Retrieval of aerosol backscatter, extinction, and lidar ratio from Raman lidar with optimal estimation

Copernicus Publications 6:5 (2013) 9297-9346

Authors:

AC Povey, RG Grainger, DM Peters, JL Agnew

Evaluation of seven European aerosol optical depth retrieval algorithms for climate analysis

Remote Sensing of Environment (2013)

Authors:

G De Leeuw, T Holzer-Popp, SL Bevan, WH Davies, J Descloitres, RG Grainger, J Griesfeller, A Heckel, S Kinne, L Kl眉ser, P Kolmonen, PV Litvinov, D Martynenko, PRJ North, B Ovigneur, N Pascal, CA Poulsen, D Ramon, M Schulz, R Siddans, L Sogacheva, D Tanr茅, GE Thomas, TH Virtanen, W Von Hoyningen-Huene, M Vountas, S Pinnock

Abstract:

Satellite data are increasingly used to provide observation-based estimates of the effects of aerosols on climate. The Aerosol-cci project, part of the European Space Agency's Climate Change Initiative (CCI), was designed to provide essential climate variables for aerosols from satellite data. Eight algorithms, developed for the retrieval of aerosol properties using data from AATSR (4), MERIS (3) and POLDER, were evaluated to determine their suitability for climate studies. The primary result from each of these algorithms is the aerosol optical depth (AOD) at several wavelengths, together with the 脜ngstr枚m exponent (AE) which describes the spectral variation of the AOD for a given wavelength pair. Other aerosol parameters which are possibly retrieved from satellite observations are not considered in this paper. The AOD and AE (AE only for Level 2) were evaluated against independent collocated observations from the ground-based AERONET sun photometer network and against "reference" satellite data provided by MODIS and MISR. Tools used for the evaluation were developed for daily products as produced by the retrieval with a spatial resolution of 10 脳 10 km2 (Level 2) and daily or monthly aggregates (Level 3). These tools include statistics for L2 and L3 products compared with AERONET, as well as scoring based on spatial and temporal correlations. In this paper we describe their use in a round robin (RR) evaluation of four months of data, one month for each season in 2008. The amount of data was restricted to only four months because of the large effort made to improve the algorithms, and to evaluate the improvement and current status, before larger data sets will be processed. Evaluation criteria are discussed. Results presented show the current status of the European aerosol algorithms in comparison to both AERONET and MODIS and MISR data. The comparison leads to a preliminary conclusion that the scores are similar, including those for the references, but the coverage of AATSR needs to be enhanced and further improvements are possible for most algorithms. None of the algorithms, including the references, outperforms all others everywhere. AATSR data can be used for the retrieval of AOD and AE over land and ocean. PARASOL and one of the MERIS algorithms have been evaluated over ocean only and both algorithms provide good results. 漏 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

On the uses of a new linear scheme for stratospheric methane in global models: water source, transport tracer and radiative forcing

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Copernicus Publications 13:18 (2013) 9641-9660

Authors:

BM Monge-Sanz, MP Chipperfield, A Untch, J-J Morcrette, A Rap, AJ Simmons

Aerosol retrieval experiments in the ESA Aerosol_cci project

Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Copernicus Publications 6:8 (2013) 1919-1957

Authors:

T Holzer-Popp, G de Leeuw, J Griesfeller, D Martynenko, L Kl眉ser, S Bevan, W Davies, F Ducos, JL Deuz茅, RG Graigner, A Heckel, W von Hoyningen-H眉ne, P Kolmonen, P Litvinov, P North, CA Poulsen, D Ramon, R Siddans, L Sogacheva, D Tanre, GE Thomas, M Vountas, J Descloitres, J Griesfeller, S Kinne, M Schulz, S Pinnock

SO2 as a possible proxy for volcanic ash in aviation hazard avoidance

Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres American Geophysical Union (AGU) 118:11 (2013) 5698-5709

Authors:

TM Sears, GE Thomas, E Carboni, AJ A. Smith, RG Grainger

Abstract:

Airborne volcanic ash poses a significant danger to aircraft, but is difficult to quantify accurately using satellite data, while sulphur dioxide is much easier to detect accurately, but is much less of a direct hazard to aviation. This paper investigates the reliability of using SO2 as a proxy for the location of volcanic ash, using an SO2 retrieval from the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) and ash detections from IASI and the Advanced Along Track Scanning Radiometer (AATSR). Using a numerical 鈥渕issed ash fraction鈥 applied to the eruptions of Eyjafjallaj枚kull in 2010 and Puyehue鈥怌ord贸n Caulle in 2011 reveals that the SO2 flag typically misses 鈭30% of the detectable ash. Furthermore, the missed ash fraction is found to be highly variable, both between the two eruptions and over the course of each eruption, with values of over 80% found on some days. The detection threshold of the AATSR ash flag is also investigated using radiative transfer calculations, allowing the threshold of the IASI flag to be inferred, and these are related to the ash contamination levels.