80 resultados para Cloudiness


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El presente Proyecto Fin de Grado tiene como objetivo el estudio y caracterización del centelleo troposférico en ausencia de lluvia en la banda Ka de un enlace Tierra-satélite. Para ello se dispondrá de un equipo receptor situado en la Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Telecomunicación. Los datos son emitidos desde el satélite EutelSat Hot Bird 13A a una frecuencia de 19,7 GHz. La primera parte del proyecto comienza con las bases teóricas de los distintos fenómenos que afectan a la propagación de un enlace satélite, mencionando los modelos de predicción más importantes. Se ha dado más importancia al apartado perteneciente al centelleo troposférico por ser el tema tratado en este proyecto. El estudio cuenta con datos del satélite durante 7 años comprendidos entre julio de 2006 a junio de 2013. Después del filtrado y el resto del tratamiento adecuado de los datos se han obtenido distintas distribuciones estadísticas que están relacionadas con el centelleo como la varianza. Más tarde se ha comparado la varianza experimental con parámetros meteorológicos obtenidos desde distintas bases de datos. El objetivo de esto ha sido discernir cuál de estos factores afecta en mayor medida a la intensidad de centelleo. Para ello se ha realizado la correlación entre la varianza y varios parámetros meteorológicos: temperatura, humedad relativa, humedad absoluta, índice de refracción húmedo, presión… Además se han realizado medidas de nubosidad en los que se ha clasificado las muestras dependiendo del tipo de nube presente en el cielo. A continuación se ha calculado la varianza mensual media y distribuciones acumuladas de ciertos modelos de predicción de centelleo, comparándolos gráficamente con las curvas experimentales. Estos modelos usan parámetros medidos en superficie por lo que se utilizarán algunos de los parámetros analizados en el capítulo anterior. Por último se expondrán las conclusiones sacadas a lo largo de la realización del proyecto y las posibles líneas de investigación futuras. ABSTRACT. The present Project has as the principal aim the study and characterization of tropospheric scintillation in lack of rain in the band Ka of an Earth-satellite link. It is provided for a receptor equipment located in the ETSIT. The data are broadcasted form the Eutelsat Hot Bird 13A satellite at the frecuency of 19,7 GHz. The beginning of the project starts with the theorical basis of the different phenomenons that affects to the propagation of a satellite link, naming the most important predictions models. The chapter referred to the scintillation has had more importance due to be the main topic in this project. The study deals with satellite data during 7 years between July 2006 to June 2013. After the filter and others treatments of the data, it has been getting different statistics distributions related to scintillation like variance. Later, the experimental variance has been compared with meteorological parameters obtained from different datasets. The purpose has been to decide which factor affects in a greater way to the scintillation intensity. For that it has been doing the correlation between variance and meteorological parameters: temperature, relative humidity, absolute humidity, air refractivity due to water vapour, pressure… Moreover, it has been doing cloudiness measurements in which the samples have been classified in order to the kind of cloud shown in the sky at that moment. Then it has been calculated the monthly averaged variance and the prediction model for cumulative distributions which has been compared with the experimental results. That models uses surface data that they will be uses some meteorological parameters analyzed in previous chapters. Finally it will be shown the conclusions obtained along the realization of the project and the possible ways of future research.

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Arctic sea ice has declined and become thinner and younger (more seasonal) during the last decade. One consequence of this is that the surface energy budget of the Arctic Ocean is changing. While the role of surface albedo has been studied intensively, it is still widely unknown how much light penetrates through sea ice into the upper ocean, affecting sea-ice mass balance, ecosystems, and geochemical processes. Here we present the first large-scale under-ice light measurements, operating spectral radiometers on a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) under Arctic sea ice in summer. This data set is used to produce an Arctic-wide map of light distribution under summer sea ice. Our results show that transmittance through first-year ice (FYI, 0.11) was almost three times larger than through multi-year ice (MYI, 0.04), and that this is mostly caused by the larger melt-pond coverage of FYI (42 vs. 23%). Also energy absorption was 50% larger in FYI than in MYI. Thus, a continuation of the observed sea-ice changes will increase the amount of light penetrating into the Arctic Ocean, enhancing sea-ice melt and affecting sea-ice and upper-ocean ecosystems.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), a key species of Southern Ocean food webs plays a central role in ecosystem processes, community dynamics of apex predators and as a commercial fishery target. A decline in krill abundance during the late 20th century in the SW Atlantic sector has been linked to a concomitant decrease in sea ice, based on the hypothesis that sea ice acts as a feeding ground for overwintering larvae. However, evidence supporting this hypothesis has been scarce due to logistical challenges of collecting data in austral winter. Here we report on a winter study that involved diver observations of larval krill in their under-ice environment, ship-based studies of krill, sea ice physical characteristics, and biophysical model analyses of krill-ocean-ice interactions. We present evidence that complex under-ice topography is vital for larval krill in terms of dispersal and advection into high productive nursery habitats, rather than the provision by the ice environment of food. Further, ongoing changes in sea ice will lead to increases in sea-ice regimes favourable for overwintering larval krill but shifting southwards. This will result in ice-free conditions in the SW Atlantic, which will be conducive for enhancing food supplies due to sufficient light and iron availability, thus enhancing larvae development and growth. However, the associated impact on dispersal and advection may lead to a net shift in krill from the SW Atlantic to regions further east by the eastward flowing ACC and the northern branch of the Weddell Gyre, with profound consequences for the Southern Ocean pelagic ecosystem.