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Michael D. King NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

The Role of Aerosols in Cloud Growth, Suppression, and Precipitation: Yoram Kaufman and his Contributions. Aerosol optical & microphysical properties Ground-based sunphotometer measurements Optical thickness Size distribution & absorption properties Aircraft remote sensing

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Michael D. King NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

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  1. The Role of Aerosols in Cloud Growth, Suppression, and Precipitation:Yoram Kaufman and his Contributions • Aerosol optical & microphysical properties • Ground-based sunphotometer measurements • Optical thickness • Size distribution & absorption properties • Aircraft remote sensing • SCAR-B and field validation/prototyping • Satellite remote sensing • Dense dark vegetation • Spectral surface albedo characterization • MODIS aerosol over land • Cloud-aerosol interaction • Relationship between absorbing and nonabsorbing aerosol & cloud formation, cloud cover, and optical properties Michael D. King NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

  2. Surface Measurements of Sun/Sky Radiation(B. N. Holben, T. F. Eck, I. Slutsker et al. – NASA GSFC) AERONET • Automatic recording and transmitting sun/sky photometers • Data Base: Aerosol optical thickness, size distribution, phase function, optical properties, and precipitable water • Collaborative: NASA – instruments/sites and centralized calibration & database • Non-NASA – instruments/sites Holben et al. (1998) 589 citations

  3. AERONET-An Internationally Federated Network (B. N. Holben, T. F. Eck, O. Dubovik, A. Smirnov et al. – NASA GSFC) • Characterization of aerosol optical properties • Validation of satellite aerosol retrievals and model predictions • Near real-time acquisition; long term measurements • aeronet.gsfc.nasa.gov Holben et al. (1998) 589 citations

  4. Aerosol Climatology from AERONET(O. Dubovik, B. N. Holben, T. F. Eck, A. Smirnov et al. - GSFC) Cooling Hansen et al. (1997) Heating Dubovik et al. (2002) 256 citations

  5. Difference between the Reflection Function and Surface Reflectance as a function of Agand 0(Y. J. Kaufman and R. S. Fraser – NASA GSFC) Retrieval of a • Optical thickness increases with a for dark surfaces • Optical thickness decreases with a for bright surfaces • There is a critical Ag where reflection function is insensitive to a • depends on single scattering albedo Fraser and Kaufman (1985) 83 citations

  6. Aerosol Effects on Reflected Radiation over Land (M. D. King, Y. J. Kaufman, D. Tanré, T. Nakajima – GSFC, Lille, Tokyo) Biomass burning Cuiabá, Brazil (August 25, 1995) R = 0.66 µm G = 0.55 µm B = 0.47 µm R = 1.6 µm G = 1.2 µm B = 2.1 µm Ag (2.1 µm) < 0.10 0.10 < Ag (2.1 µm) < 0.15 0 = 36° 20 km 12 km King et al. (1999) 155 citations

  7. Surface Reflectance at Near-Infrared Wavelengths(Y. J. Kaufman, A. Wald, L. A. Remer et al. – NASA GSFC, U. Lille) • Surface reflectance is high at 2.2 µm, moderate at 0.66 µm, and low at 0.49 µm • The aerosol effect on reflected solar radiation is small at 2.2 µm and large at 0.49 µm • MODIS operational algorithm over land assumes Ag(0.47 µm) = 0.5Ag(0.66 µm) = 0.25Ag(2.1 µm) Kaufman et al. (1997) 82 citations

  8. Dynamic Aerosol Models(L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman and B. N. Holben – NASA GSFC) • Accumulation mode particles (r < 0.3 µm) • mostly organic smoke particles or sulfates • depend on optical thickness • Aerosol-free troposphere plus stratospheric aerosol (0.3 µm < r < 0.8 µm) • Maritime salt particles in the mid-Atlantic region (0.8 µm < r < 2.5 µm) • Coarse particles (r > 2.5 µm) King et al. (1999) 155 citations

