Abstract

Abstract. Part 1 of this research concluded that many conditions of the 2003 Wakasa Bay experiment were not optimal for the purpose of tomographic retrieval. Part 2 (this paper) then aims to find possible improvements to the mobile cloud tomography method using observation system simulation experiments. We demonstrate that the incorporation of the L1 norm total variation regularization in the tomographic retrieval algorithm better reproduces discontinuous structures than the widely used L2 norm Tikhonov regularization. The simulation experiments reveal that a typical ground-based mobile setup substantially outperforms an airborne one because the ground-based setup usually moves slower and has greater contrast in microwave brightness between clouds and the background. It is shown that, as expected, the error in the cloud tomography retrievals increases monotonically with both the radiometer noise level and the uncertainty in the estimate of background brightness temperature. It is also revealed that a lower speed of platform motion or a faster scanning radiometer results in more scan cycles and more overlap between the swaths of successive scan cycles, both of which help to improve the retrieval accuracy. The last factor examined is aircraft height. It is found that the optimal aircraft height is 0.5 to 1.0 km above the cloud top. To summarize, this research demonstrates the feasibility of tomographically retrieving the spatial structure of cloud liquid water using current microwave radiometric technology and provides several general guidelines to improve future field-based studies of cloud tomography.

Highlights

  • Clouds in the lower troposphere exert large influences on the Earth’s radiation budget and play a crucial role in the planet’s hydrological cycle

  • Tikhonov regularization and the other based on the total variation regularization

  • We conduct a series of observation system simulation experiments to investigate the effects of a variety of factors on the tomographic retrieval and to determine the optimal tomographic configuration and data acquisition strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Clouds in the lower troposphere exert large influences on the Earth’s radiation budget and play a crucial role in the planet’s hydrological cycle. Tomographic methods provide great potential to address the cloud observation problem It was first proposed in the 1980s that the microwave cloud tomography method can be used to retrieve three-dimensional cloud LWC by probing the thermal emission of clouds using either multiple distinctlylocated ground-based microwave radiometers or a single radiometer deployed on a mobile platform. A first investigation of this configuration was performed by Drake and Warner (1988), in which the radiometer switches automatically between two fixed antennas as the platform moves along a horizontal line passing just under a cloud They showed that the dual-antenna setup performed to a fixed ground-based setup using two scanning radiometers.

Description of methodology
Comparison of L1 and L2 regularizations
Results of sensitivity studies
Ground-based and airborne setups
Radiometer noise level
Uncertainty in the estimate of the background brightness temperature
Scan strategy
Speed of platform motion
Platform altitude
Conclusions
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