[1] The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) is the first of a new generation of advanced satellite-based atmospheric sounders with the capability of obtaining high-vertical resolution profiles of temperature and water vapor. The high-accuracy retrieval goals of AIRS (e.g., 1 K RMS in 1 km layers below 100 mbar for air temperature, 10% RMS in 2 km layers below 100 mbar for water vapor concentration), combined with the large temporal and spatial variability of the atmosphere and difficulties in making accurate measurements of the atmospheric state, necessitate careful and detailed validation using well-characterized ground-based sites. As part of ongoing AIRS Science Team efforts and a collaborative effort between the NASA Earth Observing System (EOS) project and the Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) program, data from various ARM and other observations are used to create best estimates of the atmospheric state at the Aqua overpass times. The resulting validation data set is an ensemble of temperature and water vapor profiles created from radiosondes launched at the approximate Aqua overpass times, interpolated to the exact overpass time using time continuous ground-based profiles, adjusted to account for spatial gradients within the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU) footprints, and supplemented with limited cloud observations. Estimates of the spectral surface infrared emissivity and local skin temperatures are also constructed. Relying on the developed ARM infrastructure and previous and ongoing characterization studies of the ARM measurements, the data set provides a good combination of statistics and accuracy which is essential for assessment of the advanced sounder products. Combined with the collocated AIRS observations, the products are being used to study observed minus calculated AIRS spectra, aimed at evaluation of the AIRS forward radiative transfer model, AIRS observed radiances, and temperature and water vapor profile retrievals. This paper provides an introduction to the ARM site best estimate validation products and characterizes the accuracy of the AIRS team version 4 atmospheric temperature and water vapor retrievals using the ARM products. The AIRS retrievals over tropical ocean are found to have very good accuracy for both temperature and water vapor, with RMS errors approaching the theoretical expectation for clear sky conditions, while retrievals over a midlatitude land site have poorer performance. The results demonstrate the importance of using specialized ''truth'' sites for accurate assessment of the advanced sounder performance and motivate the continued refinement of the AIRS science team retrieval algorithm, particularly for retrievals over land.
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), the hyperspectral infrared sounder on the NASA Aqua mission, both improves operational weather prediction and provides high-quality research data for climate studies. The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), and its two companion microwave instruments, the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU) and the Humidity Sounder for Brazil (HSB), form the integrated atmospheric sounding system flying on the Earth Observing System (EOS) Aqua spacecraft since its launch in May 2002.1 The primary scientific achievement of AIRS has been to improve weather prediction (Le Marshall et al. 2005a,b,c) and to study the water and energy cycle (Tian et al. 2006). AIRS also provides information on several greenhouse gases. The measurement goal of AIRS is the retrieval of temperature and precipitable-water vapor profiles with accuracies approaching those of conventional radiosondes. In the following text we use the terms AIRS and AIRS-AMSU-HSB interchangeably.1 The HSB ceased functioning after 5 February 2003. This did not have an impact on the accuracy, coverage, or resolution of the AIRS core data product, but its loss has had a significant impact on AIRS research products.A comprehensive set of articles on AIRS and AMSU design details, prelaunch calibration, and prelaunch retrieval performance expectations were published in a special issue of IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (2003, vol. 41, no. 2). This paper discusses the performance of AIRS and examines how it is meeting its operational and research objectives based on the experience of more than 2 yr with AIRS data. We describe the science background and the performance of AIRS in terms of the accuracy and stability of its observed spectral radiances. We examine the validation of the retrieved temperature and water vapor profiles against collocated operational radiosondes, and then we assess the impact thereof on numerical weather forecasting of the assimilation of the AIRS spectra and the retrieved temperature. We close the paper with a discussion on the retrieval of several minor tropospheric constituents from AIRS spectra.
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.
[1] Comparisons between observed AIRS radiances and radiances computed from coincident in situ profile data are used to validate the accuracy of the AIRS radiative transfer algorithm (RTA) used in version 4 processing at Goddard Space Flight Center. In situ data sources include balloon-borne measurements with RS-90 sensors and frost point hygrometers and Raman lidar measurements of atmospheric water vapor. Estimates of the RTA accuracy vary with wave number region but approach 0.2 K in mid-to lowertropospheric temperature and water vapor sounding channels. Temperature channel radiance biases using ECMWF forecast/analysis products are shown to be essentially identical to those observed with coincident sonde observations, with somewhat higher biases in water vapor channels. Some empirical adjustments to the RTA channel-averaged absorption coefficients were required to achieve these stated accuracies.
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) on board NASA's Aqua satellite platform is a hypersectral IR temperature and humidity sounder for numerical weather prediction and climate change studies. We use the rich spectral information available in the AIRS thermal infrared radiances to study the spectral signatures of dust over ocean for four case studies, and to retrieve dust optical depths using a fast two‐stream radiative transfer model. Retrieved optical depths for one case, a dust storm spreading over the Eastern Mediterranean in October 2002, are compared with visible imagery and MODIS optical depth retrievals. This work represents a preliminary step to removing the effects of dust on the retrieval of temperature and water vapor from the AIRS measurements.
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