  9. Remote Sensing of Aerosol over Land: SCAR-B(D. A. Chu, Y. J. Kaufman, L. A. Remer, B. N. Holben – NASA GSFC) Brazil (August-September 1995) • Spectral optical thickness derived from MAS • Intercomparison with ground-based AERONET • Dot-dashed lines are the retrieval error (Dta = 0.05 ± 0.2ta) anticipated using the MODIS aerosol optical thickness retrieval algorithm Chu et al. (1998) 24 citations

  10. Spectral Variability of Urban Ecosystem(E. G. Moody, M. D. King, C. B. Schaaf, S. Platnick - GSFC, Boston U.) January - June Moody et al. (2005)

  11. Remote Sensing of Aerosol over Ocean: TARFOX(D. Tanré, L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman et al. – U. Lille, NASA GSFC) Atlantic Ocean (July 1996) • Spectral optical thickness derived from MAS using the MODIS at-launch algorithm • Aerosol optical thickness measured by the sunphotometer (AATS-6) aboard the University of Washington C-131A aircraft Tanré et al. (1999) 38 citations

  12. Validation of Aerosol Retrievals over Ocean: TARFOX(D. Tanré, L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman et al. – U. Lille, NASA GSFC) Retrieval of a • Spectral optical thickness derived from MAS using MODIS at-launch algorithm • Aerosol optical thickness measured by the sunphotometer (AATS-6) aboard the University of Washington C-131A aircraft Tanré et al. (1999) 38 citations King et al. (1999) 155 citations

  13. How well does Terra Represent the Daily Average?(Y. J. Kaufman, B. N. Holben, D. Tanré et al. - NASA GSFC, Univ. Lille) AERONET analysis of a • Scatter plot of the daily ratio of a during Terra overpass time to the daily average • no systematic bias • No diurnal bias observed in Ångström exponent or column water vapor 1.5 1.0 0.5 1.0 Ratio of parameter for Terra/whole day 0.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 0.5 1.0 1.5 Terra aerosol optical thickness (550 nm) Kaufman et al. (2000) 32 citations

  14. MODIS Aerosol Product(Y. J. Kaufman, L. A. Remer, D. Tanré - NASA GSFC, Univ. Lille) • Seven MODIS bands are utilized to derive aerosol properties • 0.47, 0.55, 0.65, 0.86, 1.24, 1.64, and 2.13 µm • Ocean • reflectance contrast between cloud-free atmosphere and ocean reflectance (dark) • aerosol optical thickness (0.55-2.13 µm) • size distribution characteristics (fraction of aerosol optical thickness in the fine particle mode; effective radius) • Land • dense dark vegetation and semi-arid regions determined where aerosol is most transparent (2.13 µm) • contrast between Earth-atmosphere reflectance and that for dense dark vegetation surface (0.47 and 0.66 µm) • aerosol optical thickness (0.47 and 0.66 µm) • fraction of aerosol optical thickness in the fine particle mode Tanré et al. (1997) 190 citations Kaufman et al. (1997) 179 citations

  15. Terra/MODIS Aerosol Optical Thickness (Y. J. Kaufman, L. A. Remer, D. Tanré - NASA GSFC, Univ. Lille) May 4, 2001 True Color Composite (0.65, 0.56, 0.47) Aerosol Optical Thickness sunglint 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 ta (0.56 µm) King et al. (2003) 97 citations

  16. MODIS Monthly Mean Aerosol Optical Thickness(Y. J. Kaufman, D. Tanré, O. Boucher – NASA GSFC, U. Lille) Terra September 2000 • Fine Mode • Industrial pollution • US, Europe, China, India • Smoke from biomass burning • South America (Brazil, Bolivia) • Southern Africa (Angola, Zambia) • Australia, Borneo • Coarse Mode • Desert dust • Sahara, Arabian Sea • Sea salt • Southern ocean Kaufman et al. (2002) 195 citations

