Abstract

Abstract. Spectral radiance measurements collected in nadir and sideward viewing directions by two airborne passive solar remote sensing instruments, the Spectral Modular Airborne Radiation measurement sysTem (SMART) and the Differential Optical Absorption Spectrometer (mini-DOAS), are used to compare the remote sensing results of cirrus optical thickness τ. The comparison is based on a sensitivity study using radiative transfer simulations (RTS) and on data obtained during three airborne field campaigns: the North Atlantic Rainfall VALidation (NARVAL) mission, the Mid-Latitude Cirrus Experiment (ML-CIRRUS) and the Aerosol, Cloud, Precipitation, and Radiation Interactions and Dynamics of Convective Cloud Systems (ACRIDICON) campaign. Radiative transfer simulations are used to quantify the sensitivity of measured upward radiance I with respect to τ, ice crystal effective radius reff, viewing angle of the sensor θV, spectral surface albedo α, and ice crystal shape. From the calculations it is concluded that sideward viewing measurements are generally better suited than radiance data from the nadir direction to retrieve τ of optically thin cirrus, especially at wavelengths larger than λ = 900 nm. Using sideward instead of nadir-directed spectral radiance measurements significantly improves the sensitivity and accuracy in retrieving τ, in particular for optically thin cirrus of τ ≤ 2. The comparison of retrievals of τ based on nadir and sideward viewing radiance measurements from SMART, mini-DOAS and independent estimates of τ from an additional active remote sensing instrument, the Water Vapor Lidar Experiment in Space (WALES), shows general agreement within the range of measurement uncertainties. For the selected example a mean τ of 0.54 ± 0.2 is derived from SMART, and 0.49 ± 0.2 by mini-DOAS nadir channels, while WALES obtained a mean value of τ = 0.32 ± 0.02 at 532 nm wavelength, respectively. The mean of τ derived from the sideward viewing mini-DOAS channels is 0.26 ± 0.2. For the few simultaneous measurements, the mini-DOAS sideward channel measurements systematically underestimate (−17.6 %) the nadir observations from SMART and mini-DOAS. The agreement between mini-DOAS sideward viewing channels and WALES is better, showing the advantage of using sideward viewing measurements for cloud remote sensing for τ ≤ 1. Therefore, we suggest sideward viewing measurements for retrievals of τ of thin cirrus because of the significantly enhanced capability of sideward viewing compared to nadir measurements.

Highlights

  • The impact of cirrus on the atmospheric radiative energy budget and the Earth’s climate system is uncertain (IPCC, 2013), which is partly due to the limited knowledge about the formation and development of cirrus (Sausen et al, 2005)

  • The Water Vapor Lidar Experiment in Space Demonstrator (WALES) is an airborne Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL) with additional aerosol and cloud detection capabilities operated on the German research aircraft Falcon and High Altitude and LOng range research aircraft (HALO) (Wirth et al, 2009)

  • Since no radiometric calibration is available for mini-differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS), simultaneous measurements of SMART and mini-DOAS are used to cross-calibrate the mini-DOAS with SMART

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Summary

Introduction

The impact of cirrus on the atmospheric radiative energy budget and the Earth’s climate system is uncertain (IPCC, 2013), which is partly due to the limited knowledge about the formation and development of cirrus (Sausen et al, 2005). Retrievals of τ are based on simultaneous airborne nadir and sideward viewing observations of cirrus and are compared to elaborate the potential of sideward viewing measurements to derive optical parameters of SVC and optically thin cirrus. This includes a sensitivity study using RTS presented in Sect. Radiative transfer simulations are performed to investigate the sensitivity of solar radiance measurements in nadir and sideward viewing geometry for SVC and thin cirrus In this way the potential of sideward viewing versus nadir observations for cirrus cloud parameter detection is examined. The ice crystal scattering phase function is parameterized according to Yang et al (2013)

Wavelength sensitivity
Optical thickness and viewing angle
Influence of surface albedo
Crystal shape sensitivity
Airborne measurements
The SMART instrument
The mini-DOAS instrument
The WALES instrument
Cross-calibration
Nadir radiance
Sideward viewing radiance
Temporal stability of cross-calibration
Iterative algorithm
ML-CIRRUS case study
Time series of cirrus optical thickness
Probability distribution of cirrus optical thickness
Findings
Conclusions
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