scholarly journals Correlations of Multispectral Infrared Indicators and Applications in the Analysis of Developing Convective Clouds

2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 945-960 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiong Wu ◽  
Hong-Qing Wang ◽  
Yi-Zhou Zhuang ◽  
Yin-Jing Lin ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
...  

AbstractThree infrared (IR) indicators were included in this study: the 10.8-μm brightness temperature (BT10.8), the BT difference between 12.0 and 10.8 μm (BTD12.0–10.8), and the BT difference between 6.7 and 10.8 μm (BTD6.7–10.8). Correlations among these IR indicators were investigated using MTSAT-1R images for summer 2007 over East Asia. Temporal, spatial, and numerical frequency distributions were used to represent the correlations. The results showed that large BTD12.0–10.8 values can be observed in the growth of cumulus congestus and associated with the boundary of different terrain where convection was more likely to generate and develop. The results also showed that numerical correlation between any two IR indicators could be expressed by two-dimensional histograms (HT2D). Because of differences in the tropopause heights and in the temperature and water vapor fields, the shapes of the HT2Ds varied with latitude and the type of underlying surface. After carefully analyzing the correlations among the IR indicators, a conceptual model of the convection life cycle was constructed according to these HT2Ds. A new cloud convection index (CCI) was defined with the combination of BTD12.0–10.8 and BTD6.7–10.8 on the basis of the conceptual model. The preliminary test results demonstrated that CCI could effectively identify convective clouds. CCI value and its time trend could reflect the growth or decline of convective clouds.

2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (MEDSI-6) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Shu ◽  
J. Maser

The precision ball-bearing- or roller-bearing-based stage systems provide large travel range. However, they have difficulties in meeting subnanometre resolution, high tilting stiffness and high straightness of trajectory with a single guiding system. It is always a dream to have a compact single flexure stage to cover a large travel range with very high positioning resolution. Based on an advanced structure design with the laminar overconstrained weak-link technique, we have designed and constructed a two-dimensional linear precision weak-link stage system for nanopositioning of a specimen holder for the linear multilayer Laue lenses test setup at the Advanced Photon Source Sector 26. This system provides subnanometre resolution, coupled with subnanometre metrology at a travel range of several millimetres. The two-dimensional weak-link stage system is designed with high structure stiffness using laminar overconstrained weak-link mechanisms. In this paper we present the preliminary test results of a linear precision weak-link stage system with subcentimetre travel range and subnanometre positioning resolution.


Author(s):  
Sylvie Avrillon ◽  
Hirokazu Ikeda ◽  
Takeshi Matsuda ◽  
Yutaka Saitoh ◽  
Masahiro Inoue ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 1170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cintia Carbajal Henken ◽  
Lisa Dirks ◽  
Sandra Steinke ◽  
Hannes Diedrich ◽  
Thomas August ◽  
...  

Passive imagers on polar-orbiting satellites provide long-term, accurate integrated water vapor (IWV) data sets. However, these climatologies are affected by sampling biases. In Germany, a dense Global Navigation Satellite System network provides accurate IWV measurements not limited by weather conditions and with high temporal resolution. Therefore, they serve as a reference to assess the quality and sampling issues of IWV products from multiple satellite instruments that show different orbital and instrument characteristics. A direct pairwise comparison between one year of IWV data from GPS and satellite instruments reveals overall biases (in kg/m 2 ) of 1.77, 1.36, 1.11, and −0.31 for IASI, MIRS, MODIS, and MODIS-FUB, respectively. Computed monthly means show similar behaviors. No significant impact of averaging time and the low temporal sampling on aggregated satellite IWV data is found, mostly related to the noisy weather conditions in the German domain. In combination with SEVIRI cloud coverage, a change of shape of IWV frequency distributions towards a bi-modal distribution and loss of high IWV values are observed when limiting cases to daytime and clear sky. Overall, sampling affects mean IWV values only marginally, which are rather dominated by the overall retrieval bias, but can lead to significant changes in IWV frequency distributions.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Teller ◽  
Z. Levin

Abstract. Numerical experiments were carried out using the Tel-Aviv University 2-D cloud model to investigate the effects of increased concentrations of Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN), giant CCN (GCCN) and Ice Nuclei (IN) on the development of precipitation and cloud structure in mixed-phase sub-tropical convective clouds. In order to differentiate between the contribution of the aerosols and the meteorology, all simulations were conducted with the same meteorological conditions. The results show that under the same meteorological conditions, polluted clouds (with high CCN concentrations) produce less precipitation than clean clouds (with low CCN concentrations), the initiation of precipitation is delayed and the lifetimes of the clouds are longer. GCCN enhance the total precipitation on the ground in polluted clouds but they have no noticeable effect on cleaner clouds. The increased rainfall due to GCCN is mainly a result of the increased graupel mass in the cloud, but it only partially offsets the decrease in rainfall due to pollution (increased CCN). The addition of more effective IN, such as mineral dust particles, reduces the total amount of precipitation on the ground. This reduction is more pronounced in clean clouds than in polluted ones. Polluted clouds reach higher altitudes and are wider than clean clouds and both produce wider clouds (anvils) when more IN are introduced. Since under the same vertical sounding the polluted clouds produce less rain, more water vapor is left aloft after the rain stops. In our simulations about 3.5 times more water evaporates after the rain stops from the polluted cloud as compared to the clean cloud. The implication is that much more water vapor is transported from lower levels to the mid troposphere under polluted conditions, something that should be considered in climate models.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 10009-10047
Author(s):  
H. H. Aumann ◽  
A. Ruzmaikin

Abstract. Deep Convective Clouds (DCC) have been widely studied because of their association with heavy precipitation and severe weather events. To identify DCC with Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) data we use three types of thresholds: (1) thresholds based on the absolute value of an atmospheric window channel brightness temperature; (2) thresholds based on the difference between the brightness temperature in an atmospheric window channel and the brightness temperature centered on a strong water vapor absorption line; and (3) a threshold using the difference between the window channel brightness temperature and the tropopause temperature based on climatology. We find that DCC identified with threshold (2) (referred to as DCCw4) cover 0.16% of the area of the tropical zone and 72% of them are identified as deep convective, 39% are overshooting based on simultaneous observations with the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-HSB (AMSU-HSB) 183 GHz water vapor channels. In the past ten years the frequency of occurrence of DCC decreased for the tropical ocean, while it increased for tropical land. The land increase-ocean decrease closely balance, such that the DCC frequency changed at an insignificant rate for the entire tropical zone. This pattern of essentially zero trend for the tropical zone, but opposite land/ocean trends, is consistent with measurements of global precipitation. The changes in frequency of occurrence of the DCC are correlated with the Niño34 index, which defines the SST anomaly in the East-Central Pacific. This is also consistent with patterns seen in global precipitation. This suggests that the observed changes in the frequency are part of a decadal variability characterized by shifts in the main tropical circulation patterns, which does not fully balance in the ten year AIRS data record. The regional correlations and anti-correlations of the DCC frequency anomaly with the Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI) provides a new perspective for the regional analysis of past events, since the SST anomaly in the Nino34 region is available in the form of the extended MEI since 1871. Depending on the selected threshold, the frequency of DCC in the tropical zone ranges from 0.06% to 0.8% of the area. We find that the least frequent, more extreme DCC also show the largest trend in frequency, increasing over land, decreasing over ocean. This finding fits into the framework of how weather extremes respond to climate change.


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