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Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Commander Andrew McCrindell Director Oceanography and Meteorology 12 March 2007 The Importance of Altimetry.

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Presentation on theme: "Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Commander Andrew McCrindell Director Oceanography and Meteorology 12 March 2007 The Importance of Altimetry."— Presentation transcript:

1 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Commander Andrew McCrindell Director Oceanography and Meteorology 12 March 2007 The Importance of Altimetry to the RAN

2 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology SCOPE  Why Navies need altimetry data;  Climatological applications;  Ocean modelling.

3 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Mission To enable the ADF maritime community to exploit the above and below water physical operating environments for strategic, operational and tactical advantage and for safety purposes, and to support the collection and effective management of marine data in the national interest.

4 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Rapid Environmental Assessment

5 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology CEMG METOC Impacts Safety Land DARWIN Land Air Ops (RW/FW) TOWNSVILLE Safety SWBTA Maritime Safety Land Timeline (Hrs) Maritime Air Ops (RW/FW) Maritime No ImpactsMarginal ImpactsSignificant Impacts 29 AUG 24 Hour 6 12 18 24 48 Hour72 Hour96 Hour 26 AUG27 AUG28 AUG 6 12 18 24

6 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology REA METOC PERSPECTIVE  Generate forecasts in the littoral from T-7days.  Make measurements to improve forecasts.  Reliant on modelling capability and remote sensing.

7 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology

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9 WWW.METOC.GOV.AU

10 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology

11 Satellite Data - Wind Speed Quikscat microwave scatterometer on Quikbird (NASA) and Midori II (JSA) + Lat= 15.50 Long=115.50 Beaufort Direction Scale N NE E SE S SW W NW Total 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 5 2 1 4 3 3 2 2 1 0 16 3 4 13 9 4 6 3 1 1 41 4 1 8 1 1 5 10 2 0 28 5 0 2 0 1 2 5 0 0 10 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total 6 28 14 10 15 21 5 2 Mean Speed = 10.7 Maximum Speed = 25.0 Direction of Maximum Speed 238 Number of records 2826

12 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Satellite Data – Sig. Wave Height Various altimeters: ERS1, ERS2, ENVISAT (ESA), GEOSAT, GFO (USN), TOPEX POSEIDON, JASON (NOAA) Lat, Long, Mean,Max, Nobs,0-1m,1-2m,2-3m,3-4m,4-5m,>5m 15.50,115.50,1.15, 4.60, 1058, 48, 43, 7, 2, 0, 0

13 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Wave Modelling Uses global wave models a GIS application Coastal applications using altimetry could improve these forecasts.

14 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology SONAR Prediction

15 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology Project BLUE LINK - Oceanic & Atmospheric Modelling  $15 Million Project with 3 Partners: –Defence –CSIRO –Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology  BLUElink> will deliver oceanic forecasts for the Australian Region for: –Defence Applications –Climate Studies –Operational Weather Forecasting –Ecological Applications –Commercial Applications

16 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology

17 10km resolution in this area

18 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology

19 ROAM Oceanic Forecast Example  Example shows ROAM oceanic model over NW Shelf  Diagram shows 10km resolution, but will have 2km resolution  Output shows sea surface temperature and currents  Other outputs include 3-dimensional Temperature and Salinity structure

20 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology A Slice of the Tasman Sea

21 Directorate of Oceanography and Meteorology

22 GIS Visualisation – 3D View of Eddy

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30 Concluding Remarks  Operational oceanography requires greater coverage and reliability of altimetry data.  We need to use altimeters to derive oceanic structures on the continental shelf and in coastal regions.  The users do not always realise the importance of altimetry because they are often using derived products.  Thank you for all of the activities and research that have contributed to our understanding of the world’s oceans.


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