Title: Microwave Interaction with Atmospheric Constituents
1Microwave Interaction with Atmospheric
Constituents
Chris Allen (callen_at_eecs.ku.edu) Course website
URL people.eecs.ku.edu/callen/823/EECS823.htm
2Outline
- Physical properties of the atmosphere
- Absorption and emission by gases
- Water vapor absorption
- Oxygen absorption
- Extraterrestrial sources
- Extinction and emission by clouds and
precipitation - Single particle effects
- Mie scattering
- Rayleigh approximation
- Scattering and absorption by hydrometeors
- Volume scattering and absorption coefficients
- Extinction and backscattering
- Clouds, fog, and haze
- Rain
- Snow
- Emission by clouds and rain
3Physical properties of the atmosphere
- The gaseous composition, and variations of
temperature, pressure, density, and water-vapor
density with altitude are fundamental
characteristics of the Earths atmosphere. - Atmospheric scientists have developed standard
models for the atmosphere that are useful for RF
and microwave models. - These models are representative and variations
with latitude, season, and region may be expected.
4Atmospheric composition
5Temperature, density, pressure profile
- Atmospheric density, pressure, and water-vapor
density decrease exponentially with altitude. - The atmosphere is subdivided based on thermal
profile and thermal gradients (dT/dz) where z is
altitude. - Troposphere
- surface to about 10 km dT/dz -6.5 ?C km-1
- Stratosphere
- upper boundary 47 kmdT/dz 2.8 ?C km-1 above
32 km - Mesosphere
- upper boundary 80 to 90 kmdT/dz -3.5 ?C km-1
above 60 km
6Temperature model
- Only the lowermost 30 km of the atmosphere
significantly affects the microwave and RF
signals due to the exponential decrease of
density with altitude. - For this region a simple piece-wise linear model
for the atmospheric temperature T(z) vs. altitude
may be used. - Here T(z) is expressed in K, T0 is the sea-level
temperature and T(11) is the atmospheric
temperature at 11 km. For the 1962 U.S. Standard
Atmosphere, the thermal gradient term a is -6.5
?C km-1 and T0 288.15 K.
7U.S. Standard Atmosphere, 1962
8Density and pressure models
- For the lowermost 30 km of the atmosphere a model
that predicts the variation of dry air density
?air with altitude is - where ?air has units of kg m-3, z is the altitude
in km, H2 is 7.3 km. - Assuming air to be an ideal gas we can apply the
ideal gas law to predict the pressure P at any
altitude (up to 30 km above sea level) using - Alternatively pressure can be found using
- where H3 7.7 km and Po 1013.25 mbar
9Water-vapor density model
- The water-vapor content of the atmosphere is
weather dependent and largely temperature driven.
- The sea-level water vapor density can vary from
0.01 g m-3 in cold dry climates to 30 g m-3 in
warm, humid climates. - An average value for mid-latitude regions is 7.72
g m-3. - Using this value as the surface value at
sea-level, we can use the following model to
predict the water-vapor density ?v at any
altitude using - where ?v has units of g m-3, ?0 is 7.72 g m-3,
and H4 is 2 km.
10Absorption and emission by gases
- Molecular absorption (and emission) of
electromagnetic energy may involve three types of
energy states - where
- Ee electronic energy
- Ev vibrational energy
- Er rotational energy
- Of the various gases and vapors in the Earths
atmosphere, only oxygen and water vapor have
significant absorption bands in the microwave
spectrum. - Oxygens magnetic moment enables rotational
energy states around 60 GHz and 118.8 GHz. - Water vapors electric dipole enables rotational
energy states at 22.2 GHz, 183.3 GHz, and several
frequencies above 300 GHz.
11Spectral line shape
- For a molecule in isolation the absorption and
emission energy levels are very precise and
produce well defined spectral lines. Energy
exchanges and interactions in the form of
collisions result in a spectral line broadening.
One mechanism that produces spectral line
broadening is termed pressure broadening as it
results from collisions between molecules.
