DocumentCode
1559883
Title
Influence of microphysical cloud parameterizations on microwave brightness temperatures
Author
Skofronick-Jackson, Gail M. ; Gasiewski, Albin J. ; Wang, James R.
Author_Institution
Univ. of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA
Volume
40
Issue
1
fYear
2002
fDate
1/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
187
Lastpage
196
Abstract
The microphysical parameterization of clouds and rain cells plays a central role in atmospheric forward radiative transfer models used in calculating microwave brightness temperatures. The absorption and scattering properties of a hydrometeor-laden atmosphere are governed by particle phase, size distribution, aggregate density, shape, and dielectric constant. This study investigates the sensitivity of brightness temperatures with respect to the microphysical cloud parameterization. Calculated wideband (6-410 GHz) brightness temperatures were studied for four evolutionary stages of an oceanic convective storm using a rive-phase hydrometeor model in a planar-stratified scattering-based radiative transfer model. Five other microphysical cloud parameterizations were compared to the baseline calculations to evaluate brightness temperature sensitivity to gross changes in the hydrometeor size distributions and the ice-air-water ratios in the frozen or partly frozen phase. The comparison shows that enlarging the raindrop size or adding water to the partly frozen hydrometeor mix warms brightness temperatures by as much as 55 K at 6 GHz. The cooling signature caused by ice scattering intensifies with increasing ice concentrations and at higher frequencies. An additional comparison to measured Convection and Moisture Experiment (CAMEX-3) brightness temperatures shows that in general all but two parameterizations produce calculated TBs that fall within the CAMEX-3 observed minima and maxima
Keywords
atmospheric techniques; clouds; radiometry; remote sensing; storms; 6 to 410 GHz; atmosphere; cloud; forward radiative transfer models; measurement technique; meteorology; microphysical parameterization; microphysics; microwave brightness temperature; microwave radiometry; model; rain cells; remote sensing; size distribution; storm; Aggregates; Atmosphere; Atmospheric modeling; Brightness temperature; Clouds; Electromagnetic heating; Electromagnetic wave absorption; Ice; Particle scattering; Rain;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/36.981360
Filename
981360
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