Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.

Clouds are poorly represented in climate models. This has been attributed to factors that include simulating too little cloud cover and under-representing the amount of supercooled liquid water in clouds. This leads to biases the cloud radiative effect, which in turn causes a positive shortwave radi...

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Main Author: McErlich, Cameron
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: University of Canterbury 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10092/100746
https://doi.org/10.26021/946
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spelling ftunivcanter:oai:ir.canterbury.ac.nz:10092/100746 2023-05-15T18:25:03+02:00 Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean. McErlich, Cameron 2020 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10092/100746 https://doi.org/10.26021/946 English en eng University of Canterbury https://hdl.handle.net/10092/100746 http://dx.doi.org/10.26021/946 All Rights Reserved https://canterbury.libguides.com/rights/theses Theses / Dissertations 2020 ftunivcanter https://doi.org/10.26021/946 2022-09-08T13:28:12Z Clouds are poorly represented in climate models. This has been attributed to factors that include simulating too little cloud cover and under-representing the amount of supercooled liquid water in clouds. This leads to biases the cloud radiative effect, which in turn causes a positive shortwave radiation bias over the Southern Ocean, where too much sunlight is hitting the surface of the ocean. This thesis presents an analysis of the 2BCL5 and DAR- DAR satellite datasets, as well as comparison with the ground based AWARE dataset. This work was undertaken with the aim of collecting and comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud to develop a representation of the vertical structure of clouds and their phase over the Southern Ocean. Comparisons between 2BCL5 and DARDAR found that the two display differences in the amount of cloud observed. 2BCL5 detects more clouds than DARDAR, except below 1 km where DARDAR shows a greater amount of cloud. The two also show differences in their partitioning between the ice, mixed and liquid cloud phases. 2BCL5 always detects more mixed phase cloud while DARDAR mostly classifies as either ice or liquid phase. This was found to be due to differences in the way the datasets classify cloud; 2BCL5 will generalise a whole cloud layer as mixed phase cloud if it detects both ice and supercooled liquid water while DARDAR will classify the parts of cloud that are ice, liquid, and mixed phase separately. Comparisons between 2BCL5/DARDAR and AWARE find that 2BCL5 matches better with AWARE than DARDAR does. Between 1.5 km and 4.5 km 2BCL5 agrees with AWARE while DARDAR shows a greater spread. These differences were found to be statistically significant. Below 1.5 km neither satellite dataset matches better with AWARE, even though DARDAR sees more cloud below 1km than 2BCL5. DARDAR seeing more cloud can likely be attributed to a greater amount of false positives where DARDAR is classifying noise in the radar signal incorrectly as cloud. Above 7 km neither 2BCL5 or DARDAR does a ... Other/Unknown Material Southern Ocean University of Canterbury, Christchurch: UC Research Repository Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of Canterbury, Christchurch: UC Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunivcanter
language English
description Clouds are poorly represented in climate models. This has been attributed to factors that include simulating too little cloud cover and under-representing the amount of supercooled liquid water in clouds. This leads to biases the cloud radiative effect, which in turn causes a positive shortwave radiation bias over the Southern Ocean, where too much sunlight is hitting the surface of the ocean. This thesis presents an analysis of the 2BCL5 and DAR- DAR satellite datasets, as well as comparison with the ground based AWARE dataset. This work was undertaken with the aim of collecting and comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud to develop a representation of the vertical structure of clouds and their phase over the Southern Ocean. Comparisons between 2BCL5 and DARDAR found that the two display differences in the amount of cloud observed. 2BCL5 detects more clouds than DARDAR, except below 1 km where DARDAR shows a greater amount of cloud. The two also show differences in their partitioning between the ice, mixed and liquid cloud phases. 2BCL5 always detects more mixed phase cloud while DARDAR mostly classifies as either ice or liquid phase. This was found to be due to differences in the way the datasets classify cloud; 2BCL5 will generalise a whole cloud layer as mixed phase cloud if it detects both ice and supercooled liquid water while DARDAR will classify the parts of cloud that are ice, liquid, and mixed phase separately. Comparisons between 2BCL5/DARDAR and AWARE find that 2BCL5 matches better with AWARE than DARDAR does. Between 1.5 km and 4.5 km 2BCL5 agrees with AWARE while DARDAR shows a greater spread. These differences were found to be statistically significant. Below 1.5 km neither satellite dataset matches better with AWARE, even though DARDAR sees more cloud below 1km than 2BCL5. DARDAR seeing more cloud can likely be attributed to a greater amount of false positives where DARDAR is classifying noise in the radar signal incorrectly as cloud. Above 7 km neither 2BCL5 or DARDAR does a ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author McErlich, Cameron
spellingShingle McErlich, Cameron
Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
author_facet McErlich, Cameron
author_sort McErlich, Cameron
title Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
title_short Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
title_full Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
title_fullStr Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
title_full_unstemmed Comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the Southern Ocean.
title_sort comparing satellite and ground based observations of cloud over the southern ocean.
publisher University of Canterbury
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10092/100746
https://doi.org/10.26021/946
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10092/100746
http://dx.doi.org/10.26021/946
op_rights All Rights Reserved
https://canterbury.libguides.com/rights/theses
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26021/946
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