Abstract
Abstract. Ceilometer measurements of aerosol backscatter profiles have been
widely used to provide continuous planetary boundary layer height (PBLHT)
estimations. To investigate the robustness of ceilometer-estimated PBLHT
under different atmospheric conditions, we compared ceilometer- and
radiosonde-estimated PBLHTs using multiple years of U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) ceilometer and
balloon-borne sounding data at ARM fixed-location atmospheric observatories
and from ARM mobile facilities deployed around the world for various field
campaigns. These observatories cover from the tropics to the polar regions
and over both ocean and land surfaces. Statistical comparisons of
ceilometer-estimated PBLHTs from the Vaisala CL31 ceilometer data with
radiosonde-estimated PBLHTs from the ARM PBLHT-SONDE Value-added Product
(VAP) are performed under different atmospheric conditions including stable
and unstable atmospheric boundary layer, low-level cloud-free conditions, and cloudy
conditions at these ARM observatories. Under unstable conditions, good
comparisons are found between ceilometer- and radiosonde-estimated PBLHTs at
ARM low- and mid-latitude land observatories. However, it is still
challenging to obtain reliable PBLHT estimations over ocean surfaces even
using radiosonde data. Under stable conditions, ceilometer- and
radiosonde-estimated PBLHTs have weak correlations. We compare different
PBLHT estimations utilizing the Heffter, the Liu–Liang, and the bulk
Richardson number methods applied to radiosonde data with
ceilometer-estimated PBLHT. We find that ceilometer-estimated PBLHT compares
better with the Liu–Liang method under unstable conditions and compares
better with the bulk Richardson number method under stable conditions.
Funder
U.S. Department of Energy
Cited by
18 articles.
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