An Overview of the CERES Radiation and Validation Experiment (CRAVE)The Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) experiment is one of the highest priority scientific satellite instruments developed for NASA’s Earth Observing System. The CERES Radiation and Validation Experiment (CRAVE) provides continuous world-class surface longwave and shortwave radiation measurements and validation of CERES and other satellite products. CRAVE consists of three sites (two active and one legacy).
The legacy site was the CERES Ocean Validation Experiment, or COVE, located at Chesapeake Light Station (36.90 N, 75.71 W), 25 km off the coast of southeastern Virginia, USA. COVE was active from 2000-2016 but was deactivated due to structural concerns. The deactivation of COVE interrupted a rare long-term ocean/water scene dataset in the Baseline Surface Radiation Network (BSRN), the gold standard for surface radiation measurements. Shortly after the closure of COVE, Granite Island (46.72 N, 87.41 W), a new water site, was discovered and has been active since the summer of 2018. Granite Island is privately owned, located in Lake Superior, approximately 20 km north of Marquette, Michigan, USA, and 10 km to the nearest land point. The other CRAVE site is in Hampton, Virginia, USA, at Nasa Langley Research Center (37.10 N, 76.38 W), a land scene, and has been operating since December 2014.
We will describe CRAVE and its importance, the uniqueness of each site and site logistics, participating networks and measurements made for radiometric, aerosol, meteorological and water skin temperature analysis. CRAVE measurements detecting smoke originating from Canadian wildfires with aerosol optical depths well over 2 and first results from a shortwave calibration round robin experiment will also be presented.