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  • Earth Resources and Remote Sensing  (6)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-06-06
    Description: We present sunphotometer-retrieved and in situ fine mode fractions (FMF) measured onboard the same aircraft during the ACE-Asia experiment. Comparisons indicate that the latter can be used to identify whether the aerosol under observation is dominated by a mixture of modes or a single mode. Differences between retrieved and in situ FMF range from 5-20%. When profiles contained multiple layers of aerosols, the retrieved and measured FMF were segregated by layers. The comparison of layered and total FMF from the same profile indicates that columnar values are intermediate to those derived from layers. As a result, a remotely sensed FMF cannot be used to distinguish whether the aerosol under observation is composed of layers each with distinctive modal features or all layers with the same modal features. Thus, the use of FMF in multiple layer environments does not provide unique information on the aerosol under observation.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: Geophysical Research Letters (ISSN 0094-8276); Volume 33; L05807
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Natural dust is often associated with hot, subtropical deserts, but significant dust events have been reported from cold, high latitudes. This review synthesizes current understanding of high-latitude (〉 or = 50degN and 〉 or = 40degS) dust source geography and dynamics and provides a prospectus for future research on the topic. Although the fundamental processes controlling aeolian dust emissions in high latitudes are essentially the same as in temperate regions, there are additional processes specific to or enhanced in cold regions. These include low temperatures, humidity, strong winds, permafrost and niveo-aeolian processes all of which can affect the efficiency of dust emission and distribution of sediments. Dust deposition at high latitudes can provide nutrients to the marine system, specifically by contributing iron to high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll oceans; it also affects ice albedo and melt rates. There have been no attempts to quantify systematically the expanse, characteristics, or dynamics of high-latitude dust sources. To address this, we identify and compare the main sources and drivers of dust emissions in the Northern (Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Iceland) and Southern (Antarctica, New Zealand, and Patagonia) Hemispheres. The scarcity of year-round observations and limitations of satellite remote sensing data at high latitudes are discussed. It is estimated that under contemporary conditions high-latitude sources cover 〉500,000 sq km and contribute at least 80-100 Tg/yr1 of dust to the Earth system (approx. 5% of the global dust budget); both are projected to increase under future climate change scenarios.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN34846 , Review of Geophysics (e-ISSN 1944-9208); 54; 2; 447-485
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: Like a peninsula into the Southern Ocean, the vast Patagonia desert in the southern tip of South America is exposed to extreme winds. Dust blown from this region has important impacts thousands of kilometers away, but these impacts are very difficult to assess. Questions such as the sources of dust found in snow in East Antarctica as well as the provenance of nutrients in the Southern Ocean remain unanswered. While the Patagonia desert is the likely source of dust, there is a dearth of observational records of dust activity from this desert. This study fills the gap in observations by providing a record of 50 years of surface and satellite observations of the largest and most active dust source in Patagonia: lake Colhu Huapi. The seasonality, frequency and periods of major dust activity are identified from meteorological records at a station located 100km downwind from the lake. Collocated satellite observations confirmed the major periods of dust activity in the last 30 years. This dataset provides information on how to interpret records of recent dust found in East Antarctica snow as well as help to understand the CO2 cycle in the Southern Ocean.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN67426 , Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres; 124; 6; 3417-3434
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-01-01
    Description: Satellite earth observation of aerosols using a single sensor have been done for more than three decades. The retrieved global distribution of column integrated aerosol optical depth (AOD) has been refined with higher accuracy and finer resolutions. However, the other aerosol properties, such as aerosol absorption and aerosol height, haven not been mapped as extensively using passive sensors. The detectors sensitive to these properties (UV-based sensors such as Aura-OMI) lack the adequate visible channels to tease out the absorption, height and loading contributions. In addition, their spatial resolution is prone to frequent cloud contamination impacting aerosol loading retrievals using only these spectral ranges. However, the deployment of the VIIRS and OMPS-NM sensors on the same Suomi NPP platform provides a first opportunity to carry out retrievals of aerosol single scattering albedo (SSA) and AOD with little cloud contamination using an expanded spectral range from the UV to the near-IR wavelengths. After collocated VIIRS pixel within the large OMPS footprint during the high resolution OMPS observing mode, we compared the radiance from OMPS and VIIRS to ensure the calibration from individual sensors are comparable. Then a look up table (LUT) was created for a smoke case over central Africa. The LUT is generated using 10 channels from 0.357 to 2.1 micron with 44 combinations of aerosol models and 4 different aerosol heights. With CALIOP and AERONET observation nearby, the possibility of using OMPS and VIIRS radiance as a single virtual sensor to simultaneously and consistently retrieve AOD, SSA, and aerosol height is explored.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN76344 , 2019 AGU Fall Meeting; Dec 09, 2019 - Dec 13, 2019; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Retrievals of aerosol optical depth (AOD) at 388 nm over the ocean from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) two-channel near-UV algorithm (OMAERUV) have been compared with independent AOD measurements. The analysis was carried out over the open ocean (OMI and MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) AOD comparisons) and over coastal and island sites (OMI and AERONET, the AErosol RObotic NETwork). Additionally, a research version of the retrieval algorithm (using MODIS and CALIOP (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization) information as constraints) was utilized to evaluate the sensitivity of the retrieval to different assumed aerosol properties. Overall, the comparison resulted in differences (OMI minus independent measurements) within the expected levels of uncertainty for the OMI AOD retrievals (0.1 for AOD less than 0.3, 30% for AOD greater than 0.3). Using examples from case studies with outliers, the reasons that led to the observed differences were examined with specific purpose to determine whether they are related to instrument limitations (i.e., pixel size, calibration) or algorithm assumptions (such as aerosol shape, aerosol height). The analysis confirms that OMAERUV does an adequate job at rejecting cloudy scenes within the instrument's capabilities. There is a residual cloud contamination in OMI pixels with quality flag 0 (the best conditions for aerosol retrieval according to the algorithm), resulting in a bias towards high AODs in OMAERUV. This bias is more pronounced at low concentrations of absorbing aerosols (AOD 388 nm approximately less than 0.5). For higher aerosol loadings, the bias remains within OMI's AOD uncertainties. In pixels where OMAERUV assigned a dust aerosol model, a fraction of them (less than 20 %) had retrieved AODs significantly lower than AERONET and MODIS AODs. In a case study, a detailed examination of the aerosol height from CALIOP and the AODs from MODIS, along with sensitivity tests, was carried out by varying the different assumed parameters in the retrieval (imaginary index of refraction, size distribution, aerosol height, particle shape). It was found that the spherical shape assumption for dust in the current retrieval is the main cause of the underestimate. In addition, it is demonstrated in an example how an incorrect assumption of the aerosol height can lead to an underestimate. Nevertheless, this is not as significant as the effect of particle shape. These findings will be incorporated in a future version of the retrieval algorithm.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN35653 , Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (e-ISSN 1867-8548); 9; 7; 3031-3052
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-09-18
    Description: Current methods of dust detection rely on spectral sensitivity at visible (RGB) and infrared wavelengths. However, their application on different regions needs to be tuned to mitigate errors associated with background properties. High latitude dust (HLD) regions are characterized by surface with variable albedos and land cover, thus further complicating the dust detection. Leveraging supervised machine learning (ML) methods, we propose a new method accounting for regional differences of dust occurrence.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN72809 , Annual Meeting of the National Weather Association (NWA); Sep 07, 2019 - Sep 12, 2019; Huntsville, AL; United States
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