capabilities and requirements for observing the polar regions with satellite imagers jeff key...

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Capabilities and Requirements for Observing the Polar Regions with Satellite Imagers

Jeff Key

NOAA/NESDISMadison, Wisconsin USA

Arctic Products from Polar Orbiters: A Brief Survey

Imagers (optical and microwave):•Winds•Cloud cover, thickness, particle size, phase, height•Low-level inversions•Radiation (surface and TOA)•Fires, volcanic ash•Surface temperature and albedo•Ice concentration, extent, motion, thickness/age•Snow cover, particle size•Radiation, surface and TOA

Sounders:•Temperature and moisture profiles•Heat and moisture advection

Other: •Cloud properties (lidar and radar)•Surface elevation (lidar)

Polar Winds – AVHRR and MODIS

MODIS: bent-pipe, Terra & Aqua separately and combined; MODIS direct broadcast; AVHRR: GAC, HRPT, NOAA & MetOp (with EUMETSAT); historical GAC

Left: AIRS moisture retrieval targets (cyan) and wind vectors (yellow barbs) at 400hPa. (Courtesy C. Velden)

AIRS Polar Winds in Radiance vs Retrieval Space

Retrieval space: Since the spectral and vertical resolution of AIRS is much higher than MODIS, we can attempt to employ retrieved moisture fields for the winds tracking, thereby avoiding the ambiguity of the vector height. Additionally, winds from many distinct vertical levels can be resolved.

Radiance space: Feature-tracked winds from MODIS (left) and AIRS (right) water vapor imagery

Water vapor and CO2 bands improve retrievals of:• temperature and moisture profiles, including inversions, • cloud properties and height assignment• winds

Antarctica

GOES-10 sub-point

CO2

water vapor

(Courtesy of D. Tobin)

Low-Level Atmospheric Temperature Inversions from MODIS

January

July

Strength (C) Depth (m)

Cloud Forcing, Autumn

Extended AVHRR Polar Pathfinder (APP-x), 1982-2004

(Courtesy R. Stone)

Recent Trends

Winter Surface Temperature Trend: APP-x

Heat and Moisture Advection from TOVS Path-P

Decadal trends in poleward advective heating in layer between 500 and 300 hPa (K/day/decade) for each season. (Courtesy of J. Francis)

The A-train: Aqua, CloudSat (cloud radar), CALIPSO (cloud-aerosol lidar), Parasol (polarized, multiangle), and Aura (chemistry). Satellites fly in formation within minutes of each other.

CLOUDSAT & CALIPSO

(Courtesy T. Vonder Haar)

Ice Concentration/Extent from MODIS, AMSR-E

Sea ice concentration (SIC) (%) retrieved from (a) MODIS Sea Ice Temperature (SIT), (b) MODIS visible band reflectance, and (c) from Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer - Earth Observing System (AMSR-E) Level-3 gridded daily mean from NSIDC on March 31st, 2006. MODIS retrievals compare well with AMSR-E retrievals, and show more detailed information.

MODIS Aqua true color image (left) on March 31, 2006 over Kara Sea, and derived surface skin temperature in Kelvin degree (middle), and ice concentration in percentage (right).

Ice Surface Temperature from MODIS, AVHRR

Data taken from May 4-9, 2008 from MODIS Direct Broadcast site at Tromsø, Norway

Test case below from May 8, 2008. Daily composite of all ice motion vectors and 11 micron brightness temperatures, taken from TERRA.

Data has an average of around 1 m/s difference in speed and 20 degrees difference in direction compared to drifting ice buoys.

Ice Motion from MODIS

Estimated ice thickness (left) and ice age (right) based on AVHRR data on March 12, 2004 at 04:00 LST for the entire Arctic region under all-sky condition. Right: Comparison of satellite-derived thickness and ice draft from submarine sonar.

Ice Thickness from MODIS, AVHRR

Snow Cover

(Courtesy of D. Hall)

from Blended MODIS and SSM/Ifrom Blended MODIS and SSM/I

(Courtesy of NSIDC)

from MODISfrom MODIS

Arctic Ice Cover from Nimbus-7 SMMR and DMSP SSM/I

Extent trend: -8.2 %/decadeArea trend: -9.8%/decade

During minimum extent:During minimum extent:

(Courtesy of J. Comiso)

2007 Arctic Sea Ice Extent Record MinimumCaptured by CSA RADARSAT-1

The Alaska Satellite Facility (ASF) downlinks and mosaics Canadian Space Agency (CSA) RADARSAT-1 images of the western Arctic Ocean every three days. These synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images are acquired both day and night regardless of weather conditions. The data are used for research and operational monitoring of changes in sea ice cover.

