Abstract

Abstract. In order to exploit the full-earth viewing potential of satellite instruments to globally characterise aerosols, new algorithms are required to deduce key microphysical parameters like the particle size distribution and optical parameters associated with scattering and absorption from space remote sensing data. Here, a methodology based on neural networks is developed to retrieve such parameters from satellite inputs and to validate them with ground-based remote sensing data. For key combinations of input variables available from the MODerate resolution Imaging Spectro-radiometer (MODIS) and the Ozone Measuring Instrument (OMI) Level 3 data sets, a grid of 100 feed-forward neural network architectures is produced, each having a different number of neurons and training proportion. The networks are trained with principal components accounting for 98% of the variance of the inputs together with principal components formed from 38 AErosol RObotic NETwork (AERONET) Level 2.0 (Version 2) retrieved parameters as outputs. Daily averaged, co-located and synchronous data drawn from a cluster of AERONET sites centred on the peak of dust extinction in Northern Africa is used for network training and validation, and the optimal network architecture for each input parameter combination is identified with reference to the lowest mean squared error. The trained networks are then fed with unseen data at the coastal dust site Dakar to test their simulation performance. A neural network (NN), trained with co-located and synchronous satellite inputs comprising three aerosol optical depth measurements at 470, 550 and 660 nm, plus the columnar water vapour (from MODIS) and the modelled absorption aerosol optical depth at 500 nm (from OMI), was able to simultaneously retrieve the daily averaged size distribution, the coarse mode volume, the imaginary part of the complex refractive index, and the spectral single scattering albedo – with moderate precision: correlation coefficients in the range 0.368 ≤ R ≤ 0.514. The network failed to recover the spectral behaviour of the real part of the complex refractive index. This new methodological approach appears to offer some potential for moderately accurate daily retrieval of the total volume concentration of the coarse mode of aerosol at the Saharan dust peak in the area of Northern Africa.

Highlights

  • Aerosol particles reflect and absorb solar radiation in the atmosphere shading the earth’s surface

  • Motivated by the need to develop a methodology to produce global satellite retrievals of aerosol microphysical and optical parameters, and inspired by the success of recent neural network (NN) models, this paper reports on the initial phase of AEROMAP a 2-year EU-funded project that began in March 2012

  • The performance of the trained NNs was tested by feeding them with unseen case 1–4 input data at the coastal dust site Dakar in Northern Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosol particles reflect and absorb solar radiation in the atmosphere shading the earth’s surface. They reduce visibility and can have a direct effect on human health (Samet et al, 2000). They are used to determine the earth’s hydrological cycle (Remer et al, 2005). Because of inadequate quantitative knowledge of the global spatial and temporal variation of aerosol optical properties (Hansen et al, 2005), there is uncertainty in the magnitude of their contribution to the earth’s climate and planetary radiativeforcing (IPCC, 2007, 2013). Taylor et al.: Satellite retrieval of aerosol microphysical and optical parameters

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