15 research outputs found
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The ARM Mobile Facility and its first international deployment: measuring radiative flux divergence in West Africa
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Observations of the diurnal cycle of outgoing longwave radiation from the Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget instrument
The Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget instrument on Meteosat-8, located over Africa, provides unprecedented temporal sampling (~17 minutes) of the broadband emitted thermal and reflected solar radiances. We analyse the diurnal cycle of the outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) fluxes derived from the thermal radiances for July 2006. Principal component (PC) analysis separates the signals of the surface temperature response to solar heating and of the development of convective clouds. The first two PCs explain most of the OLR variations: PC1 (surface heating) explains 82.3% of the total variance and PC2 (cloud development) explains 12.8% of the variance. Convection is initiated preferentially over mountainous regions and the cloud then advects downstream in the ambient flow. Diurnal variations are much weaker over the oceans, but a coherent signal over the Gulf of Guinea suggests that the cloudiness is modulated by the diurnally varying contrast between the Gulf and the adjacent land mass
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Evaluation of the Met Office global forecast model using Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget (GERB) data
Simulations of the top-of-atmosphere radiative-energy budget from the Met Office global numerical weather-prediction model are evaluated using new data from the Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget (GERB) instrument on board the Meteosat-8 satellite. Systematic discrepancies between the model simulations and GERB measurements greater than 20 Wm-2 in outgoing long-wave radiation (OLR) and greater than 60 Wm-2 in reflected short-wave radiation (RSR) are identified over the period April-September 2006 using 12 UTC data. Convective cloud over equatorial Africa is spatially less organized and less reflective than in the GERB data. This bias depends strongly on convective-cloud cover, which is highly sensitive to changes in the model convective parametrization. Underestimates in model OLR over the Gulf of Guinea coincide with unrealistic southerly cloud outflow from convective centres to the north. Large overestimates in model RSR over the subtropical ocean, greater than 50 Wm-2 at 12 UTC, are explained by unrealistic radiative properties of low-level cloud relating to overestimation of cloud liquid water compared with independent satellite measurements. The results of this analysis contribute to the development and improvement of parametrizations in the global forecast model
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Exploitation of Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget data using simulations from a numerical weather prediction model: Methodology and data validation
We describe a new methodology for comparing satellite radiation budget data with a numerical weather prediction (NWP) model. This is applied to data from the Geostationary Earth Radiation Budget (GERB) instrument on Meteosat-8. The methodology brings together, in near-real time, GERB broadband shortwave and longwave fluxes with simulations based on analyses produced by the Met Office global NWP model. Results for the period May 2003 to February 2005 illustrate the progressive improvements in the data products as various initial problems were resolved. In most areas the comparisons reveal systematic errors in the model's representation of surface properties and clouds, which are discussed elsewhere. However, for clear-sky regions over the oceans the model simulations are believed to be sufficiently accurate to allow the quality of the GERB fluxes themselves to be assessed and any changes in time of the performance of the instrument to be identified. Using model and radiosonde profiles of temperature and humidity as input to a single-column version of the model's radiation code, we conduct sensitivity experiments which provide estimates of the expected model errors over the ocean of about Ā±5ā10 W mā2 in clear-sky outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) and Ā±0.01 in clear-sky albedo. For the more recent data the differences between the observed and modeled OLR and albedo are well within these error estimates. The close agreement between the observed and modeled values, particularly for the most recent period, illustrates the value of the methodology. It also contributes to the validation of the GERB products and increases confidence in the quality of the data, prior to their release
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U.K. HiGEM: Simulations of desert dust and biomass burning aerosols with a high-resolution atmospheric GCM
The atmospheric component of the United Kingdomās new High-resolution Global Environmental Model
(HiGEM) has been run with interactive aerosol schemes that include biomass burning and mineral dust. Dust
emission, transport, and deposition are parameterized within the model using six particle size divisions, which
are treated independently. The biomass is modeled in three nonindependent modes, and emissions are
prescribed from an external dataset. The model is shown to produce realistic horizontal and vertical distributions
of these aerosols for each season when compared with available satellite- and ground-based observations
and with other models. Combined aerosol optical depths off the coast of North Africa exceed 0.5 both
in boreal winter, when biomass is the main contributor, and also in summer, when the dust dominates. The
model is capable of resolving smaller-scale features, such as dust storms emanating from the BodeĀ“ leĀ“ and
Saharan regions of North Africa and the wintertime BodeĀ“ leĀ“ low-level jet. This is illustrated by February and
July case studies, in which the diurnal cycles of model variables in relation to dust emission and transport are
examined. The top-of-atmosphere annual mean radiative forcing of the dust is calculated and found to be
globally quite small but locally very large, exceeding 20 W m22 over the Sahara, where inclusion of dust
aerosol is shown to improve the model radiative balance. This work extends previous aerosol studies by
combining complexity with increased global resolution and represents a step toward the next generation of
models to investigate aerosolāclimate interactions.
