NASA/TM-209630, Justus*, C.G. and Johnson, D.L., The NASA/MSFC Global Reference Atmospheric Model - 1999 Version (GRAM-99), Engineering Systems Department, Engineering Directorate, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, and *Computer Sciences Corporation, May 1999, pp. 92, Format(s): PDF 5771k |
The latest version of Global Reference Atmospheric Model (GRAM-99) is presented and discussed. GRAM-99 uses either (binary) Global Upper Air Climatic Atlas (GUACA) or (ASCII) Global Gridded Upper Air Statistics (GGUAS)CD-ROM data sets, for 0-27 km altitudes. As with earlier versions, GRAM-99 provides complete geographical andaltitude coverage for each month of the year. GRAM-99 uses a specially-developed data set, based on Middle Atmosphere Program (MAP) data, for 20-120 km altitudes, and NASA's 1999 version Marshall Engineering Thermosphere (MET-99) model for heights above 90 km. Fairing techniques assure smooth transition in overlap height ranges (20-27 km and 90-120 km). GRAM-99 includes water vapor and 11 other atmospheric constituents (O3, N2O,CO, CH4, CO2, N2, O2, O, A, He, and H). A variable-scale perturbation model provides both large-scale (wave) and small-scale (stochastic) deviations from mean values for thermodynamic variables and horizontal and vertical windcomponents. The small-scale perturbation model includes improvements in representing intermittency ("patchiness"). A major new feature is an option to substitute Range Reference Atmosphere (RRA) data for conventional GRAM climatology when a trajectory passes sufficiently near any RRA site. A complete user's guide for running the program, plus sample input and output, is provided. An example is provided for how to incorporate GRAM-99 as subroutines in other programs (e.g., trajectory codes)
| Keywords: | global reference atmospheric model, atmospheric temperature, atmospheric density, winds, thermosphere, atmospheric models, atmospheric perturbations |
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| Subjects: | Geoscience: Geophysics |
| ID Code: | 503 |
| Deposited On: | 24 July 2002 |