The Aeolus Data Innovation and Science Cluster (DISC) supports the Aeolus mission with a wide range of activities from instrument and product quality monitoring over retrieval algorithm improvements to numerical weather prediction (NWP) impact assessments for wind and aerosols. The Aeolus DISC provides support to ESA, Cal/Val teams, numerical weather prediction (NWP) centers, and scientific users for instrument special operations and calibration, for the re-processing of Aeolus products from the past and through the provision of bi-annual updates of the L1A, L1B, L2A and L2B operational processors. The Aeolus DISC is coordinated by DLR with partners from ECMWF, KNMI, Météo-France, TROPOS, DoRIT, ABB, s&t, serco, OLA, Physics Solutions, IB Reissig and Les Myriades involving more than 40 scientists and engineers. The presentation will highlight the Aeolus DISC activities with a focus for the year 2021 and early 2022 since the last Aeolus workshop in November 2020. This covers the evolution of the instrument performance including investigations of the cause of the on-going signal loss and the achieved improvement via dedicated laser tests in 2021. In addition, refinements of algorithms and correction of the wind bias will be discussed - including a known remaining seasonal bias in October and March as encountered during the re-processing campaigns. Finally, the strategy for the on-going and future re-processing campaigns will be addressed to inform the scientific community about the availability and quality of the re-processed data products. The Aeolus mission has fully achieved its mission objectives including the unprecedented demonstration of direct-detection Doppler wind lidar technology and high-power laser operation in space in the ultraviolet spectral region over its planned full mission lifetime of 3 years and 3 months. Aeolus wind products have clearly demonstrated positive impact on forecasts using several NWP models. Since early 2020, and thus only 1.5 years after launch, the Aeolus wind products are used in operation at various NWP centers worldwide. This was achieved even despite the larger than expected wind random errors due to lower initial atmospheric signal levels and the observed signal losses during the operation of the first and second laser. In addition to this incredible success, first scientific studies demonstrated the use of Aeolus for atmospheric dynamics research in the stratosphere and for the analysis of aerosol transport. These achievements of the Aeolus mission and its success were only possible with the essential and critical contributions from the Aeolus DISC. This demonstrates the need and potential for setting up such scientific consortia covering a wide range of expertise from instrument, processors, and scientific use of products for Earth Explorer type missions. The invaluable experience gained by the Aeolus DISC during the more then 3 years of Aeolus mission in orbit (preceded by a period of 20 years before launch by a similar study team) is a pre-requisite for a successful preparation of an operational follow-on Aeolus-2 mission.
Oliver Reitebuch, Isabell Krisch, Christian Lemmerz, Oliver Lux, Uwe Marksteiner, Nafiseh Masoumzadeh, Fabian Weiler, Benjamin Witschas, Vittoria Cito Filomarino, Markus Meringer, Karsten Schmidt, Dorit Huber, Ines Nikolaus, Frederic Fabre, Michael Vaughan, Katja Reisig, Alain Dabas, Thomas Flament, Adrien Lacour, Jean-Francois Mahfouf, Ibrahim Seck, Dimitri Trapon, Saleh Abdalla, Lars Isaksen, Michael Rennie, Angela Benedetti, Will McLean, Caren Henry, Dave Donovan, Jos de Kloe, Gert-Jan Marseille, Ad Stoffelen, Ping Wang, Gerd-Jan van Zadelhoff, Gaetan Perron, Sebastian Jupin-Ganglois, Bas Pijnacker-Hordijk, Marcella Veneziani, Simone Bucci, Giacomo Gostinicchi, Lorenzo Di Ciolo, Frithjof Ehlers, Thomas Kanitz, Alexander Geiss, Anne-Grete Straume, Denny Wernham, Trismono Krisna, Jonas von Bismarck, Guido Colangeli, Vittorio Trivigno, Massimo Romanazzo, Stefano Aprile, Tommaso Parinello. Contributions from the DISC to accomplish the Aeolus mission objectives
Year: 2018