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Airborne radio occultation (ARO) measurements collected
during a ferry flight at the end of the PRE-Depression Investigation of
Cloud-systems in the Tropics (PREDICT) field campaign from the Virgin Islands
to Colorado are analyzed. The large contrast in atmospheric conditions along
the flight path from the warm and moist Caribbean Sea to the much drier and
cooler continental conditions provides a unique opportunity to address the
sensitivity of ARO measurements to the tropospheric temperature and moisture
changes. This long flight at nearly constant altitude (∼ 13 km)
provided an optimal configuration for simultaneous high-quality ARO
measurements from two high-gain side-looking antennas, as well as one
relatively lower gain zenith (top) antenna. The omnidirectional top antenna
has the advantage of tracking robustly more occulting satellites in all
direction as compared to the limited-azimuth tracking of the side-looking
antennas. Two well-adapted radio-holographic bending angle retrieval methods,
full-spectrum inversion (FSI) and phase matching (PM), were compared with
the standard geometric-optics (GO) retrieval method. Comparison of the ARO
retrievals from the top antenna with the near-coincident ECMWF
reanalysis-interim (ERA-I) profiles shows only a small root-mean-square (RMS)
refractivity difference of ∼ 0.3 % in the drier upper troposphere
from ∼ 5 to ∼ 11.5 km over both land and ocean. Both the FSI
and PM methods improve the ARO retrievals in the moist lower troposphere and
reduce the negative bias found in the GO retrieval due to atmospheric
multipath. In the lowest layer of the troposphere, the ARO refractivity
derived using FSI shows a negative bias of about −2 %. The increase of
the refractivity bias occurs below 5 km over the ocean and below 3.5 km
over land, corresponding to the approximate altitude of large vertical
moisture gradients above the ocean and land surface, respectively. In
comparisons to radiosondes, the FSI ARO soundings capture well the height of
layers with sharp refractivity gradients but display a negative refractivity
bias inside the boundary layer. The unique opportunity to make simultaneous
independent recordings of occultation events from multiple antennas
establishes that high-precision ARO measurements can be achieved
corresponding to an RMS difference better than 0.2 % in refractivity (or
∼ 0.4 K). The surprisingly good quality of recordings from a very
simple zenith antenna increases the feasibility of developing an operational
tropospheric sounding system onboard commercial aircraft in the future,
which could provide a large number of data for direct assimilation in
numerical weather prediction models.