12Absorption spectrum model
- The absorption spectrum for transactions between
a pair of energy states may be written as - where
- ?a power absorption coefficient, Np m-1
- f frequency, Hz
- flm molecular resonance frequency for
transitions between energy states El and Em, Hz - c speed of light, 3 ? 108 m s-1
- Slm line strength of the lm line, Hz
- F line-shape function, Hz-1
- The line strength Slm of the lm line depend on
the number of absorbing gas molecules per unit
volume, gas temperature, and molecular parameters.
13Line-shape function
- There are several different line-shape functions,
F, used to describe the shape of the absorption
spectrum with respect to the resonance frequency,
flm. - The Lorentzian function, FL, is the simplest
- here
- linewidth parameter, Hz
- The Van Vleck and Weisskopf function, FVW, takes
into account atmospheric pressures
14Line-shape function
- The Gross function, FG, was developed using a
different approach and shows better agreement
with measured data further from the resonance
frequency.
15Water-vapor absorption
- Absorption due to water vapor can be modeled
using - For each water-vapor absorption line the line
strength is - where
- Slm0 constant characteristic of the lm
transition - flm the resonance frequency
- ?v water-vapor density
- El lower energy states energy level
- k Boltzmanns constant (1.38 ? 10-23 J K-1)
- T thermodynamic temperature (K)
- Thus ?(f, flm) expressed in dB km-1 is
16Water-vapor absorption
- Water vapor has resonant frequencies at
- 22.235 GHz, 183.31 GHz, 323 GHz, 325.1538 GHz,
380.1968 GHz, 390 GHz, 436 GHz, 438 GHz, 442
GHz, - For frequencies below 100 GHz we may consider the
water-vapor absorption coefficient to be composed
of two factors - Where
- ?(f, 22) absorption due to 22.235-GHz resonance
- ?r(f) residual term representing absorption due
to all higher- frequency water-vapor absorption
lines
17Water-vapor absorption
- Using data for the 22.235-GHz resonance we get
- where the linewidth parameter ?1 is
- f and ?1 are expressed in GHz, T is in K, ?v is
in g m-3, andP is in millibars. - The residual absorption term is
- Therefore the total water vapor absorption below
100 GHz is
18Water-vapor absorption
19Oxygen absorption
- Molecular oxygen has numerous absorption lines
between 50 and 70 GHz (known as the 60-GHz
complex) as well as a line at 118.75 GHz.
Around 60 GHz there are 39 discrete resonant
frequencies that blend together due to pressure
broadening at the lower altitudes. Complex
models are available that predict the oxygen
absorption coefficient throughout the microwave
spectrum.
Resonant frequencies (GHz) in the 60-GHz complex
49.9618, 50.4736, 50.9873, 51.5030, 52.0212,
52.5422, 53.0668, 53.5957, 54.1300, 54.6711,
55.2214, 55.7838, 56.2648, 56.3634, 56.9682,
57.6125, 58.3239, 58.4466, 59.1642, 59.5910,
60.3061, 60.4348, 61.1506, 61.8002, 62.4863,
62.4112, 62.9980, 63.5685, 64.1278, 64.6789,
65.2241, 65.7647, 66.3020, 66.8367, 67.3964,
67.9007, 68.4308, 68.9601, 69.4887
20Oxygen absorption
- For frequencies below 45 GHz a low-frequency
approximation model may be used that combines the
effects of all of the resonance lines in the
60-GHz complex with a single resonance at 60 GHz,
and that neglects the effect of the 118.75-GHz
resonance. - where f is in GHz, f0 60 GHz, and
21Total atmospheric gaseous absorption
- As water vapor and oxygen are the dominant
sources for atmospheric absorption (and
emission), the total gaseous absorption
coefficient is the sum of these two components
22Total atmospheric gaseous absorption
- Non-zenith optical thickness can be approximated
as - for ? ? 70.
23Atmospheric gaseous emission
- We know that for a non-scattering gaseous
atmosphere - where
- An upward-looking radiometer would receive the
down-welling radiation, TDN, plus a small energy
component from cosmic and galactic radiation
sources. - where
- TCOS and TGAL are the cosmic and galactic
brightness temperatures, and TEXTRA is the
extraterrestrial brightness temperature.
24Extraterrestrial sources
- TCOS is independent of frequency and direction.
- TGAL is both frequency and direction dependent.
