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Comparisons of Bispectral and Polarimetric Retrievals of Marine Boundary Layer Cloud Microphysics: Case Studies Using a LES-Satellite Retrieval SimulatorMany passive remote-sensing techniques have been developed to retrieve cloud microphysical properties from satellite-based sensors, with the most common approaches being the bispectral and polarimetric techniques. These two vastly different retrieval techniques have been implemented for a variety of polar-orbiting and geostationary satellite platforms, providing global climatological data sets. Prior instrument comparison studies have shown that there are systematic differences between the droplet size retrieval products (effective radius) of bispectral (e.g., MODIS, Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) and polarimetric (e.g., POLDER, Polarization and Directionality of Earth's Reflectances) instruments. However, intercomparisons of airborne bispectral and polarimetric instruments have yielded results that do not appear to be systematically biased relative to one another. Diagnosing this discrepancy is complicated, because it is often difficult for instrument intercomparison studies to isolate differences between retrieval technique sensitivities and specific instrumental differences such as calibration and atmospheric correction. In addition to these technical differences the polarimetric retrieval is also sensitive to the dispersion of the droplet size distribution (effective variance), which could influence the interpretation of the droplet size retrieval. To avoid these instrument-dependent complications, this study makes use of a cloud remote-sensing retrieval simulator. Created by coupling a large-eddy simulation (LES) cloud model with a 1-D radiative transfer model, the simulator serves as a test bed for understanding differences between bispectral and polarimetric retrievals. With the help of this simulator we can not only compare the two techniques to one another (retrieval intercomparison) but also validate retrievals directly against the LES cloud properties. Using the satellite retrieval simulator, we are able to verify that at high spatial resolution (50 m) the bispectral and polarimetric retrievals are highly correlated with one another within expected observational uncertainties. The relatively small systematic biases at high spatial resolution can be attributed to different sensitivity limitations of the two retrievals. In contrast, a systematic difference between the two retrievals emerges at coarser resolution. This bias largely stems from differences related to sensitivity of the two retrievals to unresolved inhomogeneities in effective variance and optical thickness. The influence of coarse angular resolution is found to increase uncertainty in the polarimetric retrieval but generally maintains a constant mean value.
Document ID
20180004726
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Miller, Daniel J.
(Maryland Univ. Baltimore County Baltimore, MD, United States)
Zhang, Zhibo
(Maryland Univ. Baltimore County Baltimore, MD, United States)
Platnick, Steven
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Ackerman, Andrew S.
(NASA Goddard Inst. for Space Studies New York, NY, United States)
Werner, Frank
(Maryland Univ. Baltimore County Baltimore, MD, United States)
Cornet, Celine
(Universite des Sciences et Techniques de Lille Flandres Artois Villeneuve D'Ascq, France)
Knobelspiesse, Kirk
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 28, 2018
Publication Date
June 26, 2018
Publication Information
Publication: Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Publisher: European Geosciences Union (EGU)
Volume: 11
Issue: 6
ISSN: 1867-1381
e-ISSN: 1867-8548
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN58435
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX15AT34A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
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