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Dive into the research topics where Henry E. Revercomb is active.

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Featured researches published by Henry E. Revercomb.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2003

AIRS/AMSU/HSB on the Aqua mission: design, science objectives, data products, and processing systems

Hartmut H. Aumann; Moustafa T. Chahine; Catherine Gautier; Mitchell D. Goldberg; Eugenia Kalnay; Larry M. McMillin; Henry E. Revercomb; Philip W. Rosenkranz; William L. Smith; David H. Staelin; L. Larrabee Strow; Joel Susskind

The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU), and the Humidity Sounder for Brazil (HSB) form an integrated cross-track scanning temperature and humidity sounding system on the Aqua satellite of the Earth Observing System (EOS). AIRS is an infrared spectrometer/radiometer that covers the 3.7-15.4-/spl mu/m spectral range with 2378 spectral channels. AMSU is a 15-channel microwave radiometer operating between 23 and 89 GHz. HSB is a four-channel microwave radiometer that makes measurements between 150 and 190 GHz. In addition to supporting the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations interest in process study and climate research, AIRS is the first hyperspectral infrared radiometer designed to support the operational requirements for medium-range weather forecasting of the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administrations National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) and other numerical weather forecasting centers. AIRS, together with the AMSU and HSB microwave radiometers, will achieve global retrieval accuracy of better than 1 K in the lower troposphere under clear and partly cloudy conditions. This paper presents an overview of the science objectives, AIRS/AMSU/HSB data products, retrieval algorithms, and the ground-data processing concepts. The EOS Aqua was launched on May 4, 2002 from Vandenberg AFB, CA, into a 705-km-high, sun-synchronous orbit. Based on the excellent radiometric and spectral performance demonstrated by AIRS during prelaunch testing, which has by now been verified during on-orbit testing, we expect the assimilation of AIRS data into the numerical weather forecast to result in significant forecast range and reliability improvements.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2006

AIRS: Improving Weather Forecasting and Providing New Data on Greenhouse Gases

Moustafa T. Chahine; Thomas S. Pagano; Hartmut H. Aumann; Robert Atlas; Christopher D. Barnet; John Blaisdell; Luke Chen; Murty Divakarla; Eric J. Fetzer; Mitch Goldberg; Catherine Gautier; Stephanie Granger; Scott E. Hannon; F. W. Irion; Ramesh Kakar; Eugenia Kalnay; Bjorn Lambrigtsen; Sung-Yung Lee; John Le Marshall; W. Wallace McMillan; Larry M. McMillin; Edward T. Olsen; Henry E. Revercomb; Philip W. Rosenkranz; William L. Smith; David H. Staelin; L. Larrabee Strow; Joel Susskind; David C. Tobin; Walter Wolf

Abstract The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) and its two companion microwave sounders, AMSU and HSB were launched into polar orbit onboard the NASA Aqua Satellite in May 2002. NASA required the sounding system to provide high-quality research data for climate studies and to meet NOAAs requirements for improving operational weather forecasting. The NOAA requirement translated into global retrieval of temperature and humidity profiles with accuracies approaching those of radiosondes. AIRS also provides new measurements of several greenhouse gases, such as CO2, CO, CH4, O3, SO2, and aerosols. The assimilation of AIRS data into operational weather forecasting has already demonstrated significant improvements in global forecast skill. At NOAA/NCEP, the improvement in the forecast skill achieved at 6 days is equivalent to gaining an extension of forecast capability of six hours. This improvement is quite significant when compared to other forecast improvements over the last decade. In addition to NCEP, ECM...


Applied Optics | 1988

Radiometric calibration of IR Fourier transform spectrometers: solution to a problem with the High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder

Henry E. Revercomb; Henry Buijs; H. B. Howell; Daniel D. LaPorte; William L. Smith; Lawrence A. Sromovsky

A calibrated Fourier transform spectrometer, known as the High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder (HIS), has been flown on the NASA U-2 research aircraft to measure the infrared emission spectrum of the earth. The primary use-atmospheric temperature and humidity sounding-requires high radiometric precision and accuracy (of the order of 0.1 and 1 degrees C, respectively). To meet these requirements, the HIS instrument performs inflight radiometric calibration, using observations of hot and cold blackbody reference sources as the basis for two-point calibrations at each wavenumber. Initially, laboratory tests revealed a calibration problem with brightness temperature errors as large as 15 degrees C between 600 and 900 cm(-1). The symptom of the problem, which occurred in one of the three spectral bands of HIS, was a source-dependent phase response. Minor changes to the calibration equations completely eliminated the anomalous errors. The new analysis properly accounts for the situation in which the phase response for radiance from the instrument itself differs from that for radiance from an external source. The mechanism responsible for the dual phase response of the HIS instrument is identified as emission from the interferometer beam splitter.


