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A physical approach for a simultaneous retrieval of sounding, surface, hydrometeor, and cryospheric parameters from SNPP/ATMS
Author(s) -
Boukabara S.A.,
Garrett K.,
Grassotti C.,
IturbideSanchez F.,
Chen W.,
Jiang Z.,
Clough S. A.,
Zhan X.,
Liang P.,
Liu Q.,
Islam T.,
Zubko V.,
Mims A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2013jd020448
Subject(s) - precipitable water , emissivity , remote sensing , environmental science , meteorology , depth sounding , radiative transfer , brightness temperature , defense meteorological satellite program , snow , satellite , radiometry , microwave , computer science , water vapor , geology , oceanography , telecommunications , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics , aerospace engineering , optics
We present in this study the results obtained when applying a physical algorithm based on a variational methodology to data from the Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder (ATMS) onboard the Suomi National Polar‐Orbiting Partnership (SNPP) for a consistent retrieval of geophysical data in all weather conditions. The algorithm, which runs operationally at the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, is applied routinely to a number of sounders from the Polar‐Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellites, the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program, and the European Meteorological Operational satellite constellations. The one‐dimension variational (1DVAR) methodology, which relies on a forward operator, the Community Radiative Transfer Model, allows for solving the inversion of the radiometric measurements into geophysical parameters which have a direct impact on the brightness temperatures. The parameters that are produced by this Microwave Integrated Retrieval System algorithm include the atmospheric temperature T (p), moisture Q (p), and vertically integrated total precipitable water; and the surface skin temperature and emissivity as well as the hydrometeor products of nonprecipitating cloud liquid water and rain‐ and ice‐water paths. In this algorithm, a simple postprocessing is applied to the 1DVAR‐generated emissivity to derive cryospheric products (snow water equivalent and sea‐ice concentration) when the data are measured over these surfaces. The postprocessing is also applied to the hydrometeors products to generate a surface rainfall rate. This comprehensive set of sounding, surface, hydrometeor, and cryospheric products generated from SNPP/ATMS is therefore radiometrically consistent, meaning that when input to the forward operator, it will allow the simulation of the actual brightness temperatures measurements within noise levels. The geophysical consistency between the products, also critical, is satisfied due to the physical approach adopted and the geophysical constraints introduced through the correlation matrix used in the variational system. The results shown in this paper confirm that the performances of all products are within the expected accuracy and precision figures and comparable to performances usually obtained with single‐parameter‐dedicated algorithms, with the added value that the inverted products are both radiometrically and geophysically consistent.

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