Abstract
AbstractOur longest, stable record of cloud‐top pressure (CTP) and cloud‐top height (CTH) are derived from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and Multi‐Angle Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) on Terra. Because of single cloud‐layer assumptions in their standard algorithms, they provide only single CTP/CTH retrievals in multi‐layered situations. In the predominant multi‐layered regime of thin cirrus over low clouds, MODIS significantly overestimates cirrus CTP and emissivity, while MISR accurately retrieves low‐cloud CTH. Utilizing these complementary capabilities, we develop a retrieval algorithm for accurately determining both‐layer CTP and cirrus emissivity for such 2‐layered clouds, by applying the MISR low‐cloud CTH as a boundary condition to a modified MODIS CO2‐slicing retrieval. We evaluate our 2‐layered retrievals against collocated Cloud‐Aerosol Transport System (CATS) lidar observations. Relative to CATS, the mean bias of the upper cloud CTP and emissivity are reduced by ∼90% and ∼75% respectively in the new technique, compared to standard MODIS products. We develop an error model for the 2‐layered retrieval accounting for systematic and random errors. We find up to 87% of all residuals lie within modeled 95% confidence intervals, indicating a near‐closure of error budget. This reduction in error leads to a reduction in modeled atmospheric longwave radiative flux biases ranging between 5 and 40 W m−2, depending on the position and optical properties of the layers. Given this large radiative impact, we recommend that the pixel‐level 2‐layered MODIS + MISR fusion algorithm be applied over the entire MISR swath for the 22‐year Terra record, leading to a first‐of‐its‐kind 2‐layered cloud climatology from Terra's morning orbit.
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