A test of the ability of current bulk optical models to represent the radiative properties of cirrus cloud across the mid- and far-infrared
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Published:2020-11-05
Issue:21
Volume:20
Page:12889-12903
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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:
Bantges Richard J.ORCID, Brindley Helen E., Murray Jonathan E., Last Alan E., Russell Jacqueline E., Fox CathrynORCID, Fox StuartORCID, Harlow Chawn, O'Shea Sebastian J.ORCID, Bower Keith N.ORCID, Baum Bryan A.ORCID, Yang Ping, Oetjen Hilke, Pickering Juliet C.
Abstract
Abstract. Measurements of mid- to far-infrared nadir radiances
obtained from the UK Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM)
BAe 146 aircraft during the Cirrus Coupled Cloud-Radiation Experiment
(CIRCCREX) are used to assess the performance of various ice cloud bulk
optical property models. Through use of a minimization approach, we find
that the simulations can reproduce the observed spectra in the mid-infrared
to within measurement uncertainty, but they are unable to simultaneously match the
observations over the far-infrared frequency range. When both mid- and
far-infrared observations are used to minimize residuals, first-order
estimates of the spectral flux differences between the best-performing
simulations and observations indicate a compensation effect between the mid-
and far-infrared such that the absolute broadband difference is < 0.7 W m−2. However, simply matching the spectra using the mid-infrared
(far-infrared) observations in isolation leads to substantially larger
discrepancies, with absolute differences reaching ∼ 1.8 (3.1) W m−2. These results show that simulations using these microphysical
models may give a broadly correct integrated longwave radiative impact but
that this masks spectral errors, with implicit consequences for the vertical
distribution of atmospheric heating. They also imply that retrievals using
these models applied to mid-infrared radiances in isolation will select
cirrus optical properties that are inconsistent with far-infrared radiances.
As such, the results highlight the potential benefit of more extensive far-infrared
observations for the assessment and, where necessary, the improvement of
current ice bulk optical models.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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