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Journal of Geophysical Research | 1994

Size distribution and scattering phase function of aerosol particles retrieved from sky brightness measurements

Yoram J. Kaufman; Anatoly A. Gitelson; Arnon Karnieli; E. Ganor; Robert S. Fraser; T. Nakajima; Seema Mattoo; Brent N. Holben

Ground-based measurements of the solar transmission and sky radiance in a horizontal plane through the Sun are taken in several geographical regions and aerosol types: dust in a desert transition zone in Israel, sulfate particles in Eastern and Western Europe, tropical aerosol in Brazil, and mixed continental/maritime aerosol in California. Stratospheric aerosol was introduced after the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in June 1991. Therefore measurements taken before the eruption are used to analyze the properties of tropospheric aerosol; measurements from 1992 are also used to detect the particle size and concentration of stratospheric aerosol. The measurements are used to retrieve the size distribution and the scattering phase function at large scattering angles of the undisturbed aerosol particles. The retrieved properties represent an average on the entire atmospheric column. A comparison between the retrieved phase function for a scattering angle of 120°, with phase function predicted from the retrieved size distribution, is used to test the assumption of particle homogeneity and sphericity in radiative transfer models (Mie theory). The effect was found to be small (20%±15%). For the stratospheric aerosol (sulfates), as expected, the phase function was very well predicted using the Mie theory. A model with a power law size distribution, based on the spectral dependence of the optical thickness, a, cannot estimate accurately the phase function (up to 50% error for λ = 0.87 μm). Before the Pinatubo eruption the ratio between the volumes of sulfate and coarse particles was very well correlated with α. The Pinatubo stratospheric aerosol destroyed this correlation. The aerosol optical properties are compared with analysis of the size, shape, and composition of the individual particles by electron microscopy of in situ samples. The measured volume size distributions before the injection of stratospheric aerosol consistently show two modes, sulfate particles with rm 0.7 μm. The “window” in the tropospheric aerosol in this radius range was used to observe a stable stratospheric aerosol in 1992, with rm ∼ 0.5 μm. A combination of such optical thickness and sky measurements can be used to assess the direct forcing and the climatic impact of aerosol. Systematic inversion for the key aerosol types (sulfates, smoke, dust, and maritime aerosol) of the size distribution and phase function can give the relationship between the aerosol physical and optical properties that can be used to compute the radiative forcing. This forcing can be validated in dedicated field experiments.


Archive | 2010

Wind speed dependence in the MODIS aerosol retrieval over ocean

Seema Mattoo; Richard Kleidman; Lorraine A. Remer; Richard Levy; A. Smirnov


Archive | 2010

Introducing... The MODIS Collection 6 Aerosol Products

Richard Levy; Lorraine A. Remer; Seema Mattoo; Richard Kleidman


Archive | 2009

Dark Target aerosol retrievals from MODIS: What have we learned in 10 years?

Richard Levy; Lorraine A. Remer; Seema Mattoo; Richard Kleidman; Gregory G. Leptoukh; Ralph A. Kahn; Didier Tanré


Archive | 2009

The coordinated multi-sensor, multi-platform ARCTAS fire plume study on June 30, 2008

J. Redemann; Yohei Shinozuka; J. M. Livingston; Philip B. Russell; Peter Pilewskie; Stephan Schmidt; Eike Bierwirth; Robert R. Johnson; Antony D. Clarke; S. G. Howell; Cameron Stuart McNaughton; Sandra Freitag; Lorraine A. Remer; Seema Mattoo; Omar Torres; Pepijn Veefkind; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; John Hair; Brian Cairns; K. D. Knobelspiesse; Anthony Bucholtz


Archive | 2009

MODIS aerosol products in Collection 6:Moving towards multisensor fusion and interdisciplinary studies

Seema Mattoo; Richard Levy; Lorraine A. Remer


Archive | 2009

Maximizing MODIS aerosol retrieval capability using joint inversions and merged data products with CALIOP, OMI and PARASOL

Lorraine A. Remer; Roberto Fernandez-Borda; Richard A. Ferrare; S. K. Satheesh; Omar Torres; François-Marie Bréon; Didier Tanré; Richard Levy; J. Vanderlei Martins; Seema Mattoo; Richard Kleidman


Archive | 2009

Validation of satellite overland retrievals of AOD at northern high latitudes with coincident measurements from airborne sunphotometer, lidar, and in situ sensors during ARCTAS

J. M. Livingston; Yohei Shinozuka; J. Redemann; Philip B. Russell; Robert R. Johnson; Antony D. Clarke; S. G. Howell; Cameron Stuart McNaughton; Sandra Freitag; Vladimir N. Kapustin; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; John Hair; Omar Torres; Pepijn Veefkind; Lorraine A. Remer; Seema Mattoo; Richard Levy; Allen Chu; Ralph A. Kahn; Michael Davis


Archive | 2008

MODIS aerosol product at 3 km spatial resolution for urban and air quality studies

Seema Mattoo; Lorraine A. Remer; Richard Levy; Brent N. Holben; A. Smirnov


Archive | 2008

Interannual variability and short-term trends in the MODIS aerosol record

Lorraine A. Remer; Israel Koren; Richard Levy; Didier Tanré; Arnon Karnieli; Karla M. Longo; J. Vanderlei Martins; Seema Mattoo; Richard Kleidman; Brent N. Holben

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Richard Kleidman

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Omar Torres

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Didier Tanré

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Smirnov

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Brent N. Holben

Goddard Space Flight Center

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