Predicting atmospheric optical properties for radiative transfer computations using neural networks

Author:

Veerman Menno A.1ORCID,Pincus Robert23ORCID,Stoffer Robin1,van Leeuwen Caspar M.4ORCID,Podareanu Damian4,van Heerwaarden Chiel C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Meteorology and Air Quality Group, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands

2. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA

3. NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, CO, USA

4. SURFsara, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

The radiative transfer equations are well known, but radiation parametrizations in atmospheric models are computationally expensive. A promising tool for accelerating parametrizations is the use of machine learning techniques. In this study, we develop a machine learning-based parametrization for the gaseous optical properties by training neural networks to emulate a modern radiation parametrization (RRTMGP). To minimize computa- tional costs, we reduce the range of atmospheric conditions for which the neural networks are applicable and use machine-specific optimized BLAS functions to accelerate matrix computations. To generate training data, we use a set of randomly perturbed atmospheric profiles and calculate optical properties using RRTMGP. Predicted optical properties are highly accurate and the resulting radiative fluxes have average errors within 0.5 W m −2 compared to RRTMGP. Our neural network-based gas optics parametrization is up to four times faster than RRTMGP, depending on the size of the neural networks. We further test the trade-off between speed and accuracy by training neural networks for the narrow range of atmospheric conditions of a single large-eddy simulation, so smaller and therefore faster networks can achieve a desired accuracy. We conclude that our machine learning-based parametrization can speed-up radiative transfer computations while retaining high accuracy. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Machine learning for weather and climate modelling’.

Funder

SURF Open Innovation Lab

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

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