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A fast radiative‐transfer model for the assimilation of infrared limb radiances from MIPAS
Author(s) -
Bormann N.,
Matricardi M.,
Healy S. B.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
quarterly journal of the royal meteorological society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.744
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1477-870X
pISSN - 0035-9009
DOI - 10.1256/qj.04.75
Subject(s) - radiance , radiative transfer , remote sensing , atmospheric radiative transfer codes , nadir , atmospheric sounding , environmental science , atmospheric infrared sounder , line (geometry) , michelson interferometer , meteorology , troposphere , physics , optics , satellite , geology , mathematics , interferometry , geometry , astronomy
A new fast radiative‐transfer model to compute emitted infrared limb radiances for the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) has been developed and validated. The model, referred to as RTMIPAS, can simulate apodized radiances for all channels of the high spectral resolution MIPAS instrument in the 685–2000 cm −1 wave‐number region. RTMIPAS is part of a wider effort to develop the capability to assimilate infrared limb radiances into the ECMWF model. The model uses a linear regression scheme to parametrize the effective layer optical depths, and it can simulate the effect of variable water vapour and ozone; for other gases included in the model, a fixed climatological profile is assumed. The development of the model has involved the calculation of an accurate line‐by‐line transmittance database, the selection of suitable predictors for the gases and the viewing geometry modelled, and the generation of regression coefficients for 43205 MIPAS channels. RTMIPAS can reproduce line‐by‐line radiances to an accuracy that is below the noise level of the instrument for most spectral points and tangent heights, while offering significantly more rapid radiance calculations compared with currently available radiative‐transfer models. The comparison of RTMIPAS transmittances with line‐by‐line model equivalents indicates that the accuracy of the RTMIPAS transmittance model is comparable to that of similar regression‐based radiative‐transfer models for nadir‐viewing geometry. Copyright © 2005 Royal Meteorological Society