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Dust Properties Retrieved from the AERI Observations at Niamey

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... factor) to agree with the microwave radiometer PWV ... (MWRRET) New algorithm to retrieve PWV and LWP from the ARM Microwave Radiometers (MWRs) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dust Properties Retrieved from the AERI Observations at Niamey


1
Dust Properties Retrieved from the AERI
Observations at Niamey
  • Dave Turner
  • Space Science and Engineering Center
  • University of Wisconsin - Madison

2
Overview
  • Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer
  • General description of instrument
  • Calibration approach
  • Data corrections needed
  • Scaling radiosonde humidity profiles
  • Dust retrieval method
  • Results
  • Importance of the dust microphysical and optical
    properties to the (infrared) forcing?
  • Are the dust properties a function of either the
    diurnal cycle or season?

3
Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI)
  • Automated instrument measuring downwelling IR
    radiation from 3.3-19 µm at 0.5 cm-1 resolution
  • Uses two well characterized blackbodies to
    achieve accuracy better than 1 of the ambient
    radiance
  • Non-linearity correction well-known
  • Data used in a wide variety of research
  • During AMF NIM deployment, AERI collected 3-min
    avg every 8 min
  • Knuteson et al. JAM 2004 (2 papers)

4
AERI Interferometer Assembly
Front End Assembly
IR Detector Dewar with Cooler Cold Finger
Blackbodies Scene Mirror Assembly Forced Air
Inlet Rain Sensor Sun Sensor
ABB
Stirling Cooler Compressor
HBB
Bomem Interferometer
Front-end Closeout (thermal)
Optics Bench
Shock Mounts (4)
Interferometer / AERI Electronics Interface Box
Knuteson et al., JTECH, 2004
5
Calibration Targets (Blackbodies)are Key to
Accurate Radiances
Emissivity gt 0.999
6
Example Raw AERI Spectra
7
Calibration of AERI Spectra
So the non-linearity correction is also critical!
8
Updated Calibration and Correction
  • Discovered after NIM deployment that the spectral
    calibration (stretch factor ? was slightly off)
  • Easy correction to determine and apply via
    post-processing
  • Very little uncertainty in this correction
  • AERI observations are always slightly warmer than
    LBLRTM clear sky calculations
  • Easiest to observe in low PWV conditions
  • Observed with all AERI systems (SGP, NSA, etc),
    albeit with slightly different magnitudes
  • Only important for clear sky research OR
    retrieval of properties from optically thin
    layers (like dust)
  • Believe that there is a small obscuration in FOV
    or that there is some contribution from
    scattering inside interferometer
  • Model this as an obscuration Fv (Nobs - Nsky) /
    (B(Teff) - Nsky) where Nsky is a clear sky LBLRTM
    calculation in dust-free conditions. Fv 0.01
    for NIM

9
Impact of Corrections
  • Identified 6 cases, manually identified to have
    negligible AOD, to characterize both ? and Fv
  • Cases from 2 May, and 23-26 Dec
  • Plan on using AMF data in Germany to verify
    adequacy

Residuals with original observations
Observed minus Calculated
Residuals with corrected observations
10
Importance of Water Vapor
  • Water vapor contributes a significant portion of
    the downwelling IR signal in the 8-13 µm band
  • Critical that the water vapor be correctly
    specified before dust properties can be retrieved
    from the AERI observations
  • Used interpolated radiosondes, where the water
    vapor profile has been scaled (height-independent
    factor) to agree with the microwave radiometer
    PWV
  • This last factor is critical, as Vaisala
    radiosonde humidity observations have a
    well-known diurnal bias (daytime approximately 6
    to 8 drier than nighttime sondes for RS-90/92
    sondes)

11
Dual Sonde Launch ExamplesVaisala RS-80H
1996 WVIOP
1997 WVIOP
Calibration differences between radiosondes
appear to act as height-independent scale factors
in the lower troposphere!
Revercomb et al., BAMS, 2003
12
AERI / LBLRTM Results
  • Using height-independent nature of the radiosonde
    calibration differences, the sonde humidity
    profiles were scaled to agree with the MWR in PWV
  • LBLRTM runs were made with both the unscaled and
    scaled radiosondes
  • Model runs made with the scaled results show 2
    times less variability than the unscaled sonde
    results