The National Ice Center (NIC) provides the Alaska Region with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery and experimental derived products for safety of fisheries, marine transportation, and low-flying aircraft .

GLAS is both a surface laser ranging system and an atmospheric profiling lidar.

Product Requirements

Parameter Instruments or Satellites

(current, polar)

Primary Spectral Information

Spatial Resolution

Refresh Rate (highest for category)

Winds MODIS, AVHRR IR window 2 km 1 hr

Cloud properties (cover, optical depth, particle size, height)

MODIS, AVHRR, CALIPSO, Cloudsat

Vis, near-IR, IR window, CO2

1 km 1 hr

Temperature inversions MODIS, AIRS IR window, CO2 or water vapor

2 km 1 hr

Radiative fluxes MODIS, AVHRR Vis, near-IR, IR window 1 km 1 hr

Fires, volcanic ash MODIS, AVHRR Vis, near-IR, IR window 2 km 1 min

Temperature and moisture profiles

HIRS, AIRS, IASI, AMSU

Hyperspectral IR 5 km 1 hr

Ice properties (concentration, motion, thickness)

MODIS, AVHRR, SSM/I, AMSR, SAR

Passive and active microwave; vis and IR

window

1 km 3 hrs

Ice sheet elevation ICESat, Cryosat Laser or radar altimetry 100 m Weekly

Snow properties (cover, grain size, SWE)

MODIS, AVHRR, SSM/I, AMSR

Vis and passive microwave

1 km 1 hr

(from multiple sources; open to discussion)

How do we meet the time requirements?

A single polar orbiter will cover very high latitudes every 100 minutes, but with a large gap each 24 hr period (depending on the scan angle cutoff). Two or more polar orbiters will improve the coverage (iridium: 66 satellites!). Of course, only part of the Arctic is covered at any given time.

However, combining multiple satellites into a single data stream can be complicated because of parallax and inter-satellite calibration differences.

Terra only Terra and Aqua (separately)

24 hr Coverage, One and Two Satellites

On the Use of Geostationary Satellites at High Latitudes

Geostationary satellites offer excellent temporal coverage and complete spatial coverage at every time step. But can they be used at high latitudes?

GEO Satellites: Issues

Theoretical pixel size change with LZA (for a 2 km FOV)

There are, however, issues at higher latitudes, particularly in terms of pixel size and atmospheric path length and the impact they have on retrievals.

Brightness temperature changes with local zenith angle (LZA) for various channels.

GEO Satellites: Impacts on Motion Products

The lower limit for tracking moving objects (clouds, water vapor, ice) is a function of temporal sampling interval and spatial resolution.

GEO Satellites: Impacts on Coverage Products

Binary labeling (e.g., cloud/not-cloud) is strongly dependent upon the pixel size. Using the beta distribution to describe the distribution of subpixel area fraction, we see that the distributions vary considerably as a function of pixel size (represented here by the variance). This generally results in an overestimation of total area fraction.

This overestimation is much less of a problem if subpixel area fraction is the goal rather than binary labeling.

GEO Satellites: Impacts on Profiles

There is a degradation on the water vapor retrievals but little impact on temperature retrievals.  Large local zenith angles result in a more nonlinear relationship for water vapor retrieval.

Temperature (above) and moisture (right) profile retrieval RMSE for different LZAs using simulated hyperspectral IR data.

GEO Satellites: Recommendations

Product Max Latitude

Radiances 55 (57)

Temp, WV Profiles 55 (57)

Small Fires 57 (57)

Large Fires 72 (72)

Winds 62 (62)

Cloud amount (binary) 55 (60)

Cloud-top Pressure 55 (57)

Snow, ice cover (fractional) 60 (65)

Ice motion 57 (60)

New Satellite System Possibilities

Winds coverage with geos and MODIS Winds coverage with geos and Molniya

Molniya iridium

Medium Earth Orbits

Conclusions

• Some snow and ice parameters do not need to be monitored at high temporal frequencies. Observations from polar orbiters are sufficient. Other paramgers, particularly atmospheric, would benefit from more frequent temporal sampling.

• Geostationary satellites provide excellent temporal coverage, but large view angles and path lengths makes them usable only to about 60o latitude.

• Multiple polar orbiters provide better temporal and spatial coverage, but constantly changing viewing geometry and inter-satellite calibration differences complicates this approach.

• Is it time for a new type of satellite observing system? Maybe it is.

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