Abstract

Abstract. Only one Clouds and Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) instrument is onboard the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP) and it has been placed in cross-track mode since launch; it is thus not possible to construct a set of angular distribution models (ADMs) specific for CERES on NPP. Edition 4 Aqua ADMs are used for flux inversions for NPP CERES measurements. However, the footprint size of NPP CERES is greater than that of Aqua CERES, as the altitude of the NPP orbit is higher than that of the Aqua orbit. Furthermore, cloud retrievals from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), which are the imagers sharing the spacecraft with NPP CERES and Aqua CERES, are also different. To quantify the flux uncertainties due to the footprint size difference between Aqua CERES and NPP CERES, and due to both the footprint size difference and cloud property difference, a simulation is designed using the MODIS pixel-level data, which are convolved with the Aqua CERES and NPP CERES point spread functions (PSFs) into their respective footprints. The simulation is designed to isolate the effects of footprint size and cloud property differences on flux uncertainty from calibration and orbital differences between NPP CERES and Aqua CERES. The footprint size difference between Aqua CERES and NPP CERES introduces instantaneous flux uncertainties in monthly gridded NPP CERES measurements of less than 4.0 W m−2 for SW (shortwave) and less than 1.0 W m−2 for both daytime and nighttime LW (longwave). The global monthly mean instantaneous SW flux from simulated NPP CERES has a low bias of 0.4 W m−2 when compared to simulated Aqua CERES, and the root-mean-square (RMS) error is 2.2 W m−2 between them; the biases of daytime and nighttime LW flux are close to zero with RMS errors of 0.8 and 0.2 W m−2. These uncertainties are within the uncertainties of CERES ADMs. When both footprint size and cloud property (cloud fraction and optical depth) differences are considered, the uncertainties of monthly gridded NPP CERES SW flux can be up to 20 W m−2 in the Arctic regions where cloud optical depth retrievals from VIIRS differ significantly from MODIS. The global monthly mean instantaneous SW flux from simulated NPP CERES has a high bias of 1.1 W m−2 and the RMS error increases to 5.2 W m−2. LW flux shows less sensitivity to cloud property differences than SW flux, with uncertainties of about 2 W m−2 in the monthly gridded LW flux, and the RMS errors of global monthly mean daytime and nighttime fluxes increase only slightly. These results highlight the importance of consistent cloud retrieval algorithms to maintain the accuracy and stability of the CERES climate data record.

Highlights

  • The Clouds and Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) project has been providing data products crucial to advancing our understanding of the effects of clouds and aerosols on radiative energy within the Earth–atmosphere system

  • As there is only one CERES instrument on National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP) and it has been placed in cross-track mode since launch, it is not possible to construct a set of angular distribution models (ADMs) specific for CERES on NPP

  • Given that the footprint size of NPP CERES is different from that of Aqua CERES, we need to quantify the NPP CERES flux uncertainty caused by using the Aqua CERES ADMs

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Summary

Introduction

The Clouds and Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) project has been providing data products crucial to advancing our understanding of the effects of clouds and aerosols on radiative energy within the Earth–atmosphere system. Cloud and aerosol retrievals based upon high-resolution imager measurements are averaged over the CERES footprints by accounting for the CERES point spread function (PSF; Smith, 1994) and are used for scene-type classification. The cloud algorithms developed by the CERES cloud working group retrieve cloud fraction, cloud optical depth, cloud phase, cloud top temperature and pressure, and cloud effective temperature and pressure (among other variables) based on MODIS pixel-level measurements (Minnis et al, 2010) These pixel-level cloud properties are spatially and temporally matched with the CERES footprints and are used to select the scene-dependent ADMs to convert the CERESmeasured radiances to fluxes (Eq 1). We design a simulation study to quantify the NPP CERES flux uncertainties due to the footprint size difference alone and due to both the footprint size and cloud property differences

Comparison between Aqua CERES and NPP CERES
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