Fully Automated Detection of Cloud and Aerosol Layers in the CALIPSO Lidar Measurements

Author:

Vaughan Mark A.1,Powell Kathleen A.1,Winker David M.1,Hostetler Chris A.1,Kuehn Ralph E.2,Hunt William H.2,Getzewich Brian J.2,Young Stuart A.3,Liu Zhaoyan4,McGill Matthew J.5

Affiliation:

1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Hampton, Virginia

2. Science Systems and Applications, Inc., Hampton, Virginia

3. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Aspendale, Victoria, Australia

4. National Institute of Aerospace, Hampton, Virginia

5. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greenbelt, Maryland

Abstract

Abstract Accurate knowledge of the vertical and horizontal extent of clouds and aerosols in the earth’s atmosphere is critical in assessing the planet’s radiation budget and for advancing human understanding of climate change issues. To retrieve this fundamental information from the elastic backscatter lidar data acquired during the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) mission, a selective, iterated boundary location (SIBYL) algorithm has been developed and deployed. SIBYL accomplishes its goals by integrating an adaptive context-sensitive profile scanner into an iterated multiresolution spatial averaging scheme. This paper provides an in-depth overview of the architecture and performance of the SIBYL algorithm. It begins with a brief review of the theory of target detection in noise-contaminated signals, and an enumeration of the practical constraints levied on the retrieval scheme by the design of the lidar hardware, the geometry of a space-based remote sensing platform, and the spatial variability of the measurement targets. Detailed descriptions are then provided for both the adaptive threshold algorithm used to detect features of interest within individual lidar profiles and the fully automated multiresolution averaging engine within which this profile scanner functions. The resulting fusion of profile scanner and averaging engine is specifically designed to optimize the trade-offs between the widely varying signal-to-noise ratio of the measurements and the disparate spatial resolutions of the detection targets. Throughout the paper, specific algorithm performance details are illustrated using examples drawn from the existing CALIPSO dataset. Overall performance is established by comparisons to existing layer height distributions obtained by other airborne and space-based lidars.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

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