- Frequency dependenceDepending on the specific
region of the galaxy, - Above 5 GHz, TGAL TDN and TGAL may be
neglected. - Below 1 GHz TGAL may not be ignored.TGAL plus
man-made emissions limit the usefulness of Earth
observations below 1 GHz. - Direction dependenceTGAL(max) in the direction
of the galactic center while TGAL(min) is the
direction of the galactic pole.
25Extraterrestrial sources
The galactic center is located in the
constellation Sagittarius. Radiation from this
location is associated with the complex
astronomical radio source Sagittarius A, believed
to be a supermassive black hole.
26Effects of the sun
- The suns brightness temperature TSUN is
frequency dependent as well as dependent on the
state of the sun. - For the quiet sun (no significant sunspots or
flares) TSUN decreases with increasing frequency. - At 100 MHz, TSUN is about 106 K, while at 10 GHz
it is 104 K, and above 30 GHz TSUN is 6000 K. - When sunspots and flares are present, TSUN can
increase by orders of magnitude. - Jupiter, a star wannabe, also emits significant
energy though it is smaller than the active sun
by at least two orders of magnitude.
27Other radio stars
- Taken from Preston, GW The Theory of Stellar
Radar, Rand Corp. Memorandum RM-3167-PR, May
1962. - The radio stars (Cassiopeia A, Cygnus A,
Centaurus A, Virgo, etc.) are astounding sources
of RF energy, not only because of their great
strength, but also because of their remarkable
energy spectra. - These spectra reach their maxima at about 10 m
wavelength (30 MHz in frequency) and fall off
rather sharply at higher frequencies ( 10
dB/decade). - The flux density from Cassiopeia exceeds the
solar flux at longer wavelengths. - Compared to Cassiopeia, Cygnus is 2 dB weaker,
Centaurus is 8 dB weaker, and Virgo is 10 dB
weaker.
28Extinction and emission by clouds and
precipitation
- Electromagnetic interaction with individual
spherical particles - A spherical particle with a radius r is
illuminated by an electromagnetic plane wave with
power density Si W m-2, a portion of which is
absorbed, Pa. - The absorption cross-section, Qa is
- The absorption efficiency factor, ?a, is the
ratio of Qa to the geometrical cross-section, A,
is
29Electromagnetic interaction with individual
spherical particles
- If the incident wave were traveling along the z
axis, and Ss(?, ?) is the power density radiation
scattered in the (?, ?) direction at distance R,
then the total power scattered by the particle is - The scattering cross section, Qs and the
scattering efficiency factor, ?s are - Thus Pa Ps represent the total power removed
from the incident wave and the extinction cross
section Qe and extinction efficiency ?e are
30Electromagnetic interaction with individual
spherical particles
- For monostatic radar applications, the radar
backscattering cross-section ?b is of interest
and this is that portion of Ss(?, ?) directed
back toward the radiation source, i.e.,Ss(? ?)
or Ss(?). - Note Incident wave travels along the z axis,so
? ? corresponds to backscatter direction.Also,
when ? ?, ? has no significance. - ?b is defined as
- or
31Mie scattering
- Gustov Mie, in 1908, developed the complete
solution for the scattering and absorption of a
dielectric sphere of arbitrary radius, r,
composed of a homogeneous, isotropic and
optically linear material irradiated by an
infinitely extending plane wave. - Key terms are the Mie particle size parameter ?
and the refractive index n (refractive contrast?) - where
- ?'rb real part of relative dielectric constant
of background medium - ?cb complex dielectric constant of background
medium (F m-1) - ?cp complex dielectric constant of particle
medium (F m-1) - ?0 free-space wavelength (m)
- ?b wavelength in background medium (m)
32Mie scattering
- Numerical solutions for spheres of various
composition.
optical limit ?e 2 for ? 1
33Mie scattering
- Strongly conducting sphere
For ? ltlt 1, ?s ltlt ?a
34Mie scattering
- Weakly absorbing sphere
- Again, for ? 1, ?s ?aso ?e ? ?a
- Also, as ? ? ?, ? a ? 1 and ?s ? 1 if 0 lt n? 1
35Backscattering efficiency, ?b
- Mies solution also predicts the backscattering
efficiency, ?b, for a spherical particle
optical limit ?b 1 for ? 1
36Rayleigh approximation
- For particles much smaller than the incident
waves wavelength, i.e., n ? 1, the Mie
solution can be approximated with simple
expressions known as the Rayleigh approximations. - For n ? lt 0.5 (Rayleigh region)
- where
- and
- Unless the partical is weakly absorbing (i.e.,
n? n') such that Im-K K2, Qa Qs since
Qs varies as ?6 and Qa varies as ?3.
