Title :
AIRS - the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder
Author :
Lambrigtsen, Bjorn ; Fetzer, Eric ; Fishbein, Evan ; Lee, Sung-Yung ; Pagano, Thomas
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Abstract :
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) was launched in 2002, along with two companion microwave sounders. This AIRS sounding suite is the most advanced atmospheric sounding system to date, with measurement accuracies far surpassing those of current weather satellites. From its Sun synchronous polar orbit, the AIRS system provides more than 300,000 all-weather soundings covering more than 90% of the globe every 24 hours. Much of the post-launch period has been devoted to optimizing the "retrieval" system used to derive atmospheric and other parameters from the observations and to validate those parameters. The geophysical parameters have been produced since the beginning of 2003 - the first data were released to the public in mid-2003, and future improved versions be released periodically. The ongoing calibration/validation effort has confirmed that the system is very accurate and stable. There are a number of applications for the AIRS products, ranging from numerical weather prediction - where positive impact on forecast accuracy has already been demonstrated, to atmospheric research - where the AIRS water vapor products near the surface and in the mid and upper troposphere promise to make it possible to characterize and model phenomena that are key for atmospheric processes, from weather patterns to long-term phenomena, such as interannual variability and climate change.
Keywords :
atmospheric composition; atmospheric humidity; atmospheric techniques; calibration; climatology; infrared detectors; meteorological instruments; troposphere; weather forecasting; 24 hour; AD 2002; AD 2003; AIRS; Atmospheric Infrared Sounder; Sun synchronous polar orbit; advanced atmospheric sounding system; all-weather soundings; atmospheric parameters; atmospheric processes; calibration; climatology; forecast accuracy; geophysical parameters; interannual variability; long-term phenomena; microwave sounders; numerical weather prediction; post-launch period; retrieval system; troposphere; water vapor products; weather patterns; Artificial satellites; Atmospheric measurements; Atmospheric modeling; Calibration; Current measurement; Extraterrestrial measurements; Geophysical measurements; Sun; Terrestrial atmosphere; Weather forecasting;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2004. IGARSS '04. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8742-2
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2004.1370798