NWP Model and Data Flow | Matched Occultations | Map Plots | Monitoring Description |
This page contains improved NRT monitoring of RO data, with effect from 1st May 2017. The monitoring of data up to that point can be found at old NRT monitoring.
O-B profiles |
Zonal plots |
Time series |
Correlations |
1D-Var stats |
Map plots |
Azimuth |
Histogram |
Time trend |
Matched obs|
Spatial plots |
VAR stats |
Delay histograms |
Availability charts |
Receipt times
Refractivity, N=(n - 1)*1E6 where n=refractive index of the medium
O = Observation
B = Background (i.e. forward-modelled equivalent of the observation)
RO = Radio Occultation
MetDB = the Met Office's database for observations
NWP = Numerical Weather Prediction
GPS = Global Positioning System
GPSRO = Global Positioning System Radio Occultation
The monitored radio occultation data are provided to the Met Office in
BUFR format via the Global Telecommunication System (GTS) by EUMETSAT, DMI (the
ROM SAF), UCAR and GFZ. Other data providers will be added if new data becomes
available. This near-real-time (NRT) data includes bending angle and
refractivity. Most of the plotted statistics are calculated as comparisons of
the observed values and the equivalent forward-modelled values using Met Office
"background" (i.e. 6-hour forecast) fields. Both monthly and daily statistics
are plotted four times a day, in parallel with the operational schedule of the
Met Office global model. Several hours after each of these runs, the plots are
updated to allow "late" data to be included in the statistics. Some statistics
from the Met Office 4D-Var system (VAR) are shown, which can help to show how
the analysis fit to RO compares to the background fit.
A small subset of plots also include ECWMF statistics. These are computed with
12-hour forecasts and are provided twice a day. These data are grouped into 1km
bins. Note that different quality control is applied by ECMWF and the Met
Office, so this will account for some differences in the statistics. In
particular, a number of "1D-Var" statistics are shown --- this is performed for
quality control, but it can help to give an indication of what may happen in a
4D-Var system.
As well as comparisons against model backgrounds, comparisons of pairs of
co-located observations are also plotted.
See below for more information about the various plots.
These plots show statistics of co-located observations over the
period of a month. Co-located pairs of observations are identified if they occur
within 300km and 3 hours of each other. Checks are in place to ensure that
observations are not compared with themselves and pairs are ignored if they have
already been included in the opposite order (i.e. if O2-O1 has been included in
the stats, O1-O2 will subsequently be screened out).
The plotted statistics are in fact (O1-O2)/(0.5*(O1+O2)). The
denominator is, therefore, the mean of the two observations. This is intended to
reduce any bias artefact that might be produced if one or other observation was
consistently used in the denominator.
Pairs are rejected from the statistics if the fractional difference between them
is greater than 2.0.
These plots show various statistics for a range of heights that have been binned onto a lat-lon grid and overlaid on a map. These plots include:
The Met Office data assimilation system, called VAR, produces a
series of statistics for each assimilation window. This includes the
contribution to the observation term of the cost function from each observation
type. Therefore we can plot time series of initial and final cost functions, as
well as the difference between these.
An additional figure shows the time series of the observations'
RMS departures from the "guess" state at the start and end of the minimisation.
These are shown for a range of heights.
Both of these figures are shown for the early forecast run
("glm") and the update run ("glu") which has a much later cut-off time, and
hence more observations are assimilated in this run.
Delay histograms
The plots show the distribution of delay times, i.e. the time
taken since the observation was made for the data to arrive in
the MetDB. The solid line is the histogram of delay times for
the occultations. The dashed line is the accumulation histogram,
which gives the proportion of the data received at a given time.
These plots are produced for yesterday's
data and for a 28-day (monthly) period of data.They are important
for judging how quickly the data is (or could be) assimilated
into NWP models.
Data availability
The plots shows the quantity of data provided during the past
28 days. The vertical axis denotes the date (dd/mm) and the horizontal
axis the UTC time of day (hh) of the observation. A coloured box
is plotted for an hour and date if at least one RO profile was
available in that hour; the number of profiles received is printed
within the box. The colour of the box indicates the smallest
delay for data observed within that hour:
The key at the bottom of the plot shows the colours used. Blank
areas mean that no profiles were available in MetDB for that hour
(at the time of the analysis). The total number of profiles for
each day is shown on the right margin of the plot. It should be
noted that the flow of data provided to the Met Office can stop
occasionally for reasons beyond our control, hence why some of
the plots may be missing.
Receipt Times
There is a single plot for all satellite/processing centre combos. The
title shows the satellite and processing centre IDs and first and last
observation times being analyzed; nominally this will be the previous
28 days. The coloured vertical 'streaks' are made up of individual
points (one per RO profile), each showing the delay (in hours, vertical
axis) against the time of day (receipt time, horizontal axis) that the
RO profile was ingested into the MetDB (receipt time). The key at the
top of the plot shows the colours used for each satellite/processing
centre combo, the number of profiles in the analysis, the period of
available data and the percentage of data that would have met the
operational Global model Main Run nominal cut-off times (see below),
for that combo. The light shaded zones (gray, pink, green, blue) denote
the operational Global model analysis nominal data windows
(±3hrs of the Main Run analysis times of hh=00, 06, 12 & 18
UTC). The horizontal dashed line represents the basic operational
requirement that 90% of the data be available within 3h00m of the
observation time, so the more points lying below this line, the better.
The vertical dotted lines labeled 'Mhh' represent cut-off times for the
Main Runs; data arriving after these times will not be assimilated (but
they might be included in the 12Z Update Run, which cut-off is denoted
by the vertical dashed line labeled 'U12').
For data to be available for operational assimilation, its observation time must be within the model analysis window and be delivered to MetDB before the cut-off time for that window. Hence data points must lie in the yellow triangles for inclusion in the Main Runs. Late-arriving data lying in the dark pink area would meet the cut-off for the U12 analysis, which isused as the starting point for the main 6-day forecast. Data not lying in a yellow or pink zone would never be assimilated in our operational system (but could be included in an off-line (re-)analysis or case study to maximize data coverage)The date and time when the plots were generated are shown in the bottom right corner.