Published in Atmos. Meas. Tech. 6, 199-206, doi:10.5194/amt-6-199-2013 in 2013
S. de Haan, L.J. Bailey, and J.E. Können
Aircraft observations of wind and temperature are very
important for upper air meteorology. In this article, the quality of the meteorological
information of an Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Contract (ADS-C) message is
assessed. The ADS-C messages broadcast by the aircraft are received at air
traffic control centres for surveillance and airline control centres for
general aircraft and dispatch management. A comparison is performed against a
global numerical prediction (NWP) model and wind and temperature observations
derived from Enhanced Surveillance (EHS) air-traffic control radar which
interrogates all aircraft in selective mode (Mode-S EHS). Almost 16 000 ADS-C
reports with meteorological information were compiled from the Royal Dutch
Airlines (KLM) database. The length of the data set is 76 consecutive days and
started on 1 January 2011. The wind and temperature observations are of good
quality when compared to the global NWP forecast fields from the European
Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). Comparison of ADS-C wind and
temperature observations against Mode-S EHS derived observations in the
vicinity of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol shows that the wind observations are of
similar quality and the temperature observations of ADS-C are of better quality
than those from Mode-S EHS. However, the current ADS-C data set has a lower
vertical resolution than Mode-S EHS. High vertical resolution can be achieved
by requesting more ADS-C when aircraft are ascending or descending, but could
result in increased data communication costs.NB: Third
author is my son – not me (GPK)