Advances in Space Research | 1985

Models of the structure of the atmosphere of Venus from the surface to 100 kilometers altitude

A. Seiff; John T. Schofield; Arvydas J. Kliore; F. W. Taylor; Sanjay S. Limaye; Henry E. Revercomb; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; V. V. Kerzhanovich; V.I. Moroz; M.Ya. Marov

From a critical comparison and synthesis of data from the four Pioneer Venus Probes, the Pioneer Venus Orbiter, and the Venera 10, 12, and 13 landers, models of the lower and middle atmosphere of Venus are derived. The models are consistent with the data sets within the measurement uncertainties and established variability of the atmosphere. The models represent the observed variations of state properties with latitude, and preserve the observed static stability. The rationale and the approach used to derive the models are discussed, and the remaining uncertainties are estimated.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2003

Dry Bias and Variability in Vaisala RS80-H Radiosondes: The ARM Experience

David D. Turner; Barry M. Lesht; Shepard A. Clough; James C. Liljegren; Henry E. Revercomb; D. C. Tobin

Thousands of comparisons between total precipitable water vapor (PWV) obtained from radiosonde (Vaisala RS80-H) profiles and PWV retrieved from a collocated microwave radiometer (MWR) were made at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program’s Southern Great Plains Cloud and Radiation Testbed (SGP CART) site in northern Oklahoma from 1994 to 2000. These comparisons show that the RS80-H radiosonde has an approximate 5% dry bias compared to the MWR. This observation is consistent with interpretations of Vaisala RS80 radiosonde data obtained during the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean‐Atmosphere Response Experiment (TOGA COARE). In addition to the dry bias, analysis of the PWV comparisons as well as of data obtained from dual-sonde soundings done at the SGP show that the calibration of the radiosonde humidity measurements varies considerably both when the radiosondes come from different calibration batches and when the radiosondes come from the same calibration batch. This variability can result in peak-to-peak differences between radiosondes of greater than 25% in PWV. Because accurate representation of the vertical profile of water vapor is critical for ARM’s science objectives, an empirical method for correcting the radiosonde humidity profiles is developed based on a constant scaling factor. By using an independent set of observations and radiative transfer models to test the correction, it is shown that the constant humidity scaling method appears both to improve the accuracy and reduce the uncertainty of the radiosonde data. The ARM data are also used to examine a different, physically based, correction scheme that was developed recently by scientists from Vaisala and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). This scheme, which addresses the dry bias problem as well as other calibration-related problems with the RS80-H sensor, results in excellent agreement between the PWV retrieved from the MWR and integrated from the corrected radiosonde. However, because the physically based correction scheme does not address the apparently random calibration variations observed, it does not reduce the variability either between radiosonde calibration batches or within individual calibration batches.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2004

Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer. Part I: Instrument Design

Robert O. Knuteson; Henry E. Revercomb; Fred A. Best; N. C. Ciganovich; Ralph G. Dedecker; T. P. Dirkx; S. C. Ellington; Wayne F. Feltz; Raymond K. Garcia; H. B. Howell; William L. Smith; John F. Short; D. C. Tobin

Abstract A ground-based Fourier transform spectrometer has been developed to measure the atmospheric downwelling infrared radiance spectrum at the earths surface with high absolute accuracy. The Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI) instrument was designed and fabricated by the University of Wisconsin Space Science and Engineering Center (UW-SSEC) for the Department of Energy (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program. This paper emphasizes the key features of the UW-SSEC instrument design that contribute to meeting the AERI instrument requirements for the ARM Program. These features include a highly accurate radiometric calibration system, an instrument controller that provides continuous and autonomous operation, an extensive data acquisition system for monitoring calibration temperatures and instrument health, and a real-time data processing system. In particular, focus is placed on design issues crucial to meeting the ARM requirements for radiometric calibration, spectral cali...


Journal of Applied Meteorology | 2003

Near-Continuous Profiling of Temperature, Moisture, and Atmospheric Stability Using the Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI)

Wayne F. Feltz; William L. Smith; H. B. Howell; Robert O. Knuteson; H. M. Woolf; Henry E. Revercomb

Abstract The Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program (ARM) has funded the development and installation of five ground-based atmospheric emitted radiance interferometer (AERI) systems at the Southern Great Plains (SGP) site. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of the AERI instrument, improvement of the AERI temperature and moisture retrieval technique, new profiling utility, and validation of high-temporal-resolution AERI-derived stability indices important for convective nowcasting. AERI systems have been built at the University of Wisconsin—Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, and deployed in the Oklahoma–Kansas area collocated with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 404-MHz wind profilers at Lamont, Vici, Purcell, and Morris, Oklahoma, and Hillsboro, Kansas. The AERI systems produce absolutely calibrated atmospheric infrared emitted radiances at one-wavenumber resolution from 3 to 20 μm at less than 10-min temporal resolution. The instruments are robust, are a...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1996

