Example of Aeolus Rayleigh-clear Level-2B HLOS winds |
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Introduction to Aeolus
Aeolus is was the fifth satellite in the Living Planet Programme of the European Space Agency, after being launched on 22 August 2018. The mission's objective is to provide profiles of high-quality wind observations from the surface to the lower stratosphere, using a Doppler wind lidar (DWL) instrument (known as ALADIN) in a near-polar sun-synchronous, dawn-dusk orbit at around 320 km altitude. The wind information is the horizontal line-of-sight (HLOS) component, in the direction perpendicular to the satellite's velocity. The mission is intended to have a surpassed its minimum lifetime of three years (lasting nearly five years) after de-orbiting on 28 July 2023.
ECMWF is contracted by ESA to develop, in collaboration with KNMI and , DLR and other partners of the Aeolus DISC the the Aeolus Level 2B/C (L2B/C) processing software i.e. the wind retrieval. The L2B wind retrieval algorithms have also been developed in the past in collaboration with Météo-France, DLR and LMD/IPSL. ECMWF generates the L2B products operationally and in NRT in ECMWF generated the NRT L2B products during the mission lifetime via the L2/Met PF (Level-2/Meteorological Processing Facility; a part of the mission's Ground Segment), and disseminates the products . The products were disseminated to ESA for further distribution to users. ECMWF also convert the L2B Earth Explorer format products to a WMO approved BUFR format which is provided to and forwarded them to EUMETSAT for further distribution to the NWP/research community via the GTS and EUMETCast.
ECMWF have operationally assimilated the Aeolus L2B wind observations in ECMWF's global NWP (Numerical Weather Prediction) model since from 9 January 2020 , as they to 30 April 2023. The L2B winds were proven to improve forecast skill. and operational assimilation was justified, despite being a demonstration mission. Aeolus winds have a positive impact on analysis and forecast quality, particularly in the tropics and in areas sparsely observed by windspolar areas, particularly where conventional wind profiles are absent. The intention is to hopefully use reprocessed datasets in future ECMWF produced reanalyses.
Given that ALADIN is a High Spectral Resolution Lidar, it is also possible to derive information useful for on atmospheric composition modelling. Aeolus will also provide information on the atmosphere's : cloud and aerosol optical properties (particle backscatter and extinction coefficients, via the Level-2A product). This is also being researched at ECMWF for the benefit of the CAMS model.
Further information and publications on Aeolus:
- See ESA's website on Aeolus
- Aeolus on twitter
- Journal QJRMS article about the NWP impact of Aeolus at ECMWF: https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.4142
- A conference proceedings article about on some of the demonstrated scientific benefits of Aeolus: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?tp=&arnumber=abstract/document/9554267
- Some ECMWF web articles about ECMWF going operational with operationally assimilating Aeolus winds:
- An ECMWF Technical Memorandum on Aeolus: https://www.ecmwf.int/en/elibrary/19538-nwp-impact-aeolus-level-2b-winds-ecmwf
- An introductory presentation about Aeolus L2B winds (possibly now obsolete): Aeolus_L2B_winds.pptxECMWF newsletter article about the impact of reprocessed wind data:https://www.ecmwf.int/en/newsletter/173/earth-system-science/aeolus-positive-impact-forecasts-second-reprocessed-dataset
- Aeolus was launched on 22 August 2018; this website provided a log of progress on the satellite up until launch: https://aeolusweb.wordpress.com/
- Aeolus-specific conferences:
- A CAL/VAL rehearsal workshop took place in March 2017
- and the presentations can be found via this web page: http://www.aeolus-calval-2017.org/
- CAL/VAL rehearsal L2B and L2C datasets are available here
- Aeolus CAL/VAL and Science workshop 2019
- Aeolus CAL/VAL and Science workshop 2020
- Aeolus 3rd anniversary conference in 2022
- Aeolus Science Conference 2023
- Documents Technical Notes prepared for ESA regarding the L2B/C processing are available here; which might be useful to help understand the L2B products
- A science blog from ECMWF about our involvement in Aeolus
- Browse the available Aeolus data from ESA's ground segment
- Automated Aeolus L2B data quality monitoring at ECMWF (no longer useful after the end of mission)
- Monthly Aeolus L2B quality reports by ECMWF (search for Aeolus)
- An introductory talk on Aeolus winds from the EUMETSAT/ECMWF NWP-SAF Satellite data assimilation training course: 03_SAT_TC_Aeolus_winds_MR_v2023.pdf
- An introductory talk about Aeolus L2B winds (possibly now obsolete): Aeolus_L2B_winds.pptx
- A talk on Aeolus NWP impact from the Aeolus Science conference 2023: ECMWF_NWP_impact_Aeol_winds_Rennie_Rhodes_sci_conf.pdfBrowse the available Aeolus data from ESA
The L2B processing software
KNMI and ECMWF develop the Aeolus Level-2B wind retrieval software, the main output of which are HLOS wind observations, which are suitable for use in NWP and meteorological research. Refer to the Algorithm Theoretical Basis document for information about the algorithms (see documentation links below).
Downloading the L2B processing software and documentation
- The Aeolus Level-2B/C processing documentation v3.30 (including the Software Release Note, the Algorithm Theoretical Basis and the Input/Output Data Definitions Interface Control documents) and associated datasets (needed to test the success of the installation) is available for download:
Button Hyperlink title Download Aeolus L2B/C documentation and datasets type standard url L2B processor documentation and datasets - The source code can be freely downloaded from from our website (upon acceptance of the licence terms):
Button Hyperlink title Download Aeolus L2B processor package type standard url http://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/software-and-tools/software/aeolus - News on updates to the software, e.g. planned deliveries, is provided here
- Aeolus L2B winds have a WMO approved BUFR template:
- Some guidance for NWP users on the L2B BUFR data
An example of real Aeolus L2B HLOS winds, from an orbit just to the west of hurricane Dorian on 1 September 2019: