microwave emissivity model upgrade for new instruments
DESCRIPTION
Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments. Fuzhong Weng NOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and Applications. Banghua Yan QSS Group Inc. Kozo Okamoto EMC Visiting Scientist, now at JMA. The 3 rd JCSDA Science Workshop, April 20-21, 2005, Camp Springs, MD. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments
Fuzhong WengNOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and Applications
Banghua Yan QSS Group Inc
The 3rd JCSDA Science Workshop, April 20-21, 2005, Camp Springs, MD
Kozo Okamoto EMC Visiting Scientist, now at JMA
![Page 2: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
JCSDA Road Map (2002 - 2010)
Improved JCSDA data assimilation science
2002 2004 2007 2008 2009 2005
OK
Deficiency
2003
Advanced JCSDA community-based radiative transfer model,Advanced data thinning techniques
Sci
ence
Ad
van
ce
By 2010, a numerical weather prediction community will be empowered to effectively assimilate increasing amounts of
advanced satellite observations
2010
AMSU, HIRS, SSM/I, Quikscat,
AVHRR, TMI, GOES assimilated
AIRS, ATMS, CrIS, VIIRS, IASI, SSM/IS, AMSR, more products assimilated
Pre-JCSDA data assimilation science
Radiative transfer model, OPTRAN, ocean microwave emissivity, microwave land emissivity model, and GFS data assimilation system were developed
The radiances of satellite sounding channels were assimilated into EMC global model under only clear atmospheric conditions. Some satellite surface products (SST, GVI and snow cover, wind) were used in EMC models
A beta version of JCSDA community-based radiative transfer model (CRTM) transfer model will be developed, including non-raining clouds, snow and sea ice surface conditions
The radiances from advanced sounders will be used. Cloudy radiances will be tested under rain-free atmospheres, and more products (ozone, water vapor winds) are assimilated
NPOESS sensors ( CMIS, ATMS…) GOES-R
The CRTM includes scattering & polarization from cloud, precip and surface
The radiances can be assimilated under all conditions with the state-of-the science NWP models
Resources:
![Page 3: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Atmospheric Spectroscopy Model
Aerosol and Cloud Optical Model
Surface Emissivity, Reflectivity Models
Forward Radiative Transfer Schemes
Receiver and Antenna Transfer Functions
Jacobian (Adjoint) Model
Atmospheric State Vectors Surface State Vectors
JCSDA Community Radiative Transfer Model
![Page 4: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Natural Scenes
Two-Scale Approx.
Scattering/ observations
Geometric Optics
Scattering/ observations
Theory Base
Surface Emissivity Model
![Page 5: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Surface Emissivity
• Open water – two-scale roughness theory
• Sea ice – Coherent reflection
• Canopy – Four layer clustering scattering
• Bare soil – Coherent reflection and surface roughness
• Snow/desert – Random media
Surface Emissivity Spectra (=530)
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency (GHz)
Em
issiv
ity a
t V
-Po
lari
zati
on
Snow
Canopy
Bare Soil
Wet Land
Desert
Ocean
Surface Emissivity Spectra (=530)
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200
Frequency (GHz)
Em
issiv
ity a
t H
-Po
lari
zati
on
Snow
Canopy
Bare Soil
Wet Land
Desert
Ocean
Weng et al (2001, JGR)
![Page 6: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Deficiencies of Snow Modeling
• Not applicable for aged snow
• Limited at frequencies less than 50 GHz
• Not applicable for vertically stratified snow
• Two stream radiative transfer approach
![Page 7: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Brightness Temperature Sensitivity to Surface Emissivity
Table 1.