37Rayleigh approximation
and
so
- Therefore the scattering cross section increases
quite rapidly with particle radius and with
increasing frequency. - ExampleFor ? held constant, a 12 increase in
radius r (a 40 volume increase) doubles the
scattering cross section. - For a constant radius r, an octave increase in
frequency (factor of 2) results in a 16-fold
increase (12 dB) in the scattering cross section.
38Rayleigh backscattering
- Again, for the Rayleigh region (n ? lt 0.5), a
simplified expression for the backscattering
efficiency is found, Rayleighs backscattering
law - or
- And as was the case for the scattering cross
section, - Therefore in the Rayleigh region, the
backscattering cross section is very sensitive to
particle size relative to wavelength.
39Rayleigh backscattering
- For large n, K ? 1 yielding
- However for the case of n ? (perfect
conductor) which violates the Rayleigh condition
(n ? lt 0.5) for finite particle sizes, the
backscattering cross section can be found for
? 1 using Mies solution - or
40Rayleigh backscattering
41Scattering and absorption by hydrometeors
- Now we consider the interaction of RF and
microwave waves with hydrometeors (i.e.,
precipitation product, such as rain, snow, hail,
fog, or clouds, formed from the condensation of
water vapor in the atmosphere). - Electromagnetic scattering and absorption of a
spherical particle depend on three parameters - wavelength, ?
- particles complex refractive index, n
- particle radius, r
- This requires an understanding of the dielectric
properties of liquid water and ice.
42Pure water
- The Debye equation describes the frequency
dependence of the dielectric constant of pure
water, ?w - where
- ?w0 static relative dielectric constant of pure
water, dimensionless - ?w? high-frequency (or optical) limit of ?w,
dimensionless - ?w relaxation time of pure water, s
- f electromagnetic frequency, Hz
- Algebraic manipulation yields
43Pure water
- While ?w? is apparently temperature independent,
temperature affects ?w0 and ?w causing ?'w and
??w to be dependent on temperature, T. - The relaxation time for pure water is
- where T is expressed in ?C.
- The corresponding relaxation frequency fw0 of
pure water is - which varies from 9 GHz at 0 ?C to 17 GHz at 20
?C. - The temperature-dependent static dielectric of
water is
44Pure water
Relative dielectric constant, real part, ?r' vs.
imaginary part, ?r?
45Pure water
- To apply the solutions from Mie or Rayleigh
requires the complex refractive index. - where
- ?rc is the complex relative dielectric constant
46Pure water
Refractive index, real part, n'
47Pure water
Refractive index, imaginary part, n?
48Pure water
Refractive index, magnitude n
49Sea water
- Saline water is water containing dissolved salts.
- The salinity, S, is the total salt mass in grams
dissolved in 1 kg of water and is typically
expressed in parts per thousand () on a
gravimetric (weight) basis. - The average sea-water salinity, Ssw, is 32.54
- The following expressions for the real and
imaginary parts of the relative dielectric
constant of saline water are valid over salinity
range of 4 to 35 and the temperature range from
0 to 40 ?C. - where
- ?sw is the relaxation time of saline water, s
- ?i is the ionic conductivity of the aqueous
soluiton, S m-1 - ?0 is the free-space permittivity, 8.854 ? 10-12
F m-1
50Sea water
- The high-frequency (or optical) limit of ?sw is
independent of salinity. - The static relative dielectric constant of saline
water depends on salinity () and temperature
(?C). - where
51Sea water
- The relaxation time is also dependent on both
salinity and temperature. - where
- ?sw(T, 0) ?w(T) that was given earlier
52Sea water
- Finally, the ionic conductivity for sea water,
?i, depends on salinity () and temperature (?C)
as - where the ionic conductivity at 25 ?C is
- and
- where ? 25 T, T is in ?C
53Pure and sea water
Relative dielectric constant, real part, ?r'
54Pure and sea water
Relative dielectric constant, imaginary part, ?r?
55Pure and fresh-water ice
- As water goes from its liquid state to its solid
state, i.e., ice, its relaxation frequency drops
from the GHz range to the kHz range. - At 0 ?C the relaxation frequency of ice, fi0, is
7.23 kHz and at -66 ?C it is only 3.5 Hz. - At RF and microwave frequencies the term 2?f?i0
or f/fi0 is much greater than one. Therefore the
real part of the relative dielectric of pure ice
(?i') should be independent of frequency and
temperature (below 0 ?C) at RF and microwave
frequencies.
56Characteristics of ice
- The dielectric properties of ice can be predicted
by the Debye equation - Multiple relaxation frequencies exist for pure
ice, some in the kHz, others in the THz.
Complex Real part Imaginary part
Multiple relaxation frequencies exist for pure
ice, some in the kHz, others in the THz. In the
kHz band20 ?s ? 40 ms In the THz band6 fs
? 30 fs
57Pure and fresh-water ice
- There is some variability in reported measured
values for ?i'. - Recent work shows that
58Pure and fresh-water ice
- Similarly the Debye expression for the imaginary
part (?i?) simplifies to - where ?i0 91.5 at 0 ?C.
- However while the Debye equation predicts that
?i? should decrease monotonically with increasing
frequency, experimental data do not agree. - The relatively small value for the loss factor
?i? makes accurate measurement difficult. - Possible cause for this discrepancy is a resonant
frequency in the infrared band (5 THz and 6.6
THz).
59Pure and fresh-water ice
Relative dielectric constant, imaginary part, ?r?
60Pure and fresh-water ice
Relative dielectric constant, imaginary part, ?r?
Loss (dB/m) ? f??So for region where ?? ?
1/f,Loss is frequency independent
61Pure and fresh-water ice
- An empirical fit of the data presented in Fig.
E.3 (previous slide) relating ?? to frequency and
temperature resulted in - where T is the physical ice temperature in ?C
(always a negative value) and f is the frequency
expressed in GHz. Strictly speaking, this
relationship is only valid for frequencies from
100 MHz to about 700 MHz and temperatures from -1
?C and -20 ?C. - This yields the following expression for ice
attenuation which is independent of frequency (up
to around 700 MHz)
62Pure and fresh-water ice
63Characteristics of ice
64Characteristics of ice
65Characteristics of ice
66Characteristics of ice
67Characteristics of ice
68Liquid water hydrometeors
- Electromagnetic scattering and absorption of a
spherical particle depend on three parameters - wavelength, ?
- particles complex refractive index, n
- particle radius, r
- Now consider the various sizes of water particles
naturally found in the atmosphere. - The radius of particles in clouds range from 10
to 40 ?m - cirrostratus 40 ?m, cumulus congestus 20
?mlow-lying stratus fair-weather cumulus 10
?m - Particles in a fog layer have a radius around 20
?m. - Particles forming heavy haze conditions have a
radius around 0.05 ?m. - Rain clouds may have particles with radii as
large as a few millimeters.
69Drop-size distribution for cloud types
70Drop-size distribution by rain rate
71Liquid water hydrometeors
- At 3 GHz, Rayleigh approx. is valid for rain
clouds while at 30 GHz it is valid for water
clouds and at 300 GHz for fair-weather clouds.
72Ice particles and snow
- For ice particles (e.g., sleet, hail) the
Rayleigh and Mie solutions are applicable
recognizing that ni 1.78 and using the
appropriate particle dimensions. - For snowflakes, the radius, rs, and density, ?s,
of the snowflake must be known. Snow is a
mixture of air and ice crystals so the snow
density can vary from that of air to that of ice,
?i 1 g cm-3. - It has been shown that the backscattering cross
section of a snowflake can be approximated using
an equivalent radius for an ice particle, ri,
i.e., rs3 ri3 / ?s and
73Volume scattering and absorption coefficients
- Consider now the situation were we have multiple
particles within a volume (e.g., cloud or rain)
such that as a plane wave propagates through this
volume it experiences scattering, absorption,
extinction, and backscatter. - Some reasonable assumptions used to simplify the
analysis of this problem include - the particles are randomly distributed with the
volume(permitting the application of incoherent
scattering theory) - the volume density is low(may ignore shadowing
of one particle on another) - With these assumptions the effects of the
ensemble of particles is simply the algebraic
summation of the effects of each particles
contribution. This applies to scattering,
absorption, extinction, and backscattering.
