Title :
How atmospheric instability influences models results of satellite observed upper tropospheric water vapor properties
Author :
Dim, J.R. ; Murakami, H. ; Takamura, T. ; Hori, M. ; Nakajima, T.Y.
Author_Institution :
Earth Obs. Res. Center, JAXA, Tsukuba, Japan
Abstract :
The proper depiction of water vapor distribution in the upper troposphere and the related radiative properties is critical for the accuracy of climate and atmospheric circulation model predictions. In the present study, differences between satellite observations (Terra-MODIS) and atmospheric models´ simulations are examined. The models are: the National Center for Environmental Protection/Department Of Energy (NCEP-DOE) reanalysis-2 data and the Nonhydrostatic ICosahedral Atmospheric Model (NICAM). The models´ outputs (atmospheric temperature and humidity profiles) are used in this study to simulate the upper tropospheric brightness temperature (UTBT) and relative humidity (UTRH) at clear sky and low cloud areas. The results obtained show the contribution of atmospheric instability due to heat movements of the lower troposphere clear sky, cloud convection and low cloud radiative properties in the discrepancies between model and observation results. These differences tend to increase with the increase of the proportion of unstable pixels in the clear sky areas. Heat movements from cloud convection and low clouds examined through the convective clouds´ distribution and the cloud effective emissivity respectively, show that cloud convection mostly affects the NICAM model results (existence of a positive correlation between the latter model error and the amount of convective clouds) and, discrepancies are stronger in broken clouds than continuous clouds.
Keywords :
atmospheric humidity; atmospheric movements; atmospheric radiation; climatology; clouds; troposphere; NCEP-DOE reanalysis-2 data; NICAM model; National Center for Environmental Protection/Department Of Energy; Nonhydrostatic ICosahedral Atmospheric Model; Terra-MODIS observations; atmospheric circulation model; atmospheric instability; brightness temperature; climate model; cloud convection; heat movement; relative humidity; satellite observations; upper tropospheric water vapor; Atmospheric modeling; Clouds; Humidity; Ocean temperature; Predictive models; Satellites; Temperature distribution; Terrestrial atmosphere; US Department of Energy; Water; Satellite; models; simulation; water vapor;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium,2009 IEEE International,IGARSS 2009
Conference_Location :
Cape Town
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3394-0
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3395-7
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2009.5417673