Spectral discrimination of coarse and fine mode optical depth

Date

2003-09-12

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

O’Neill, N. T., T. F. Eck, A. Smirnov, B. N. Holben, and S. Thulasiraman. “Spectral Discrimination of Coarse and Fine Mode Optical Depth.” Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 108, no. D17 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1029/2002JD002975.

Rights

This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
Public Domain

Abstract

The recognition that the aerosol particle size distribution (PSD) is effectively bimodal permits the extraction of the fine and coarse mode optical depths (τբ and τ꜀) from the spectral shape of the total aerosol optical depth (τₐ = τբ + τ꜀). This purely optical technique avoids intermediate computations of the PSD and yields a direct optical output that is commensurate in complexity with the spectral information content of τₐ. The separation into τբ and τ꜀ is a robust process and yields aerosol optical statistics, which are more intrinsic than those, obtained from a generic analysis of τₐ. Partial (optical) validation is provided by (1) demonstrating the physical coherence of the simple model employed, (2) demonstrating that τ꜀ variation is coherent with photographic evidence of thin cloud events and that τբ variation is coherent with photographic evidence of clear sky and haze events, and (3) showing that the retrieved values of τբ and τ꜀ are well-correlated, if weakly biased, relative to formal inversions of combined solar extinction and sky radiance data. The spectral inversion technique permitted a closer scrutiny of a standard (temporally based) cloud-screening algorithm. Perturbations of monthly or longer-term statistics associated with passive or active shortcomings of operational cloud screening were inferred to be small to occasionally moderate over a sampling of cases. Diurnal illustrations were given where it was clear that such shortcomings can have a significant impact on the interpretation of specific events; (1) commission errors in τբ due to the exclusion of excessively high-frequency fine mode events and (2) omission errors in τ꜀ due to the inclusion of insufficiently high-frequency thin homogeneous cloud events.