74Volume scattering
- The volume scattering coefficient, ?s, will be
the sum of the scattering cross section of each
particle in the volume. - It is the total scattering cross section per unit
volumetherefore its units are (Np m-3)?(m2)Np
m-1 - Since the particles are not of a uniform size,
the particle size distribution must be a factor
in the calculation. We use the drop-size
distribution, p(r), which defines the partial
concentration of particles per unit volume per
unit increment in radius. - where
- Q(r) scattering cross section of sphere of
radius r, m2 - r1 and r2 lower and upper limits of drop radii
within volume, m
75Volume scattering
- The volume scattering coefficient, ?s, can also
be found using the scattering efficiency, ?s,
since ?s Qs/?r2. - where ? 2?r/?0.
- Note that while the limits go from 0 to ?, in
reality - p(?) 0 for r lt r1 and r gt r2
- The scattering efficiency term, ?s, comes from
the Mie solution, however if the conditions for
use of the Rayleigh approximations are satisfied,
the ?s may be the simplier expressions.
76Volume absorption, extinction, and backscattering
- Similarly, the volume absorption coefficient, ?a,
is - And the volume extinction coefficient, ?e, is
- The volume backscattering coefficient, ?v, also
known as the radar reflectivity with units of
(m-3)?(m2) m-1, is
77Drop-size distribution clouds
- For clouds, fog, and haze, key parameters and
characterizations of various cloud models
include - Water content, mv (g m-3)
- Drop-size distribution, p(r)
- Particle composition ice, water, or rain
- Height (above groud) of the cloud base (m)
78Examples of cloud types
Low-lying stratus
Fog layer
Cirrostratus
Fair-weather cumulus
Haze, heavy
Cumulus congestus
79Drop-size distribution clouds
- The drop size distribution is given by
- and p(0) p(?) 0. The variables a, b, ?, and
? are positive, real constants related to the
clouds physical properties. Furthermore, ? must
be an integer. - Values for both ? and ? are listed in the
previously shown table. - Given p(r), the total number of particles per
unit volume, Nv, can be found by integrating p(r)
over all values of r - which simplifies to
where ?( ) is the standard gamma function and
80Drop-size distribution clouds
- In addition, the mode radius of the distribution,
rc, is - Note mode the most frequent value assumed by
a random variable - So the maximum density in the distribution is
- The total water content per unit volume, mv (g
m-3), also known as the mass density, is the
product of the volume occupied by the particles,
Vp, and the density of water (106 g m-3) where
Vp is obtained by multiplying p(r) by 4?r3/3 and
integrating which yields
where
81Drop-size distribution clouds
- Finally, a normalized drop-size distribution,
pn(r) can be found where pn(r) is the ratio of
p(r) to p(rc). - So p(r) pn(r) ? p(rc)
- or
82Volume extinction clouds
- For ice clouds the Rayleigh approximation is
valid for frequencies up to 70 GHz while for
water clouds it is valid up to about 50 GHz. - For both cloud types, the absorptive cross
section Qa is much greater than the scattering
cross section Qs. - The extinction due to clouds ?ec (dB km-1) can be
expressed as - where ?1 (dB km-1 g-1 m3) is the extinction for
mv 1 g m-3 and - with ?o in cm
83Volume backscattering clouds
- Under the Rayleigh assumption
- For the case of Nv particles per unit volume, the
cloud volume backscattering coefficient, ?vc is - Now define the reflectivity factor Z to be
- where di is the diameter of the ith particle
expressed in m.
84Volume backscattering clouds
- The cloud volume backscattering coefficient now
becomes - When Z is expressed in mm6 and ?0 is in cm,
- The Z factor can be related to the liquid water
content mv (g m-3) as - Similarly a Z factor for the liquid water content
of an ice cloud is found
85Volume backscattering clouds
- So while the K2 term is larger for water
particles, the backscattering from ice clouds is
larger since ice particles are typically an order
of magnitude larger than water particles.
