Improvements to the AERIoe Thermodynamic Profile Retrieval Algorithm

Temperature and humidity profiles in the atmospheric boundary layer (i.e., from the surface to 3 km) can be retrieved from ground-based spectral infrared observations made by the atmospheric emitted radiance interferometer (AERI) at high temporal and moderate vertical resolution. However, the retrie...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing
Main Authors: David D. Turner, W. Greg Blumberg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2018.2874968
https://doaj.org/article/8bd2f9efd1344760a1913d7a5023dc3e
Description
Summary:Temperature and humidity profiles in the atmospheric boundary layer (i.e., from the surface to 3 km) can be retrieved from ground-based spectral infrared observations made by the atmospheric emitted radiance interferometer (AERI) at high temporal and moderate vertical resolution. However, the retrieval is an ill-posed problem, and thus there are multiple thermodynamic solutions that might satisfy the observed radiances. Previous work developed a physical-iterative method called AERIoe that retrieved temperature and water vapor mixing ratio profiles from these radiance observations in both clear and cloudy conditions. The AERIoe algorithm was modified to enforce two physical constraints, namely that the derived relative humidity must be less than 100% and that the potential temperature must be monotonically increasing with height above some thin potentially subadiabatic layer after each iteration. Furthermore, additional observations including in situ surface meteorology, numerical weather prediction model output, microwave brightness temperatures, and partial profiles of water vapor from a Raman lidar were incorporated into the observation vector of the retrieval along with the infrared radiance observations. The addition of these new observations markedly improved the accuracy of the temperature profiles, especially above 2 km, and the water vapor profiles relative to radiosondes. These improvements are seen using cases from the tropics, mid-latitudes, and Arctic.