<<Validation of Measurements and Models>>

S07 - P05
Water Vapour Intercomparison Effort In The Frame Of The Convective And Orographically-Induced Precipitation Study

Rohini Bhawar1, P. Di Girolamo1, D. Summa1, C. Flamant2, D. Althausen3, A. Behrendt4, A. Blyth5, O. Bock6, P. Bosser6, M. Cacciani7, S. Crewell8, C. Champollion2, F. Davies9, T. Di Iorio7, G. Ehret10, R. Engelmann3, C. Kiemle11, I. Mattis3, C. Herold3, S. Mobbs5, D. Mueller3, S. Pal4, M. Radlach4, A. Riede4, P. Seifert3, M. Shiler4, V. Smith5, M. Wirth11, V. Wulfmeyer4

1University of Basilicata
2Service d'Aéronomie, CNRS-UPMC
3Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research
4Institut fuer Physik und Meteorologie, Universitaet Hohenheim
5Institute of Atmospheric Science, School of Earth and Environment
6LOEMI - Institut Géographique National
7Dipartimento di Fisica, Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”
8Inst. f. Geophysik und Meteorologie der Universitaet zu Koeln
9Research Institute for Built and Human Environment
10DLR - Institut fuer Physik der Atmosphaere,Oberpfaffenhofen
11DLR - Institut fuer Physik der Atmosphaere

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Abstract
An intensive water vapour intercomparison effort, involving airborne and ground-based water vapour lidar systems, radiosondes with different humidity sensors, GPS and microwave radiometers (MWR), was performed in the frame of COPS (01 June - 31 August 2007). The main objective of this work is to provide accurate error estimates for the different water vapour profiling sensors. Simultaneous and co-located data from different sensors are used to compute relative bias and root-mean square (rms) deviations as a function of altitude.
Comparisons between airborne CNRS DIAL and ground-based Raman lidar BASIL (25 in total) indicate a mean relative bias between the two sensors of 2.1 % (0.12 g/kg) in the altitude region 0–3.5 km a.g.l. Based on the 3 comparisons between BASIL vs airborne DLR DIAL, the mean relative bias is -3.5 % (-0.24g/Kg) in the altitude region 0–3 Km. On the present statistics of comparisons between BASIL vs both airborne DIALs and GPS and putting equal weight on the data reliability of each instrument, it results in the bias values of: BASIL Raman Lidar 0.3 %, DLR DIAL -3.2 %, CNRS DIAL 2.4 % and GPS 2.0 %.
An inter-comparison between radiosondes indicates that RS80-A and RS80-H are affected by several systematic sources of errors. After correction for these error sources, mean bias between RS80 (A&H) and RS92 is found to be reduced to -4.5 %. Comparisons (5 in total) between the two airborne DIAL’s (CNRS DIAL and DLR DIAL) over the COPS region result in mean relative bias of 6.0 % (0.53 g/Kg) in the altitude 0-3 Km. The ongoing comparisons between BASIL vs GPS, MWR and radiosondes and between the water vapor lidars located at different sites especially benefiting from the extraordinary performances of the ground-based UHOH DIAL system, will be discussed at the conference.