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Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere

About: Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Snow & Data assimilation. The organization has 332 authors who have published 997 publications receiving 38835 citations. The organization is also known as: CIRA.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the first phase derivation and implementation of daytime aerosol correction algorithms for remotely sensed sea surface temperature (SST) from the advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) instrument flown onboard NOAA polar orbiting satellites is presented.
Abstract: [1] This research presents the first-phase derivation and implementation of daytime aerosol correction algorithms for remotely sensed sea surface temperature (SST) from the advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) instrument flown onboard NOAA polar orbiting satellites. To accomplish this, a long-term (1990–1998), global AVHRR-buoy match-up database was created by merging the NOAA/NASA Pathfinder Atmospheres and Pathfinder Oceans data sets. The merged data set is unique in that it includes daytime estimates of aerosol optical depth (AOD) derived from AVHRR channel 1 (0.63 μm) under global conditions of significant aerosol loading. Histograms of retrieved AOD reveal monomodal, lognormal distributions for both tropospheric and stratospheric aerosol modes. It is then shown empirically that the SST depression caused under each aerosol mode can be expressed as a linear function in two predictors, these being the slant path AOD retrieved from AVHRR channel 1 along with the ratio of channels 1 and 2 normalized reflectances. On the basis of these relationships, parametric equations are derived to provide an aerosol correction for retrievals from the daytime NOAA operational multichannel and nonlinear SST algorithms. Separate sets of coefficients are utilized for two aerosol modes: tropospheric (i.e., dust, smoke, haze) and stratospheric/tropospheric (i.e., following a major volcanic eruption). The equations are shown to significantly reduce retrieved SST bias using an independent set of match-ups. Eliminating aerosol-induced bias in both real-time and retrospective processing will enhance the utility of the AVHRR SST for the general user community and in climate research.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A climatology of the structure of the low-altitude cloud field (tops below 4 km) over the Southern Ocean (40°-65°S) in the vicinity of Australia (100°-160°E) has been constructed with CloudSat products for liquid water and ice water clouds.
Abstract: A climatology of the structure of the low-altitude cloud field (tops below 4 km) over the Southern Ocean (40°–65°S) in the vicinity of Australia (100°–160°E) has been constructed with CloudSat products for liquid water and ice water clouds. Averaging over longitude and time, CloudSat produces a roughly uniform cloud field between heights of approximately 750 and 2250 m across the extent of the domain for both winter and summer. This cloud field makes a transition from consisting primarily of liquid water at the lower latitudes to ice water at the higher latitudes. This transition is primarily driven by the gradient in the temperature, which is commonly between 0° and −20°C, rather than by direct physical observation.The uniform lower boundary is a consequence of the CloudSat cloud detection algorithm being unable to reliably separate radar returns because of the bright surface versus returns due to clouds, in the lowest four range bins above the surface. This is potentially very problematic over t...

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, large-eddy simulations of trade wind cumulus clouds are conducted for clean and polluted aerosol conditions and at a number of different grid sizes to explore the microphysical and morphological responses of fields of cumulus to aerosol perturbations and the robustness of these responses to resolution.
Abstract: [1] Large-eddy simulations of trade wind cumulus clouds are conducted for clean and polluted aerosol conditions and at a number of different grid sizes to explore (1) the microphysical and morphological responses of fields of cumulus to aerosol perturbations and (2) the robustness of these responses to resolution. Cloud size distributions are shown to be well approximated by a negative power law function indicating that as resolution increases, more and more small clouds are resolved. Cloud fraction in the highest-resolution simulations is 30% higher than in the coarse-resolution simulations. Polluted cloud populations contain higher numbers of smaller clouds than clean cloud populations. Their frequency of convection is higher and lifetimes are shorter. The polluted clouds also tend to have higher cloud-averaged liquid water contents. It is hypothesized that these responses are a result of a chain reaction set off by stronger evaporation at cloud edges in the case of polluted clouds. In all cases, the smallest clouds either dominate or contribute significantly to cloud fraction and cloud reflectance, in accord with recent satellite studies. The response of cloud fraction and liquid water path to aerosol changes is shown to be strongly dependent on the definition of what constitutes a “cloud,” suggesting that caution be exercised before parameterizing these responses.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Parker and Boesch as mentioned in this paper presented the latest version (v9.0) of the University of Leicester GOSAT Proxy XCH4 dataset and found that 7.3 million of these are sufficiently cloud-free (37.6%) to process further and ultimately obtain 4.6 million (23.5%) high-quality XCH 4 observations.
Abstract: . This work presents the latest release (v9.0) of the University of Leicester GOSAT Proxy XCH4 dataset. Since the launch of the GOSAT satellite in 2009, these data have been produced by the UK National Centre for Earth Observation (NCEO) as part of the ESA Greenhouse Gas Climate Change Initiative (GHG-CCI) and Copernicus Climate Change Services (C3S) projects. With now over a decade of observations, we outline the many scientific studies achieved using past versions of these data in order to highlight how this latest version may be used in the future. We describe in detail how the data are generated, providing information and statistics for the entire processing chain from the L1B spectral data through to the final quality-filtered column-averaged dry-air mole fraction ( XCH4 ) data. We show that out of the 19.5 million observations made between April 2009 and December 2019, we determine that 7.3 million of these are sufficiently cloud-free (37.6 %) to process further and ultimately obtain 4.6 million (23.5 %) high-quality XCH4 observations. We separate these totals by observation mode (land and ocean sun glint) and by month, to provide data users with the expected data coverage, including highlighting periods with reduced observations due to instrumental issues. We perform extensive validation of the data against the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON), comparing to ground-based observations at 22 locations worldwide. We find excellent agreement with TCCON, with an overall correlation coefficient of 0.92 for the 88 345 co-located measurements. The single-measurement precision is found to be 13.72 ppb, and an overall global bias of 9.06 ppb is determined and removed from the Proxy XCH4 data. Additionally, we validate the separate components of the Proxy (namely the modelled XCO2 and the XCH4∕XCO2 ratio) and find these to be in excellent agreement with TCCON. In order to show the utility of the data for future studies, we compare against simulated XCH4 from the TM5 model. We find a high degree of consistency between the model and observations throughout both space and time. When focusing on specific regions, we find average differences ranging from just 3.9 to 15.4 ppb. We find the phase and magnitude of the seasonal cycle to be in excellent agreement, with an average correlation coefficient of 0.93 and a mean seasonal cycle amplitude difference across all regions of −0.84 ppb. These data are available at https://doi.org/10.5285/18ef8247f52a4cb6a14013f8235cc1eb ( Parker and Boesch , 2020 ) .

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare more than two weeks of radiometer neural network and radiosonde temperature and humidity soundings including clear and precipitating conditions, and show that the radiometer provided continuous temperature, humidity and liquid profiles during all weather conditions including rain, sleet and snow.

52 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20221
202173
202095
201968
201846
201785