Abstract

NASA’s Plankton, Aerosol, Clouds, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) satellite mission is scheduled to launch in 2022, with the Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) on board. For the first time reflected sunlight from the Earth across a broad spectrum from the ultraviolet (UV: 350 nm) to the short wave infrared (SWIR: 2260 nm) will be measured from a single instrument at 1 km spatial resolution. While seven discrete bands will represent the SWIR, the spectrum from 350 nm to 890 nm will be continuously covered with a spectral resolution of 5 nm. OCI will thus combine in a single instrument (and at an enhanced spatial resolution for the UV) the heritage capabilities of the MODerate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), while covering the oxygen A-band. Designed for ocean color and ocean biology retrievals, OCI also enables continuation of heritage satellite aerosol products and the development of new aerosol characterization from space. In particular the combination of MODIS and OMI characteristics allows deriving aerosol height, absorption and optical depth along with a measure of particle size distribution. This is achieved by using the traditional MODIS visible-to-SWIR wavelengths to constrain spectral aerosol optical depth and particle size. Extrapolating this information to the UV channels allows retrieval of aerosol absorption and layer height. A more direct method to derive aerosol layer height makes use of oxygen A-band absorption methods, despite the relative coarseness of the nominal 5 nm spectral resolution of OCI. Altogether the PACE mission with OCI will be an unprecedented opportunity for aerosol characterization that will continue climate data records from the past decades and propel aerosol science forward towards new opportunities.

Highlights

  • AND OVERVIEWUncertainty in Understanding Aerosol ProcessesAerosols contribute the largest uncertainties in estimating climate forcing (Boucher et al, 2013)

  • Aerosols can act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) or as ice nuclei (IN), which means that variation on the concentrations or composition of aerosols can exert an influence on cloud evolution

  • This capability through the oxygen A-band (O2A) can be mined from the single-view Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) measurements to retrieve aerosol layer height (ALH), but if it can be measured from a multi-angle instrument, such as the PACE multi-angle imaging polarimeters (MAP), information on aerosol layering in the atmosphere increases

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Summary

Introduction

AND OVERVIEWUncertainty in Understanding Aerosol ProcessesAerosols contribute the largest uncertainties in estimating climate forcing (Boucher et al, 2013). These products include spectral AOD, a measure of particle size, SSA and aerosol layer height (ALH).

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