Turner et al., JTECH, 2003
13
Using the AERI / LBLRTM Results to Look into the
Diurnal Issue
  • Unscaled sonde results show significant diurnal
    differences, both in mean value and standard
    deviation
  • Scaled sonde results are virtually identical both
    day and night
  • Radiosondes have a considerable diurnal
    difference

Turner et al., JTECH, 2003
14
Microwave Radiometer Retrievals (MWRRET)
  • New algorithm to retrieve PWV and LWP from the
    ARM Microwave Radiometers (MWRs)
  • Uses both a physical-iterative and an advanced
    statistical retrieval
  • Physical retrieval only applied at radiosonde
    launch times
  • Statistical retrieval, which uses surface P/T/U
    data to estimate the retrieval coefficients, is
    then tuned to the physical retrieval
  • MWRRET algorithm accounts for biases in the
    observed brightness temperatures if not
    accounted for, then physically unreasonable LWPs
    exist
  • MWRRET dataset processed for NIM and in ARM
    archive (PI products section)

Turner et al., IEEE TGRS, in press
15
MIXCRA
  • Developed to retrieve simultaneously the
    properties of both the liquid and ice particles
    in a mixed-phase cloud from AERI observations
  • Optical depth and effective radius of both
    components
  • Optimal estimation used to propagate
    uncertainties in observations and sensitivity of
    forward model to provide uncertainties of
    retrieved solution
  • Turner, JAM, 2005
  • Scattering properties are provided to algorithm
    via a lookup table, so I am able to retrieve dust
    properties simply by exchanging the ice/liquid
    tables with dust tables
  • Different phases must have different absorption
    bands
  • Modeled the dust as spherical particles with a
    lognormal size distribution
  • Adequate for 8-13 µm band, not for 3-5 µm band

16
Example 8-13 µm Band Fit
17
More Examples
  • Dust assumed to be pure kaolinite in this example
  • Obs / calc fits are impressive, but not perfect
    across the bands incorporating a second mineral
    improves fit to obs
  • Clear sky calcs show significant IR surface
    forcing

18
Example 3-5 µm Band Fit
19
IR Sensitivity to Aerosol Particle Size
20
Time-series of Dust Optical Depthand Effective
Radius
21
Approach
  • Downwelling IR radiance is sensitive to dust
    composition, optical depth, and effective radius
  • To detect differences in composition, each
    mineral must absorb in different spectral regions
  • Able to distinguish between quartz, kaolinite,
    and gypsum using IR data
  • Performed 6 sets of retrievals on manually
    identified cloud-free periods
  • Quartz-only, kaolinite-only, gypsum-only
  • Quartzkaolinite, quartzgypsum, kaolinitegypsum
  • Retrieval with the best statistical fit for each
    sample was identified
  • Results analyzed as function of season and local
    meteorology

22
Infrared Spectral Signaturesof Different Mineral
Types
Quartz absorbs here (not Kaolinite or Gypsum)
Kaolinite absorbs here (not Quartz or Gypsum)
Gypsum and Quartz absorb here (not Kaolinite)
23
Wind Direction and Water Vapor at ARM Site in
Niamey
Early monsoon
Late monsoon
Pre-monsoon
Post-monsoon
24
Dust Optical Depth and Composition Distribution
Distribution for entire year
25
Dust Optical Depth and Composition Distribution
26
Distribution of Effective Radius Per Period
Kaolinite
Quartz and Gypsum
27
Kaolinite Fraction forEach of the Periods
  • Kaolinite fraction defined as Fk ?k / ?total
  • Fk significantly different for KaoliniteGypsum
    in the pre-monsoon and post-monsoon periods
  • Quartz becomes more dominant (relatively) during
    the early- and late-monsoon periods

28
Summary
  • Retrieved infrared optical depth, effective
    radius, and dust composition from AERI
    observations at NIM
  • Only used observations from 8-13 µm, and assumed
    the dust particles to be spherical
  • Dust assumed to be kaolinite, quartz, gypsum, or
    some combination of any two
  • Only applied to observations that were manually
    identified as cloud free
  • Kaolinite is the dominant component of dust for
    entire year, with 66 of observations are best
    satisfied by a combination of kaolinite gypsum
    and 23 best satisfied with a combination of
    kaolinite quartz
  • Kaolinite fraction changes significantly during
    the 4 periods in 2006. The changes are likely
    associated with land-use changes associated with
    the precipitation cycle

dturner_at_ssec.wisc.edu
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