  17. Terra/MODIS Global Aerosol Optical Properties (Y. J. Kaufman, L. A. Remer, and D. Tanré – NASA GSFC, U. Lille) Fine Mode vs Coarse Mode Aerosol August 30, 2001 90 45 Latitude 0 -45 -90 0 Longitude 1.0 Fine Aerosol Fraction 0.0 0.0 0.25 0.5 Aerosol Optical Thickness Aerosol Optical Thickness

  18. Monthly Mean Aerosol Optical Properties(L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman, and D. Tanré et al. – GSFC, U. Lille) April 2005 (Collection 5) Aqua

  19. Zonal Mean Aerosol Optical Thickness(L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman, and D. Tanré et al. – GSFC, U. Lille) April 2005 (Collection 5 vs Collection 4) Aqua

  20. Zonal Mean Aerosol Fine Mode Fraction(L. A. Remer, Y. J. Kaufman, and D. Tanré et al. – GSFC, U. Lille) April 2005 (Collection 5) Aqua

  21. Effect of Smoke and Dust on Shallow Clouds(Y. J. Kaufman, I. Koren, L. A. Remer, D. Rosenfeld, Y. Rudich –GSFC, Hebrew U., Weizmann Inst.) • Aerosols Dust and sea salt a(fine mode)/a(total) < 0.50 pollution dust Pollution and smoke a(fine mode)/a(total) > 0.50 smoke sea salt • Clouds convective Deep convective clouds pc < 300 hPa mixed Mixed 640 hPa < pc < 300 hPa Low-level stratiform clouds pc > 640 hPa stratiform Kaufman et al. (2005) 22 citations

  22. Effect of Smoke and Dust on Shallow Clouds(Y. J. Kaufman, I. Koren, L. A. Remer, D. Rosenfeld, Y. Rudich –GSFC, Hebrew U., Weizmann Inst.) June - August 2002 Aerosol indirect effects • Increase in stratiform cloud cover with an increase in aerosol concentration • Lower concentration of aerosols associated with larger effective radius • Assessed the impact of meteorology and how it varies as opposed to aerosol properties • The aerosol forcing corresponding to the increase in cloud cover is ~ 6 W/m2 in the June-Aug period over the Atlantic Ocean 5°-30°N 5°-30°N 20°S-5°N 20°S-5°N Kaufman et al. (2005) 22 citations

  23. Publications on ‘MODIS’ AND ‘Aerosol’(Y. J. Kaufman – NASA GSFC) Publications on ‘MODIS’ AND ‘Aerosol’ Year

  24. Summary and Conclusions • Aerosol properties & their impact on climate pioneered by Yoram Kaufman • Atmospheric correction and calibration of satellite sensors • Dense dark vegetation and retrievals of aerosol optical properties over land • Visionary in establishing a multiyear spectral aerosol climatology, later supplanted by worldwide AERONET ground-based sun/sky radiometers • Aerosol effect on negating influence of CO2 increases in Earth’s atmosphere • Satellite algorithms for aerosol optical thickness and fine mode fraction • Effects of aerosols on cloud suppression, optical properties, and precipitation • Key publications that have had a long and influential role in aerosol science • Holben, B. N. et al., 1998: AERONET—A federated network. Remote Sens. Environ., 66, 1-16.[591 citations] • King, M. D., Y. J. Kaufman, W. P. Menzel, and D. Tanré, 1992: Remote sensing of cloud, aerosol, and water vapor properties from MODIS. IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sens., 30, 2-27.[245 citations] • Kaufman, Y. J., D. Tanré, and O. Boucher, 1978: A satellite view of aerosols in the climate system. Nature, 419, 16971-16988.[192 citations] • Published over 200 papers with over 7500 citations • 412 different co-authors

  25. Dr. Yoram J. KaufmanRadiative transfer, aerosol remote sensing, aerosol-cloud interactions, colleague and friend

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