Abstract
Abstract. Statistics on the occurrence of clear skies, ice clouds, and mixed-phase clouds over Concordia Station, in the Antarctic Plateau, are provided for multiple timescales and analyzed in relation to simultaneous meteorological parameters measured at the surface. Results are obtained by applying a machine learning cloud identification and classification (CIC) code to 4 years of measurements between 2012–2015 of downwelling high-spectral-resolution radiances, measured by the Radiation Explorer in the Far Infrared – Prototype for Applications and Development (REFIR-PAD) spectroradiometer. The CIC algorithm is optimized for Antarctic sky conditions and results in a total hit rate of almost 0.98, where 1.0 is a perfect score, for the identification of the clear-sky, ice cloud, and mixed-phase cloud classes. Scene truth is provided by lidar measurements that are concurrent with REFIR-PAD. The CIC approach demonstrates the key role of far-infrared spectral measurements for clear–cloud discrimination and for cloud phase classification. Mean annual occurrences are 72.3 %, 24.9 %, and 2.7 % for clear sky, ice clouds, and mixed-phase clouds, respectively, with an inter-annual variability of a few percent. The seasonal occurrence of clear sky shows a minimum in winter (66.8 %) and maxima (75 %–76 %) during intermediate seasons. In winter the mean surface temperature is about 9 ∘C colder in clear conditions than when ice clouds are present. Mixed-phase clouds are observed only in the warm season; in summer they amount to more than one-third of total observed clouds. Their occurrence is correlated with warmer surface temperatures. In the austral summer, the mean surface air temperature is about 5 ∘C warmer when clouds are present than in clear-sky conditions. This difference is larger during the night than in daylight hours, likely due to increased solar warming. Monthly mean results are compared to cloud occurrence and fraction derived from gridded (Level 3) satellite products from both passive and active sensors. The differences observed among the considered products and the CIC results are analyzed in terms of footprint sizes and sensors' sensitivities to cloud optical and geometrical features. The comparison highlights the ability of the CIC–REFIR-PAD synergy to identify multiple cloud conditions and study their variability at different timescales.
Highlights
The polar regions present several challenges for meteorology and climatology studies (Walsh et al, 2018)
It is possible to incur in situations in which a very thin layer of liquid water is close to a thicker ice layer, and the spectral signal measured at the ground is interpreted by the CIC algorithm as exiting from an ice cloud
Low values of lidar depolarization together with large values of the backscattering signal indicate the presence of liquid water phase in the cloud layer, while high depolarization values are observed in the presence of ice clouds
Summary
The polar regions present several challenges for meteorology and climatology studies (Walsh et al, 2018). The measurements are performed by means of the Radiation Explorer in the Far Infrared – Prototype for Applications and Development (REFIR-PAD) Fourier transform spectroradiometer (Bianchini et al, 2019) in the scope of the projects Radiative Properties of Water Vapor and Clouds in Antarctica (PRANA) and Concordia Multi-Process Atmospheric Studies (CoMPASs), within the Italian National Program for Research in Antarctica (PNRA; Palchetti et al, 2015) These projects represent the first long-term field campaigns to collect high-spectral-resolution radiances in the FIR, with continuity for an extended period (measurements started in 2012). The lidar detects backscattering and depolarization signals up to 7 km above the surface Besides these measurements, the Antarctic Meteo-Climatological Observatory installed at Concordia (http://www.climantartide.it/, last access: 14 September 2021) provides data from an automatic weather station (AWS) and from daily radiosonde launches.
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