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Applications and Limitations of Satellite Data

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Other than cloud images, why do we need satellite data ... Clouds Retrieval (cont. ... Thin cirrus clouds are wide spread, but too thin to be reliably detected ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Applications and Limitations of Satellite Data


1
Applications and Limitations of Satellite Data
  • Professor Ming-Dah Chou
  • January 3, 2005
  • Department of Atmospheric Sciences
  • National Taiwan University

2
Why Satellite Observation?
  • Other than cloud images, why do we need satellite
    data for regional weather and climate studies in
    Taiwan?

3
A short answer is
  • For extended weather and climate forecasts,
    large-scale circulations and physical environment
    (e.g. SST, snow/ice cover) become very important.
    Large-scale circulations and physical environment
    can be best observed from satellite.?

4
Some Examples for Application of Satellite Data
  • Model Initialization/Assimilation/Reanalysis
  • Validation
  • Improvements on model physics

5
ModelInitialization/ Assimilation/Reanalysis
  • Initialization for weather forecast
  • Assimilation
  • Reanalysis (model satellite observation)
  • Accurate and long-term Description
  • of the earth-atmosphere system.

6
Validation of weather forecast and climate
simulations
  • What parameters?
  • Diagnostic
  • Prognostic
  • Clouds
  • Radiative heat budgets
  • Cloud radiative forcing
  • Temperature
  • Humidity
  • SST
  • Ice and snow cover
  • Others

7
Model improvement
  • Interaction between dynamical and physical
    processes (intra-seasonal and inter-annual
    variations)
  • Tropical disturbances and air-sea interaction
    (momentum and heat fluxes)
  • Interaction between monsoon dynamics,
    precipitation, and radiation.

8
Satellite Retrievals
  • Solar Spectral Channels
  • Thermal Infrared Channels
  • Microwave Channels

9
Solar Spectral Channels
  • Measurement of reflection at narrow channels
  • Lack of vertical information

10
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11
Information Derived
  • Clouds
  • Aerosols
  • Fractional cover (visible channel)
  • Article size (multiple channels)
  • Cloud water amount (multiple channels)
  • Cloud contamination problem especially thin
    cirrus clouds.
  • Mostly over oceans.
  • Large uncertainty over land especially over
    deserts
  • Optical thickness spectral variation (multiple
    channels)
  • Single scattering albedo (large uncertainty)
  • Asymmetry factor (large uncertainty)

12
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13
Information Derived (Continued)
  • Ozone
  • Land reflectivity
  • Vegetation cover
  • Ice/snow cover
  • Total ozone amount (multiple channels)
  • Spectral variation
  • NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index)
  • Reflection (albedo) difference of two channels
  • Sudden albedo jump across green light
  • Cloud contamination problem
  • Multiple channels to differentiate clouds and ice/

14
Thermal Infrared Channels
  • Rationale emission and absorption of thermal IR

15
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16
Information Derived
  • Temperature profile
  • Water vapor profile
  • Multiple channels in the CO2 absorption band
  • Uniform CO2 concentration
  • Weighting functions peak at different heights
  • Multiple channels in the H2O absorption band
  • Coupled with temperature retrievals
  • Low vertical resolution
  • Broad weighting function

17
Information Derived (Continued)
  • Clouds
  • Fractional cover
  • Cloud height
  • Particle size
  • Cloud water amount
  • Cloud-surface temperature contrast
  • High spatial resolution
  • Window channel
  • Opaque clouds in thermal IR
  • Emission at cloud top
  • Unreliable
  • Unreliable

18
Microwave Channels
  • Emission and absorption in microwave spectrum
  • Long wavelength
  • Capable of penetrating through clouds

19
Information Derived
  • Temperature profile
  • Water vapor profile
  • Multiple channels in an absorption line
  • Uniform CO2 concentration
  • Weighting functions peak at different heights
  • Multiple channels in a H2O absorption line
  • Coupled with temperature retrievals
  • Low vertical resolution
  • Broad weighting function

20
Information Derived (Continued)
  • Precipitation
  • Multiple channels
  • Polarization (particle size)
  • Long wavelength sensitive to large particles
  • Vertical distribution of precipitation

21
SST Retrievals
  • IR Technique
  • Microwave Technique

22
IR Technique
  • Three IR window channels (3.7, 10, and 11 µm)
  • Differential water vapor absorption
  • Regression
  • Satellite measurements vs buoy measurements
  • Sub-surface temperature
  • Clear sky only
  • NOAA/AVHRR, NASA/MODIS
  • NOAA NCEP claims SST retrieval accuracy is
  • 0.2-0.3 C

23
Microwave Technique
  • Single microwave channel
  • Unaffected by clouds and water vapor
  • Rain (?)
  • Sub-surface temperature (?)

24
Microwave Technique (Cont.)

e estimated from surface wind Ts SST Tb
Satellite measured brightness temperature
For Ts300 K and e0.5, we have Tb150K and If
?e0.001, ?Ts0.6 KVERY SENSITIVE!
  • Bias among MODIS-, AVHRR-, and TRMM-derived SST
    is large, reaching 0.5-1.0 C

25
Clouds Retrieval
  • Day Use both solar and thermal IR channels
  • Night Use only thermal IR channels
  • High spatial resolution of satellite measurements
  • A field-of-view picture element (pixel) is
    either totally cloud covered or totally cloud
    free
  • Cloud detection
  • asat ath Tsat
  • Threshold albedo (ath) and brightness
    temperature (Tth) are empirically determined

26
Clouds Retrieval (cont.)
  • Zonally-averaged cloud cover of NASA/ISCCP,
    NASA/MODIS, and NOAA/NESDIS could differ by
    30-40
  • Uncertainties of cloud optical thickness,
    particle size and water content are even larger
    than that of cloud cover
  • Regardless of the large uncertainties of cloud
    retrievals, global cloud data sets could be
    useful depending on applications.

27
Aerosols
  • Various sources/types of aerosols
  • Fossil fuel combustions, dust, smoke, sea
    salt
  • Large temporal and regional variations
  • Short life time, 10 days
  • Difficult to differentiate between aerosols and
    thin cirrus
  • Difficult to retrieve aerosol properties over
    land
  • high surface albedo
  • Differences between various data sets of
    satellite-retrieved, as well as model-calculated
    aerosol optical thickness are large.
  • Impact of aerosols on thermal IR is neglected.
  • Potentially, aerosols could have a large impact
    on regional and global climate.

28
Thin Cirrus CloudsUpper Tropospheric Water Vapor
  • Climatically very important
  • Thin cirrus clouds are wide spread, but too thin
    to be reliably detected
  • Upper tropospheric water vapor is too small to be
    reliably retrieved
  • Thin cirrus clouds
  • Upper tropospheric water vapor
  • Although difficult to retrieve from satellite
    measurements, there are no other alternatives.
  • Key to understand feedback mechanisms in climate
    change studies.
  • Weak absorption visible channel (0.55 µm)
  • Strong absorption near-IR channel (1.36 µm)
  • Strong absorption water vapor channel (6.3 µm)

29
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30
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