1 / 15

Marine Boundary Layer Cloud-top Altitude Analysis From Satellite Measurements

Marine Boundary Layer Cloud-top Altitude Analysis From Satellite Measurements. Mary Jordan Phil Durkee Department of Meteorology Naval Postgraduate School Research Sponsor: SPAWAR. BACIMO 2003 Conference Monterey, CA 9-11 September 2003. SEMEO Project.

fynn
Download Presentation

Marine Boundary Layer Cloud-top Altitude Analysis From Satellite Measurements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marine Boundary Layer Cloud-top Altitude Analysis From Satellite Measurements Mary Jordan Phil Durkee Department of Meteorology Naval Postgraduate School Research Sponsor: SPAWAR BACIMO 2003 Conference Monterey, CA 9-11 September 2003

  2. SEMEO Project • Estimation of marine cloud-top height is one element of the project Satellite-Derived Marine Atmospheric Boundary Layer and EM/EO Properties (SEMEO). • SEMEO Purpose: to estimate the location and strength of elevated ducts in coastal and open ocean regions. • Marine stratus unobscured by upper level clouds • The cloud-top height is the Optimum Coupling Height (OCH) for an elevated duct (Helvey, 2000). • Technique is applied to NPOES and GOES satellites

  3. NPS Cloud-Top Height Algorithm • The cloud-top height algorithm used in SEMEO was developed in the MS Thesis of LT Blake McBride, USN (June 2000). • Inputs: • IR cloud-top temperature (11 micron, Channel 4) • Surface Temperature

  4. NPS Cloud-Top Height Algorithm • Assumptions: • Constant vertical cloud fraction in the boundary layer • Vertical cloud fraction is related to cloud-top height. • Deep boundary layers (> 400 m): top 1/3 is cloud • Shallow boundary layers (< 400 m): top 2/3 is cloud • Use dry adiabatic lapse rate to estimate depth of cloud-free boundary layer. • Use moist adiabatic lapse rate to estimate depth of clouds in boundary layer.

  5. Strong Subsidence Pseudo-Adiabatic Lapse Rate Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate TS DT = TCT - TS TCT Inversion Marine Stratocumulus LCL Ocean

  6. Validation Cases • FIRE (1987): 9 cases • Rawinsonde • Measured SST • NPOES • MAST (1994): 15 cases • Rawinsonde • Measured SST or Air Temperature • NPOES • CARMA (2002): 29 cases • Aircraft profile • NAVO "K10" SST Field • 0.1 degree resolution • NPOES and GOES

  7. GOES-10 1915 UTC 28 August 2002

  8. NAVO Sea-Surface Temperature28 August 2002

  9. Comparison Measured vs. Estimated28 August 2002 Cloud Top Cloud Base

  10. Verification Statistics RMS Difference Fire: 66.2 m Mast: 108.6 m Carma: 81.8 m All Cases:88.0 m

  11. GOES-10 1930 UTC 31 August 2002

  12. NAVO Sea-Surface Temperature31 August 2002

  13. Comparison Measured vs. Estimated31 August 2002 Cloud Top Cloud Base • Warm SST under the cloud is not representative of the surface air temperature which generated the cloud. • Possible explanations: • SST field is inaccurate. • Boundary layer developed along a trajectory that crosses a strong SST gradient (from cold to warm)

  14. SEMEO Automation Process Map 11-km SST field to AVHRR or GOES domains (1 km or 4 km) Identify Low Cloud Area in 1-km AVHRR or 4-km GOES; output field is Cloud-Top Temperature Add Estimates of Refractivity Profile to Height Field Compute Cloud-Top Height on 1-km or 4-km domain

  15. Summary & Future • 88 meter RMS height difference for 53 cases is promising. • These cases were chosen to show algorithm performance under the best conditions. • There was good agreement between NPOES and GOES height estimates on each day (not shown). • Improve the surface temperature estimate. • Use back trajectory to compute a weighted average of the SST • Should improve results in vicinity of SST gradients • Validate with additional existing cases.

More Related