1985 - December 1990, ECMWF WMO analyses for January 1980 - December 1987, and OLR data for July 1974 - December 1991. We already had some SSM/I data and GLA analyses from a previous grant. In addition, to improve our computing power, we also used grant funds to purchase an IBM PS/2 with accessories, a NEC laser jet printer, and a microcomputer system for word processing. This report is organized as follows. Our research team is listed first. Section two contains a summary of our significant accomplishments; however, a detailed discussion of research results is not included since this information can be found in the accompanying reprints and preprints. Section three offers some concluding remarks, and a complete bibliographic summary is given in Section four. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Indian Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
spellingShingle METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
Vincent, Dayton G.
Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
topic_facet METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
description This research grant was a revised version of an original proposal. The period of the grant was for three years with a six-month no-cost extension; thus, it was from 20 July 1990 to 19 January 1994. The objectives of the grant were to identify periods and locations of active convection centers, primarily over the Southern Hemisphere tropical Indian and Pacific Oceans; determine reasons for any periodic behavior found in the first objective; identify cases where subtropical jets over the South Pacific persisted for several days and examine the influences of tropical versus extra-tropical mechanisms in maintaining them; obtain estimates of precipitation by Q(sub 1) and Q(sub 2) budgets, including the importance of terms in each of the respective budgets, and compare these estimates to those obtained by other methods; and diagnose the distributions of moisture and precipitable water over the North Atlantic Ocean using routine analyses and satellite microwave data. To accomplish these objectives, we used grant funds to purchase several data sets, including the Global Precipitation Climate Project (GPCP) observations of station precipitation, ECMWF WCRP/TOGA archive two analyses for January 1985 - December 1990, ECMWF WMO analyses for January 1980 - December 1987, and OLR data for July 1974 - December 1991. We already had some SSM/I data and GLA analyses from a previous grant. In addition, to improve our computing power, we also used grant funds to purchase an IBM PS/2 with accessories, a NEC laser jet printer, and a microcomputer system for word processing. This report is organized as follows. Our research team is listed first. Section two contains a summary of our significant accomplishments; however, a detailed discussion of research results is not included since this information can be found in the accompanying reprints and preprints. Section three offers some concluding remarks, and a complete bibliographic summary is given in Section four.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Vincent, Dayton G.
author_facet Vincent, Dayton G.
author_sort Vincent, Dayton G.
title Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
title_short Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
title_full Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
title_fullStr Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
title_full_unstemmed Observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
title_sort observational and modeling studies of heat, moisture, precipitation and global-scale circulation patterns
publishDate 1994
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940020012
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Indian
Pacific
geographic_facet Indian
Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 19940020012
Accession ID: 94N24485
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940020012
op_rights No Copyright
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