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The EUSTACE Project: Delivering Global, Daily Information on Surface Air Temperature

Authors :
Joel R. Mitchelson
Tim Trent
Francesco Capponi
Emma Dodd
R. Iestyn Woolway
Nick Rayner
Renate Auchmann
Christopher J. Merchant
Finn Lindgren
Antonello A. Squintu
Pia Nielsen-Englyst
Rasmus Tonboe
John Remedios
Alison Waterfall
Elizabeth C. Kent
Karen L. Veal
Paul van der Linden
Gerard van der Schrier
Rachel Killick
John Kennedy
Ag Stephens
Colin Morice
Jonathan Winn
Darren Ghent
Patricio F. Ortiz
Elizabeth Good
Stefan Brönnimann
Yuri Brugnara
Laura Carrea
Peter Thorne
Jacob L. Høyer
Kristine S. Madsen
J. Bessembinder
Kate Winfield
Source :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 101:E1924-E1947
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2020.

Abstract

Day-to-day variations in surface air temperature affect society in many ways, but daily surface air temperature measurements are not available everywhere. Therefore, a global daily picture cannot be achieved with measurements made in situ alone and needs to incorporate estimates from satellite retrievals. This article presents the science developed in the EU Horizon 2020–funded EUSTACE project (2015–19, www.eustaceproject.org) to produce global and European multidecadal ensembles of daily analyses of surface air temperature complementary to those from dynamical reanalyses, integrating different ground-based and satellite-borne data types. Relationships between surface air temperature measurements and satellite-based estimates of surface skin temperature over all surfaces of Earth (land, ocean, ice, and lakes) are quantified. Information contained in the satellite retrievals then helps to estimate air temperature and create global fields in the past, using statistical models of how surface air temperature varies in a connected way from place to place; this needs efficient statistical analysis methods to cope with the considerable data volumes. Daily fields are presented as ensembles to enable propagation of uncertainties through applications. Estimated temperatures and their uncertainties are evaluated against independent measurements and other surface temperature datasets. Achievements in the EUSTACE project have also included fundamental preparatory work useful to others, for example, gathering user requirements, identifying inhomogeneities in daily surface air temperature measurement series from weather stations, carefully quantifying uncertainties in satellite skin and air temperature estimates, exploring the interaction between air temperature and lakes, developing statistical models relevant to non-Gaussian variables, and methods for efficient computation.

Details

ISSN :
15200477 and 00030007
Volume :
101
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe53c6cd3a9ff4615a4dc424f3e0afa6