Consequently ice clouds are therefore more
readily detected. - water
- ice
- At microwave frequencies,
- 0.89 ? Kw2 ? 0.93 (0 ?C ? T ? 20 ?C)
- Ki2 ? 0.2
86Extinction and backscattering rain
- Raindrops are typically two orders of magnitude
larger than water droplets in clouds. - Therefore while the Rayleigh approximation is
valid for water clouds at frequencies up to 50
GHz, for rainfall rates of 10 mm hr-1 it is valid
up to only about 10 GHz. - Knowledge of the drop-size distribution is
required to predict the extinction and
backscattering parameters for rain. - For rainfall rates between 1 and 23 mm hr -1 the
following model may be used - Where p(d) is the number of drops of diameter d
(m) per unit volume per drop-diameter interval,
N0 8.0?106 m-4, and b (m-1) is related to
rainfall rate Rr (mm hr-1) by
87Drop-size distribution by rain rate
- Measured drop-size data for various rainfall rates
88Volume extinction rain
- The volume extinction coefficient of rain (?er)
is - where ? 2?r/?0.
89Volume extinction rain
90Volume extinction rain
- A direct relationship between the volume
extinction coefficient of rain (?er) and the
rainfall rate Rr involves?1 (dB km-1 per mm
hr-1) - where b is a dimensionless parameter.
- Both ?1 and b are wavelength dependent and
determined experimentally. - The rainfall rate, Rr (mm hr-1), is related to
the drop-size distribution, p(d), as well as the
raindrops terminal velocity, vi (m s-1) and the
number of drops per unit volume, Nv (m-3).
91Volume extinction rain
- The polarization dependence arises from the
oblate spheriod (i.e., non-spherical) raindrop
shape.
92Volume extinction rain
- Horizontal-path extinction (attenuation) for
various rainfall rates.
93Volume backscattering rain
- The volume backscattering coefficient for rain,
?vr (m-1), can be found using the same
expressions developed for clouds that use the
Rayleigh approximation - where ?0 is expressed in cm.
- For frequencies below 10 GHz, the reflectivity
factor, Z (mm6 m-3), is related to the rainfall
rate, Rr (mm hr-1) by - For f gt 10 GHz, an effective reflectivity factor,
Ze, is used
94Volume backscattering rain
95Volume backscattering rain
- In weather radar applications, such as the
WSR-88D, the parameter dBZ is used where - where
- Z0 corresponds to a rainfall rate of 1 mm hr-1
(0.04 in hr-1) - Reflectivities in the range between 5 and 75 dBZ
are detected when the radar is in precipitation
mode. Reflectivities in the range between -28 and
28 dBZ are detected when the radar is in clear
air mode.
96Volume backscattering rain
VCP denotes the vertical coverage pattern in use
97Volume backscattering rain
- Polarization
- Spherical targets tend to preserve the
polarization during backscattering. - For example, when the illumination is
horizontally polarized, the backscattered wave is
also horizontally polarized with minimal
vertically-polarized backscatter. - Thus weather radars use transmitters and
receivers with the same polarization. - For applications where backscatter from rain
represents clutter (e.g., air traffic control
radars) so to suppress backscatter from rain
radar designers often employ circular
polarization. - Transmit right circular, receive left circular
thus minimizing rain backscatter (as long as the
raindrop remains spherical). - While the backscatter from the desired target is
reduced, the rain backscatter suppression is even
greater yielding a net improvement in the
signal-to-clutter ratio.
98Volume extinction snow
- It can be shown that for a precipitation rate,
Rr, expressed in mm of melted water per hour and
a free-space wavelength ?0 expressed in cm the
snow extinction coefficient, ?es, is - This expression is valid for frequencies up to
about 20 GHz. - Here the first term represents the scattering
component while the second term represents
absorption. - Note that ?i? varies with both temperature and
frequency. - At -1 C and 2 GHz (?0 15 cm), ?i? ? 10-3,
- Here the extinction coefficient is dominated by
absorption for snowfall rates up to a few mm hr-1.
