Arka Mitra

and 4 more

Cloud-top heights (CTH) from the Multiangle Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on Terra constitute our longest-running single-platform CTH record from a stable orbit. Here, we provide the first evaluation of the Terra Level 2 CTH record against collocated International Space Station Cloud-Aerosol Transport System (CATS) lidar observations between 50ºN - 50ºS. Bias and precision of Terra CTH relative to CATS is shown to be strongly tied to cloud horizontal and vertical heterogeneity and altitude. For single-layered, unbroken, optically thick clouds observed over all altitudes, the uncertainty in MODIS and MISR CTH are -540±690 m and -280±370 m, respectively. The uncertainties are generally smaller for lower altitude clouds and larger for optically thinner clouds. For multi-layered clouds, errors are summarized herein using both absolute CTH and CATS-layer-altitude proximity to Terra CTH. We show that MISR detects the lower cloud in a two-layered system, provided top-layer optical depth < ~0.3, but MISR low-cloud CTH errors are unaltered by the presence of thin cirrus. Systematic and random errors are propagated to explain inter-sensor disagreements, as well as to provide the first estimate of the MISR stereo-opacity bias. For MISR, altitude-dependent wind-retrieval bias (-90 to -110 m) and stereo-opacity bias (-110 to -150 m) and for MODIS, CO2-slicing bias due to geometrically thick cirrus leads to overall negative CTH bias. MISR’s precision is largely driven by precision in retrieved wind-speed (3.7 m s-1), whereas MODIS precision is driven by forward-modeling uncertainty.

Arka Mitra

and 4 more

Cloud-top heights (CTH) from the Multiangle Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on Terra constitute our longest-running single-platform CTH record from a stable orbit. Here, we provide the first evaluation of the Terra Level 2 CTH record against collocated International Space Station Cloud-Aerosol Transport System (CATS) lidar observations between 50ºN - 50ºS. Bias and precision of Terra CTH relative to CATS, calculated from the normality of CTH error histograms, are shown to be strongly tied to cloud horizontal and vertical heterogeneity and altitude. For single-layered, unbroken, optically thick clouds observed for all altitudes, the uncertainty in MODIS and MISR CTH are -540±690 m and -280±370 m, respectively. The uncertainties are generally smaller for lower altitude clouds and larger for optically thinner clouds. For multi-layered clouds, errors are summarized herein using both absolute CTH and CATS-layer-altitude proximity to Terra CTH. We show that MISR detects the lower cloud in a two-layered system, provided top-layer optical depth < ~0.3, but MISR low-cloud errors are unaltered by the presence of thin cirrus. Systematic and random errors are propagated to explain inter-sensor disagreements, as well as to provide the first estimate of MISR stereo-opacity bias. For MISR, altitude-dependent wind-retrieval bias (-90 to -110 m) and stereo-opacity bias (-110 to -240 m) and for MODIS, bias due to low opacity near cloud-top lead to overall negative CTH bias. MISR’s precision is largely driven by wind-speed uncertainty (3.7 m s-1), whereas MODIS precision is driven by forward-modeling uncertainty.

Yulan Hong

and 1 more

A full understanding of the climatological properties of aerosols is an important step towards characterizing their effects on the regional and global climate. Utilizing the observations from Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO), we study cloud-free and cloudy aerosol properties with attentions on aerosol and cloud layer vertically relative positions. On a global scale, the cloud-free aerosols account for 55.9% of all detected aerosols with a mean optical depth ( ) and uncertainty of 0.135 {plus minus} 0.047. The cloudy aerosols, accounting for 44.1%, have a larger and uncertainty of 0.143 {plus minus} 0.074 compared to the cloud-free aerosols. The above-cloud aerosols (4.2%), primarily composed of elevated smoke, dust/volcanic ash and polluted dust, have a much smaller (0.056 0.038). The below-cloud aerosols (21.3%) have ~ 0.165 0.087, showing close probability density distributions, aerosol types, backscatter-depolarization ratio diagram, and lidar ratio-color ratio diagram with the cloud-free aerosols. In addition, 27.4% of the detected aerosol profiles are found to have cloud layers vertically connected to aerosol layers. The lidar backscatter profiles of these aerosols have larger median values than the cloud-free, above-cloud and below-cloud aerosols. The seasonal variability of the cloud-free and the cloudy aerosols significantly varies with regions. This study implies that quantifying the impact of clouds, particularly cirrus due to the wide coverage of cirrus-aerosol overlap, on aerosol direct radiative effect is crucial to assess aerosols’ roles in the Earth-climate system.