Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models
Cloud detection is the first step of any complex satellite-based cloud retrieval. No instrument detects all clouds, and analyses that use a given satellite climatology can only discuss a specific subset of clouds. We attempt to clarify which subsets of clouds are detected in a robust way by passive...
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ftdatacite:10.17605/osf.io/3erbj 2023-05-15T13:36:44+02:00 Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models Noel, Vincent Chepfer, Helene Chiriaco, Marjolaine Winker, David Okamoto, Hajime Hagihara, Yuichiro Cesana, Gregory Lacour, Adrien 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/3erbj https://eartharxiv.org/3erbj/ unknown EarthArXiv CC-By Attribution 4.0 International Physical Sciences and Mathematics Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology Preprint Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/3erbj 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Cloud detection is the first step of any complex satellite-based cloud retrieval. No instrument detects all clouds, and analyses that use a given satellite climatology can only discuss a specific subset of clouds. We attempt to clarify which subsets of clouds are detected in a robust way by passive sensors, and which require active sensors. To do so, we identify where retrievals of Cloud Amounts (CAs), based on numerous sensors and algorithms, differ the most. We investigate large uncertainties, and confront retrievals from the CALIOP lidar, which detects semitransparent clouds and directly measures their vertical distribution, whatever the surface below. We document the cloud vertical distribution, opacity and seasonal variability where CAs from passive sensors disagree most.CALIOP CAs are larger than the passive average by +0.05 (AM) and +0.07 (PM). Over land, the +0.1 average difference rises to +0.2 over the African desert, Antarctica and Greenland, where large passive disagreements are traced to unfavorable surface conditions. Over oceans, CALIOP retrievals are closer to the average of passive retrievals except over the ITCZ (+0.1). Passive CAs disagree more in tropical areas associated with large-scale subsidence, where CALIOP observes a specific multi-layer cloud population: optically thin, high-level clouds and opaque (z>7km), shallow boundary layer clouds (z<2km).We evaluate the CA and cloud vertical distribution from 8 General Circulation Models where passive retrievals disagree and CALIOP provides new information. We find that modeled clouds are not more realistic where cloud detections from passive observations have long been robust, than where active sensors provide more reliable information. Report Antarc* Antarctica Greenland DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Greenland |
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DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) |
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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology |
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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology Noel, Vincent Chepfer, Helene Chiriaco, Marjolaine Winker, David Okamoto, Hajime Hagihara, Yuichiro Cesana, Gregory Lacour, Adrien Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
topic_facet |
Physical Sciences and Mathematics Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology |
description |
Cloud detection is the first step of any complex satellite-based cloud retrieval. No instrument detects all clouds, and analyses that use a given satellite climatology can only discuss a specific subset of clouds. We attempt to clarify which subsets of clouds are detected in a robust way by passive sensors, and which require active sensors. To do so, we identify where retrievals of Cloud Amounts (CAs), based on numerous sensors and algorithms, differ the most. We investigate large uncertainties, and confront retrievals from the CALIOP lidar, which detects semitransparent clouds and directly measures their vertical distribution, whatever the surface below. We document the cloud vertical distribution, opacity and seasonal variability where CAs from passive sensors disagree most.CALIOP CAs are larger than the passive average by +0.05 (AM) and +0.07 (PM). Over land, the +0.1 average difference rises to +0.2 over the African desert, Antarctica and Greenland, where large passive disagreements are traced to unfavorable surface conditions. Over oceans, CALIOP retrievals are closer to the average of passive retrievals except over the ITCZ (+0.1). Passive CAs disagree more in tropical areas associated with large-scale subsidence, where CALIOP observes a specific multi-layer cloud population: optically thin, high-level clouds and opaque (z>7km), shallow boundary layer clouds (z<2km).We evaluate the CA and cloud vertical distribution from 8 General Circulation Models where passive retrievals disagree and CALIOP provides new information. We find that modeled clouds are not more realistic where cloud detections from passive observations have long been robust, than where active sensors provide more reliable information. |
format |
Report |
author |
Noel, Vincent Chepfer, Helene Chiriaco, Marjolaine Winker, David Okamoto, Hajime Hagihara, Yuichiro Cesana, Gregory Lacour, Adrien |
author_facet |
Noel, Vincent Chepfer, Helene Chiriaco, Marjolaine Winker, David Okamoto, Hajime Hagihara, Yuichiro Cesana, Gregory Lacour, Adrien |
author_sort |
Noel, Vincent |
title |
Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
title_short |
Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
title_full |
Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
title_fullStr |
Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
title_full_unstemmed |
Disagreement among global cloud distributions from CALIOP, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
title_sort |
disagreement among global cloud distributions from caliop, passive satellite sensors and general circulation models |
publisher |
EarthArXiv |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/3erbj https://eartharxiv.org/3erbj/ |
geographic |
Greenland |
geographic_facet |
Greenland |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctica Greenland |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctica Greenland |
op_rights |
CC-By Attribution 4.0 International |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/3erbj |
_version_ |
1766083331901882368 |