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Clear‐sky biases in satellite infrared estimates of upper tropospheric humidity and its trends
Author(s) -
John Viju O.,
Holl Gerrit,
Allan Richard P.,
Buehler Stefan A.,
Parker David E.,
Soden Brian J.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2010jd015355
Subject(s) - satellite , infrared , sky , environmental science , troposphere , remote sensing , atmospheric sciences , meteorology , relative humidity , geology , astronomy , physics
We use microwave retrievals of upper tropospheric humidity (UTH) to estimate the impact of clear‐sky‐only sampling by infrared instruments on the distribution, variability, and trends in UTH. Our method isolates the impact of the clear‐sky‐only sampling, without convolving errors from other sources. On daily time scales, IR‐sampled UTH contains large data gaps in convectively active areas, with only about 20–30 % of the tropics (30°S–30°N) being sampled. This results in a dry bias of about −9 %RH in the area‐weighted tropical daily UTH time series. On monthly scales, maximum clear‐sky bias (CSB) is up to −30 %RH over convectively active areas. The magnitude of CSB shows significant correlations with UTH itself (−0.5) and also with the variability in UTH (−0.6). We also show that IR‐sampled UTH time series have higher interannual variability and smaller trends compared to microwave sampling. We argue that a significant part of the smaller trend results from the contrasting influence of diurnal drift in the satellite measurements on the wet and dry regions of the tropics.

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