Observations of the Infrared Radiative Properties of the Ocean—Implications for the Measurement of Sea Surface Temperature via Satellite Remote Sensing

William L. Smith; Robert O. Knuteson; Henry E. Revercomb; Wayne F. Feltz; H. B. Howell; W. P. Menzel; Nicholas R. Nalli; Otis B. Brown; James W. Brown; Peter J. Minnett; Walter McKeown

Abstract The Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI) was used to measure the infrared radiative properties and the temperature of the Gulf of Mexico during a 5-day oceanographic cruise in January 1995. The ocean skin temperature was measured with an accuracy believed to be better than 0.1°C. The surface reflectivity/emissivity was determined as a function of view angle and sea state. The radiative properties are in good theoretical consistency with in situ measurements of ocean bulk temperature and the meteorological observations made from the oceanographic vessel. The AERI and in situ measurements provide a strong basis for accurate global specifications of sea surface temperature and ocean heat flux from satellites and ships.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2013

Achieving Climate Change Absolute Accuracy in Orbit

Bruce A. Wielicki; David F. Young; M. G. Mlynczak; Kurt J. Thome; Stephen S. Leroy; James M. Corliss; J. G. Anderson; Chi O. Ao; Richard J. Bantges; Fred A. Best; Kevin W. Bowman; Helen E. Brindley; James J. Butler; William D. Collins; John Andrew Dykema; David R. Doelling; Daniel R. Feldman; Nigel P. Fox; Xianglei Huang; Robert E. Holz; Yi Huang; Zhonghai Jin; D. Jennings; David G. Johnson; K. Jucks; Seima Kato; Daniel Bernard Kirk-Davidoff; Robert O. Knuteson; Greg Kopp; David P. Kratz

The Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory (CLARREO) mission will provide a calibration laboratory in orbit for the purpose of accurately measuring and attributing climate change. CLARREO measurements establish new climate change benchmarks with high absolute radiometric accuracy and high statistical confidence across a wide range of essential climate variables. CLARREOs inherently high absolute accuracy will be verified and traceable on orbit to Systeme Internationale (SI) units. The benchmarks established by CLARREO will be critical for assessing changes in the Earth system and climate model predictive capabilities for decades into the future as society works to meet the challenge of optimizing strategies for mitigating and adapting to climate change. The CLARREO benchmarks are derived from measurements of the Earths thermal infrared spectrum (5–50 μm), the spectrum of solar radiation reflected by the Earth and its atmosphere (320–2300 nm), and radio occultation refractivity from which...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1999

Downwelling spectral radiance observations at the SHEBA ice station: Water vapor continuum measurements from 17 to 26μm

D. C. Tobin; Fred A. Best; P. D. Brown; S. A. Clough; Ralph G. Dedecker; R. G. Ellingson; Raymond K. Garcia; H. B. Howell; Robert O. Knuteson; E. J. Mlawer; Henry E. Revercomb; J. F. Short; P. Van Delst; V. P. Walden

Earth loses energy to space in the form of longwave (or infrared) radiation. Much of this energy is radiated through the transparent portion of the water vapor rotational band from 17 to 33 μm (300 to 600 cm−1). Very few measurements have been made in this spectral region to characterize how water vapor absorbs and emits longwave radiation. An Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI) with extended longwave spectral coverage has been deployed at the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean (SHEBA) ice station 300 miles north of the Alaskan coast to measure downwelling radiances at wavelengths of 3 to 26 μm (380 to 3000 cm−1). The spectral and radiometric performance of the instrument, installation at the ice station, and initial observations are shown. Comparisons to line-by-line radiative transfer calculations for selected clear-sky cases are presented, and air-broadened water vapor continuum absorption coefficients are determined in the wing of the pure rotational band from 17 to 26 μm (380 to 600 cm−1). Comparisons of the coefficients with the widely used Clough Kneizys Davies (CKD) water vapor continuum model suggest empirical modifications to this model are necessary. Comparisons to laboratory measurements of Burch et al. [1974] made at room temperature suggests little or no temperature dependence of the continuum from 400 to 550 cm−1. Implications of these modifications on top-of-atmosphere and surface fluxes, as well as atmospheric cooling rates, are discussed.

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Robert O. Knuteson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David C. Tobin

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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William L. Smith

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Fred A. Best

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Joe K. Taylor

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Raymond K. Garcia

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Daniel D. LaPorte

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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D. C. Tobin

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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