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Airborne Sunphotometer Studies of Aerosol Properties and Effects, Including Closure Among Satellite, Suborbital Remote, and In situ MeasurementsAirborne sunphotometry has been used to measure aerosols from North America, Europe, and Africa in coordination with satellite and in situ measurements in TARFOX (1996), ACE-2 (1997), PRIDE (2000), and SAFARI 2000. Similar coordinated measurements of Asian aerosols are being conducted this spring in ACE-Asia and are planned for North American aerosols this summer in CLAMS. This paper summarizes the approaches used, key results, and implications for aerosol properties and effects, such as single scattering albedo and regional radiative forcing. The approaches exploit the three-dimensional mobility of airborne sunphotometry to access satellite scenes over diverse surfaces (including open ocean with and without sunglint) and to match exactly the atmospheric layers sampled by airborne in situ measurements and other radiometers. These measurements permit tests of the consistency, or closure, among such diverse measurements as aerosol size-resolved chemical composition; number or mass concentration; light extinction, absorption, and scattering (total, hemispheric back and 180 deg.); and radiative fluxes. In this way the airborne sunphotometer measurements provide a key link between satellite and in situ measurements that helps to understand any discrepancies that are found. These comparisons have led to several characteristic results. Typically these include: (1) Better agreement among different types of remote measurements than between remote and in situ measurements. (2) More extinction derived from transmission measurements than from in situ measurements. (3) Larger aerosol absorption inferred from flux radiometry than from in situ measurements. Aerosol intensive properties derived from these closure studies have been combined with satellite-retrieved fields of optical depth to produce fields of regional radiative forcing. We show results for the North Atlantic derived from AVHRR optical depths and aerosol intensive properties from TARFOX and ACE-2. Companion papers show analogous, preliminary results for Asian-Pacific aerosols and results of SAFARI-2000 closure studies on African aerosols.
Document ID
20010092170
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Russlee, Philip B.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Schmid, B.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Redemann, J.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Livingston, J. M.
(SRI International Corp. Menlo Park, CA United States)
Bergstrom, R. W.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Ramirez, S. A.
(Symtech Corp. United States)
Hipskind, R. Stephen
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
January 17, 2001
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Meeting Information
Meeting: 8th Scientific Assembly International Asssociation of Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences
Location: Innsbruck
Country: Austria
Start Date: July 10, 2001
End Date: July 18, 2001
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 291-01-91-45
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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