Title: Miguel A' Bustamante
1Improved Processing of Multi-filter Rotating
Shadowband Radiometer Network for Distributed
Monitoring of Atmospheric Aerosols
- Miguel A. Bustamante
- Mentors and Collaborators
- B. Gross, F. Moshary, and S. Ahmed The Graduate
Center, Optical Remote Sensing Lab, NOAA-CREST,
The City College of the University of New York
and NASA-GISS
With the kind assistance of Dr. M. Alexandrov
(NASA-GISS)
2Can Satellites be used for examining air quality
in urban areas
- Aerosol optical depth from satellites show strong
correlation with PM2.5 measurements on ground in
the North East - Aloft Plumes (as seen from Lidar) must be
filtered out. - Satellite results cannot provide the spatial
resolution needed to accurately quantify the
local aerosol signal generated within the urban
canopy - Development of a spatial network of radiometers
can help improve modeling of urban albedo and
provide a subsequent improvement in spatial
resolution.
3Aerosol optical depth from satellites shows
strong correlation with PM2.5
Coincident Lidar measurements have been used to
filter out significant aloft plumes from dataset.
IDEA 60ug line
AOD for High PM 2.5 region can easily give
false positives
PM2.5 Concentration
Still, we note poor performance of AOD as a
predictor of high pollution events due to errors
in retrieval and aerosol inhomogeneity
4Satellite Observations inferring larger aerosol
loading over city
Note that measurements over NYC have been
derived based on regional algorithm which
removes bias
5MFRSR Ground Radiometer Network Motivation
- Satellite AOD does correlate well with PM2.5 but
in general can lead to many false positives.
Spatial resolution is in general too low to
accurately mark the boundary. - Such measurements can only reliably provide
statistical information on aerosol differences
between urban and non urban regimes - Need a cost effective spatially distributed
radiometer system which can validate satellite
measurements over broad spatial distributions. - Unfortunately CIMEL radiometer are too expensive
and not portable vs. a cheaper and portable MFRSR
instrument. - The network requires a robust processing approach
which is less sensitive to instability in AOD
than the Langley Regression Calibration. - Besides monitoring aerosol transport and
validating satellite measurements, these
measurements can be used to improve the retrieval
algorithms over different areas by improving
surface albedo.
6Devices
CIMEL Sun Photometer CE-318
- Multi-filter Rotating Shadowband
- Radiometer (MFRSR)
It makes direct sun measurements at eight
spectral bands 340, 380, 440, 670, 870, 936 and
1020 nm. The CCNY sun photometer is identified at
NASA AERONET (AErosol RObotic NETwork) as
instrument 237. Since light is absorbed and
scattered by atmospheric anthropogenic gases, the
concentration of Aerosols and NO2 among others
can be determined.
Model MFR-7 is a field instrument that
simultaneously makes instantaneous spectral
measurements at six wavelengths (415, 500, 615,
673, 870, and 940 nm) of Global, diffuse and
direct normal components of spectral solar
irradiance. The instrument uses the same detector
to sense global and diffuse irradiance
eliminating channel variability.
7Network TopologyCurrent and Future
Outer ring
Inner ring
8Data Analysis(1)
- Improvement on this approach are possible by
implementing a novel algorithm based on the ratio
between the direct and diffuse radiance developed
at NASA-GISS in which only the optical depth
ratios during the calibration procedure are
required to be stable. - Results shows that this approach significantly
improve optical depth time series measurements
when compared to Aeronet CIMEL aerosol optical
depth measurements in comparison to the Langley
regression method calibration.
Regressing these equations to find D and C870. D
is the Opacity Deficiency Term
- M. Alexandrov, A. Lacis, B. Carlson and B.
Cairns, 2002 Remote Sensing of Atmospheric
Aerosol and Trace Gases by Means of Multi-filter
Rotating Shadowband Radiometer. Part I J. Atmos.
Sci., 59, 524-542
9Data Analysis(2)
- Once the calibration of the 870 channel is
accomplished, the calibration of the other
aerosol channels can be accomplished with 870
optical thickness as reference. - Using the 870 as reference leads to a regression
problem where it is only necessary to assume that
the aerosol optical depth ratio between the
channel and the 870 reference is stable. - This condition is much less severe than the
condition of the Langley regression which
requires the aerosol optical depth itself should
be stable.
10Comparison Between Uncertainties in AOD and AOD
Ratio
Note that the fractional error of the aerosol
optical depth is at least twice as large as the
Aerosol Optical depth Ratio which supports the
effort to use optical depth ratios in the
calibrations stage.
11Comparison Between CIMEL and MFRSR
NASA processing algorithm matches CIMEL process
more robustly
12Further Match-ups to Assess When MFRSRBreaks
Down
Problems at low AOD
Showing worst case errors for NASA Langley and
other technique
13Further Match-ups to Assess When MFRSRBreaks
Down
Showing worst case errors for NASA Langley and
other technique
14Preliminary Results fromPrinceton Site
Effect of a Dust Plume on Coarse versus Fine Mode
Aerosol
MFRSR Coarse and Fine Mode Optical depth sees
dramatic increase in Coarse particles at 1600
Three Channel Lidar sees dust incursion into PBL
at 1600 and later
15Match-ups of AOD (including fine and coarse mode)
at DOE ARM Site in Southern Great Plains (SGP)
In general, retrieval of aerosol fine mode is
superior than coarse mode due to lack of long
wavelength channels (wavelength lt 860)
16Conclusions
- In general processing MFRSR data using Langley
regression leads to significant errors due to the
variability of the optical depth during the
calibration process and difficulties in the
elimination of sky background. - An improved processing method based on
calibration of the long channel (870nm) using a
combination of direct and diffuse radiation does
not require good stability. Calibration of the
other channels assumes that the optical depth
ratios are stable which we showed is a realistic
assumption. - We note that good agreement often occurs (not
always) if CIMEL AOD is high and variability
with the angstrom coefficient is low - A comparison of CIMEL and MFRSR in the retrieval
of fine and coarse mode aerosols indicates that
the fine mode retrieval by MFRSR seems much
better than the coarse mode. This can be
partially explained by remembering the MFRSR
wavelength are in the range from 440 to 870nm
unlike the CIMEL which goes from 340 to1020nm (or
more recently 1640nm)
17Future Work
- More instruments are being networked into the
system. - Intercomparisons to explore case by case
differences in AOD between different sites are
needed and will be based on situations where
clear down wind or cross wind conditions between
sites - More data is needed to quantify the retrieval
performance for total and fine mode AOD - Data from GISS algorithm needs to be implemented
over network based on CART Architecture.
18Thank You