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Featured researches published by L. Larrabee Strow.


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...


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2003

An overview of the AIRS radiative transfer model

L. Larrabee Strow; Scott E. Hannon; S. De Souza-Machado; Howard E. Motteler; D. C. Tobin

The two main elements of the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder radiative transfer algorithm (AIRS-RTA) are described in this paper: 1) the fast parameterization of the atmospheric transmittances that are used to perform the AIRS physical retrievals and 2) the spectroscopy used to generate the parameterized transmittances. We concentrate on those aspects of the spectroscopy that are especially relevant for temperature and water vapor retrievals. The AIRS-RTA is a hybrid model in that it parameterizes most gases on a fixed grid of pressures, while the water optical depths are parameterized on a fixed grid of water amounts. Water vapor, ozone, carbon monoxide, and methane profiles can be varied, in addition to the column abundance of carbon dioxide.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012

Hyperspectral Earth Observation from IASI: Five Years of Accomplishments

Fiona Hilton; Raymond Armante; Thomas August; Christopher D. Barnet; Aurélie Bouchard; C. Camy-Peyret; Virginie Capelle; Lieven Clarisse; Cathy Clerbaux; Pierre-François Coheur; Andrew Collard; Cyril Crevoisier; G. Dufour; David P. Edwards; François Faijan; Nadia Fourrié; Antonia Gambacorta; Mitchell D. Goldberg; Vincent Guidard; Daniel Hurtmans; Sam Illingworth; Nicole Jacquinet-Husson; Tobias Kerzenmacher; Dieter Klaes; L. Lavanant; Guido Masiello; Marco Matricardi; A. P. McNally; Stuart M. Newman; Edward Pavelin

The Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) forms the main infrared sounding component of the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellitess (EUMETSATs) Meteorological Operation (MetOp)-A satellite (Klaes et al. 2007), which was launched in October 2006. This article presents the results of the first 4 yr of the operational IASI mission. The performance of the instrument is shown to be exceptional in terms of calibration and stability. The quality of the data has allowed the rapid use of the observations in operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) and the development of new products for atmospheric chemistry and climate studies, some of which were unexpected before launch. The assimilation of IASI observations in NWP models provides a significant forecast impact; in most cases the impact has been shown to be at least as large as for any previous instrument. In atmospheric chemistry, global distributions of gases, such as ozone and carbon monoxide, can be produ...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

Daily global maps of carbon monoxide from NASA's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder

William Wallace McMillan; Christopher D. Barnet; L. Larrabee Strow; Moustafa T. Chahine; M. L. McCourt; Juying Warner; Paul C. Novelli; S. Korontzi; Eric Maddy; S. Datta

Received 24 October 2004; revised 19 January 2005; accepted 4 March 2005; published 1 June 2005. [1] We present the first observations of tropospheric carbon monoxide (CO) by the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) onboard NASA’s Aqua satellite. AIRS daily coverage of 70% of the planet represents a significant evolutionary advance in satellite trace gas remote sensing. Tropospheric CO abundances are retrieved from AIRS 4.55 mm spectral region using the full AIRS retrieval algorithm run in a research mode. The presented AIRS daily global CO maps from 22– 29 September 2002 show large-scale, long-range transport of CO from anthropogenic and natural sources, most notably from biomass burning. The sequence of daily maps reveal CO advection from Brazil to the South Atlantic in qualitative agreement with previous observations. Forward trajectory analysis confirms this scenario and indicates much longer range transport into the southern Indian Ocean. Preliminary comparisons to in situ aircraft profiles indicate AIRS CO retrievals are approaching the 15% accuracy target set by pre-launch simulations. Citation: McMillan, W. W., C. Barnet, L. Strow, M. T. Chahine, M. L. McCourt, J. X. Warner, P. C. Novelli, S. Korontzi, E. S. Maddy, and S. Datta (2005), Daily global maps of carbon monoxide from NASA’s Atmospheric Infrared Sounder, Geophys. Res. Lett., 32, L11801, doi:10.1029/ 2004GL021821.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2004

Retrieval of semitransparent ice cloud optical thickness from atmospheric infrared sounder (AIRS) measurements

Heli Wei; Ping Yang; Jun Li; Bryan A. Baum; Hung-Lung Huang; Steven Platnick; Yongxiang Hu; L. Larrabee Strow