)( dsB TTT = 0.04
![Page 8: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Advanced Microwave Sounding UnitSounding Channels
53.7 GHz52.8 GHz
183+-1 GHz 183+-3 GHz
![Page 9: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
![Page 10: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Emissivity Retrieval:
)( ds
dub
TT
TTT
AMSU-A: 23.8, 31.4, 50.3, 89 GHzAMSU-A: 23.8, 31.4, 50.3, 89 GHzAMSU-B: 89, 150 GHz AMSU-B: 89, 150 GHz AVHRR: TsAVHRR: TsRAOBS temperature/q profiles RAOBS temperature/q profiles
Snow Emissivity Data Base
Winter season of 2003: Eastern part of Winter season of 2003: Eastern part of US: persistent snow cover during US: persistent snow cover during FebruaryFebruary
![Page 11: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Snow Storms (February 2003)
![Page 12: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
AMSU Measurements at Hagerstown, MD (39.7N, 77.7W)
210
220
230
240
250
260
270
280
10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28
Date in February 2003
Tb
(K
)
23.8 GHz 31.4 GHz 50.3 GHz
89.0 GHz 150.0 GHz Ts
Dry snow >12 in Heavy rain Refrozen New snow
![Page 13: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Snow Emissivity SpectraSnow Emissivity Spectra31.4 50.3 8923.8 150
![Page 14: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Sea Ice Emissivity Spectra
Sea ice types: see Hewison and English, IEEE, 1999
![Page 15: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Impacts of Surface Emissivity Operational
![Page 16: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Impacts of Surface EmissivityExperimental
![Page 17: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Impacts of Surface EmissivityExperimental - Operational
![Page 18: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Impacts of AMSU on Forecasts in Polar Region
Anomaly Correlation for 700 hPa Geopotential Height
![Page 19: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Snow Microwave Emissivity SpectraSnow Microwave Emissivity Spectra
Snow H-POL Emissivity Spectra
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
0 30 60 90 120 150Frequency (GHz)
Snow
Em
issi
vity
-
Grass_after_Snow Wet Snow Powder SnowShallow Snow Medium Snow Deep SnowThin Crust Snow Thick Crust Snow Bottom Crust Snow (A)Bottom Crust Snow (B) Crust Snow RS_Snow (A)RS_Snow (B) RS_Snow (C) RS_Snow (D)RS_Snow (E)
Snow V-POL Emissivity Spectra
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
0 30 60 90 120 150Frequency (GHz)
Snow
Em
issi
vity
-
Grass_after_Snow Wet Snow Powder SnowShallow Snow Medium Snow Deep SnowThin Crust Snow Thick Crust Snow Bottom Crust Snow (A)Bottom Crust Snow (B) Crust Snow RS_Snow (A)RS_Snow (B) RS_Snow (C) RS_Snow (D)RS_Snow (E)
![Page 20: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Sea Ice Microwave Emissivity SpectraSea Ice Microwave Emissivity Spectra
Sea Ice H-POL Emissivity Spectra
0.40
0.50
0.60
0.70
0.80
0.90
1.00
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160Frequency (GHz)
Em
issi
vity
-
RS_ Ice (A) RS_Ice (B) New Ice + SnowBare New Ice Broken Ice First Year IceComposite Pack Ice RS_Ice (C) Fast IceRS_Ice (D) RS_Ice (E) RS_Ice (F)Grease Ice
Sea Ice V-POL Emissivity Spectra
0.60
0.65
0.70
0.75
0.80
0.85
0.90
0.95
1.00
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160Frequency (GHz)
Em
issi
vity
-
RS_ Ice (A) RS_Ice (B) New Ice + SnowBare New Ice Broken Ice First Year IceComposite Pack Ice RS_Ice (C) Fast IceRS_Ice (D) RS_Ice (E) RS_Ice (F)Grease Ice
![Page 21: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Performance of Ocean Emissivity Model in GDAS
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
0 30 60 90 120 150
Frequency (GHz)
Oce
an H
-PO
L E
mis
siv
ity
NESDIS (10m/s) MetOff. (10m/s)
NESDIS (30m/s) MetOff. (30m/s)
(b)0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
0 30 60 90 120 150
Frequency (GHz)
Oce
an V
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
ty
NESDIS (10m/s) MetOff. (10m/s)
NESDIS (30m/s) MetOff. (30m/s)
(a)
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
0 30 60 90 120 150
Frequency (GHz)
Oce
an V
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
ty
NESDIS (10m/s) MetOff. (10m/s)
NESDIS (30m/s) MetOff. (30m/s)
(c)
Oce
an V
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
ty
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
0 30 60 90 120 150
Frequency (GHz)
Oce
an H
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
ty
NESDIS (10m/s) MetOff. (10m/s)
NESDIS (30m/s) MetOff. (30m/s)
(d)
Oce
an V
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
ty
Oce
an H
-PO
L E
mis
sivi
tyO
cean
H-P
OL
Em
issi
vity
V-POL (SST = 300 K) H-POL (SST = 300 K)
V-POL (SST =280 K) H-POL (SST = 280 K)
![Page 22: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Comparison between Met Office and NESDIS Ocean Emissivity Models
► NESDIS Ocean Emissivity Model (Hollinger, 1971; Stogryn, 1972;
Klein and Swift, 1977 )
►Met Office Ocean Emissivity Model (A semi-empirical model, English and Hewison)
![Page 23: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Histogram of Simulated TB Bias at AMSR-E Channels Using Met Office Ocean Emissivity Model
![Page 24: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Histogram of Simulated TB Bias at AMSR-E Channels Using NESDIS Ocean Emissivity Model
![Page 25: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Summary of Accomplishments
• Microwave emissivity models have been updated for new sensors (SSMIS, MHS) over snow and sea ice conditions
• Microwave snow and sea ice emissivity models are integrated as part of CRTM
• These upgrades improve AMSU data utilization rate in polar atmospheres (200-300% increase).
• Impacts of the emissivity models on global 6-7 forecasts are also assessed and significant
![Page 26: Microwave Emissivity Model Upgrade for New Instruments](https://reader037.vdocument.in/reader037/viewer/2022102819/56814c86550346895db9a122/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Outstanding Issues
• Ocean microwave emissivity model used in NCEP global data assimilation system is found to cause larger biases in simulated brightness temperatures at lower frequencies, compared to the model developed by NESDIS, especially at high wind speeds