Retrieving instantaneous extinction of aerosol undetected by the CALIPSO layer detection algorithm
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Published:2022-08-19
Issue:16
Volume:22
Page:10589-10602
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Mao Feiyue, Shi Ruixing, Rosenfeld DanielORCID, Pan Zengxin, Zang LinORCID, Zhu YannianORCID, Lu Xin
Abstract
Abstract. Aerosols significantly affect the Earth–atmosphere energy
balance and climate change by acting as cloud condensation nuclei.
Specifically, the susceptibility of cloud and precipitation to aerosols is
stronger when aerosols are faint but tends to be saturated in polluted
conditions. However, previous methodologies generally miss these faint
aerosols based on instantaneous observations because they are too
optically thin to be detected and are therefore usually unretrieved. This result
in a large underestimation when quantifying aerosol climate impacts. Here,
we focus on retrieving and verifying the instantaneous extinction of
undetected faint aerosol by the CALIPSO layer detection algorithm on a global scale.
Using the observations during the Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment III on the International Space Station (SAGE III/ISS) as constraints, the lidar ratios of
undetected faint aerosol are estimated with a global median of 42.2 and
24.5 sr at the stratosphere and the troposphere, respectively. The retrieved
extinction of undetected aerosol during night-time shows good agreement with
the independent 12-month SAGE III/ISS product on a 1∘ average. The
corresponding correlation coefficient and averaged normalized root-mean-square error are 0.66 % and 100.6 %, respectively. The minimum retrieved
extinction coefficients can be extended to 10−3 and 10−4 km−1 with an uncertainty of 35 % and 125 % during night-time,
respectively. The CALIPSO retrieval during daytime has a positive bias and
relatively low agreement with SAGE III/ISS due to the low signal-to-noise
ratio caused by sunlight. This study has great potential for improving the
understanding of aerosol variations and the quantification of aerosol
impacts on global climate change.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China National Key Research and Development Program of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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