An approach is developed to infer the optical thickness of semitransparent ice clouds (when optical thickness is less than 5) from Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) high spectral resolution radiances. A fast cloud radiance model is developed and coupled with an AIRS clear-sky radiative transfer model for simulating AIRS radiances when ice clouds are present. Compared with more accurate calculations based on the discrete ordinates radiative transfer model, the accuracy of the fast cloud radiance model is within 0.5 K (root mean square) in terms of brightness temperature (BT) and runs three orders of magnitude faster. We investigate the sensitivity of AIRS spectral BTs and brightness temperature difference (BTD) values between pairs of wavenumbers to the cloud optical thickness. The spectral BTs for the atmospheric window channels within the region 1070-1135 cm/sup -1/ are sensitive to the ice cloud optical thickness, as is the BTD between 900.562 cm/sup -1/ (located in an atmospheric window) and 1558.692 cm/sup -1/ (located in a strong water vapor absorption band). Similarly, the BTD between a moderate absorption channel (1587.495 cm/sup -1/) and the strong water absorption channel (1558.692 cm/sup -1/) is sensitive to ice cloud optical thickness. Neither of the aforementioned BTDs is sensitive to the effective particle size. Thus, the optical thickness of semitransparent ice clouds can be retrieved reliably. We have developed a spectrum-based approach and a BTD-based method to retrieve the optical thickness of semitransparent ice clouds. The present retrieval methods are applied to a granule of AIRS data. The ice cloud optical thicknesses derived from the AIRS measurements are compared with those retrieved from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) 1.38and 0.645-/spl mu/m bands. The optical thicknesses inferred from the MODIS measurements are collocated and degraded to the AIRS spatial resolution. Results from the MODIS and AIRS retrievals are in reasonable agreement over a wide range of optical thicknesses.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1987

Line mixing in a N2‐broadened CO2 Q branch observed with a tunable diode laser

Bruce M. Gentry; L. Larrabee Strow

Line‐mixing effects have been observed in the infrared Q branch of the (1110,0310)I–0000 band of CO2 at 2076 cm−1. A tunable diode laser spectrometer was used to record spectra of CO2 broadened by N2 and O2 at total pressures ranging from 100 to 720 Torr. The observed absorption coefficients are up to 65% lower than those calculated using an isolated Lorentzian line approximation. A simple energy gap scaling law is used to determine the off‐diagonal relaxation matrix elements from the known pressure‐broadening coefficients. The spectra calculated using these matrix elements reproduces the observed absorption coefficients to within several percent.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2011

Global Land Surface Emissivity Retrieved From Satellite Ultraspectral IR Measurements

Daniel K. Zhou; Allen M. Larar; Xu Liu; William L. Smith; L. Larrabee Strow; Ping Yang; Peter Schlüssel; Xavier Calbet

Ultraspectral resolution infrared (IR) radiances obtained from nadir observations provide information about the atmosphere, surface, aerosols, and clouds. Surface spectral emissivity (SSE) and surface skin temperature from current and future operational satellites can and will reveal critical information about the Earths ecosystem and land-surface-type properties, which might be utilized as a means of long-term monitoring of the Earths environment and global climate change. In this study, fast radiative transfer models applied to the atmosphere under all weather conditions are used for atmospheric profile and surface or cloud parameter retrieval from ultraspectral and/or hyperspectral spaceborne IR soundings. An inversion scheme, dealing with cloudy as well as cloud-free radiances observed with ultraspectral IR sounders, has been developed to simultaneously retrieve atmospheric thermodynamic and surface or cloud microphysical parameters. This inversion scheme has been applied to the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI). Rapidly produced SSE is initially evaluated through quality control checks on the retrievals of other impacted surface and atmospheric parameters. Initial validation of retrieved emissivity spectra is conducted with Namib and Kalahari desert laboratory measurements. Seasonal products of global land SSE and surface skin temperature retrieved with IASI are presented to demonstrate seasonal variation of SSE.


Applied Optics | 1996

Experimental investigation of the self- and N 2 -broadenedcontinuum within the ν 2 band of watervapor

Tobin Dc; L. Larrabee Strow; Lafferty Wj; Olson Wb

We present an experimental study of the self- and N(2)-broadened H(2) O continuum in microwindows within the ν(2) fundamental centered at ~1600 cm(-1). The continuum is derived from transmission spectra recorded at room temperature with a BOMEM Fourier transform spectrometer at a resolution of ~0.040 cm(-1). Although we find general agreement with previous studies, our results suggest that there is significant near-wing super-Lorentzian behavior that produces a highly wave-number-dependent structure in the continuum as it is currently defined.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1986

Rotational collisional narrowing in an infrared CO2 Q branch studied with a tunable‐diode laser

L. Larrabee Strow; Bruce M. Gentry

Rotational collisional narrowing, or line mixing, has been observed in the infrared absorption spectrum of the Q branch of the (1110,0310)II – 0000 band of CO2 at 1932.47 cm−1 using a tunable diode laser. Spectra were recorded at pressures ranging from 100 to 745 Torr both inside the Q branch and below the band origin. The observed absorption coefficients below the band origin were up to 80% less than those calculated using an isolated Lorentz line approximation. A simple fitting law for the state‐to‐state rotationally inelastic rate constants is determined using the known line broadening coefficients. A calculation of line mixing using these rates agrees with the observed absorption coefficients to within several percent.

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William L. Smith

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Christopher D. Barnet

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Xu Liu

Langley Research Center

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David C. Tobin

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Henry E. Revercomb

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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