1. Introduction
Accurate modeling of mineral dust is known to be
important because of its radiative impact in both numerical
weather prediction models (Milton et al. 2008;
Haywood e
Observations of the Earth's Radiation Budget in relation to atmospheric hydrology: 4. Atmospheric column radiative cooling over the world's oceans
This paper introduces a simple method for deriving climatological values of the longwave flux emitted from the clear sky atmosphere to the iceāfree ocean surface. Simulations of the clear sky longwave fluxes to space and to the surface are employed in this study to assist in the development of this flux retrieval which requires monthly averaged columnāintegrated water vapor w and the clear sky topāofāatmosphere (TOA) outgoing longwave flux (both available from satellite measurements). It is shown using both theory and data from simulations how the ratio of the surface to TOA flux is a simple function of w and a validation of the simple relationship is presented based on a limited set of surface flux measurements. The rms difference between the retrieved surface fluxes and the simulated surface fluxes is approximately 6 W mā2. The clear sky column cooling rate of the atmosphere is derived from the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) values of the clear sky TOA flux and the surface flux retrieved using Special Scanning Microwave Imager (SSM/I) measurements of w together with ERBE clear sky fluxes. The relationship between this column cooling rate, w, and the sea surface temperature (SST) is explored and it is shown how the cooling rate systematically increases as both w and SST increase. The uncertainty implied in these estimates of cooling are approximately Ā±0.2 K dā1. The effects of clouds on this longwave cooling are also explored in a limited way by placing bounds on the possible impact of clouds on the column cooling rate based on certain assumptions about the effect of clouds on the longwave flux to the surface. While a more global assessment of the cloud effect must await use of new satellite data that will allow us to estimate the contributions by clouds to these surface fluxes, it is shown in this paper how the longwave effects of clouds in a moist atmosphere where the column water vapor exceeds approximately 30 kg mā2 may be estimated from presently available satellite data with an uncertainty estimated to be approximately 0.2 K dā1. Based on an approach described in this paper, we show how clouds in these relatively moist regions decrease the column cooling by almost 50% of the clear sky values and the existence of significant longitudinal gradients in column radiative heating across the equatorial and subtropical Pacific Ocean
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Observations of the impact of a major Saharan dust storm on the Earth's radiation balance
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Evidence for large decadal variability in the tropical mean radiative energy budget
It is widely assumed that variations in Earth's radiative energy budget at large time and space scales are small. We present new evidence from a compilation of over two decades of accurate satellite data that the top-of-atmosphere (TOA) tropical radiative energy budget is much more dynamic and variable than previously thought. Results indicate that the radiation budget changes are caused by changes in tropical mean cloudiness. The results of several current climate model simulations fail to predict this large observed variation in tropical energy budget. The missing variability in the models highlights the critical need to improve cloud modeling in the tropics so that prediction of tropical climate on interannual and decadal time scales can be improved.</jats:p