99Volume extinction snow
- For the same precipitation rate Rr, the
extinction rate for rain is 20 to 50 times
greater than that of dry snow. - However, observations show that the extinction
rate for melting snow is substantially larger
than that of rain.
100Volume backscattering snow
- The volume backscattering coefficient for dry
snow, ?vs, is - where
- and the snowflake diameter, ds, has been replaced
by the ice particle diameter, di, containing the
same mass. - Therefore recognizing that Kds2/?s2 ? ΒΌ, the
expression for ?vs becomes - and for Rr expressed in mm of water per hour
101Volume backscattering snow
- Comparison of volume backscattering for rain and
snow - Rain Snow
- The expressions are comparable in magnitude.
- However the terminal velocity of snowflakes (vs)
are relatively small (1 m s-1) compared to
raindrops, the snow precipitation rates are
typically much smaller than rainfall rates (2 to
9 m s-1). - Therefore the volume backscattering from snow is
typically smaller than that of rain, unless the
snow is melting in which case the backscattering
from snow is substantially larger. These are
termed bright bands.
102Impact on TSKY
Tm is mean temperature in atmospheres lower 2 to
3 km.
- Simulation results of TSKY(?) under three
atmospheric conditionsclear sky, moderate cloud
cover, 4 mm hr-1 rain.
?0 3 cm (10 GHz), 1.8 cm (16.7 GHz), 1.25 cm
(24 GHz), 0.86 cm (35 GHz), 0.43 cm (70 GHz), 0.3
cm (100 GHz)
103Application space-based temperature sounding
- We seek to estimate the temperature profile T(z)
for a scatter-free atmosphere using data from a
down-looking spaceborne radiometer.
104Application space-based temperature sounding
- The temperature profile will be derived in the
lower atmosphere using the brightness temperature
around an resonance frequency for an atmospheric
constituent that is homogenously distributed,
i.e., oxygen. - We know that
- where Ta is the atmospheres radiometric
brightness temperature, Ts is the surface
brightness temperature, and ?m is the optical
thickness.
105Application space-based temperature sounding
- We define a temperature weighting function W(f,z)
as - so that the atmospheric component Ta(f) is
- we know that for O2 the absorption coefficient
depends on the pressure and the temperature as - where
- and H 7.7 km , P0 1013 mbar
106Application space-based temperature sounding
- So to first order
- where
- Substituting we get
- where
107Application space-based temperature sounding
108Application space-based temperature sounding
- For a temperature weighting function of the form
- we find
- therefore
point of local maximum
109Application space-based temperature sounding
- From this analysis it is clear that
- The temperature weighting function causes most of
the contribution to be from a limited range of
altitudes. - By selecting the proper frequency (and thus ?m(f
)) the altitude for the region of peak
contribution can be selected. - By selecting an oxygen resonance frequency, known
absorption characteristics are available
throughout the atmosphere. - And by selecting a series of frequencies near
resonance (the 60-GHz complex or 118.75 GHz)
atmospheric temperatures at various altitudes can
be sensed.
110Application space-based temperature sounding
111Application space-based temperature sounding
- Data inversion to extract the temperature profile
- Previously we adopted the following form to
relate the atmospheric temperature at altitude z,
T(z), to the apparent temperature atmospheric,
Ta. - Now let us divide the atmosphere into N layers
where each has a constant temperature and equal
thickness ?z such that the nth layer is centered
at altitude zn and has temperature Tn. - The equation above can be rewritten as
112Application space-based temperature sounding
- Data inversion to extract the temperature profile
- Also, if brightness temperature measurements are
made for M unique frequencies fm, then - where Wnm W(fm, zn) and Tam Ta(fm).
- So that
- or
113Application space-based temperature sounding
- Here Ta represents the M measured brightness
temperatures, W is the M?N matrix of temperature
weighting functions, and T is the N-element
vector representing the unknown atmospheric
temperature profile. - Various techniques are available to find T given
W and Ta. - For N gt M, there is no unique solution for this
ill-posed problem. - For the case where N M
- The least-squares solution for T where N lt M
requires - where WT denotes a matrix transpose and W-1
denotes a matrix inverse.
114Application space-based temperature sounding
115Application space-based temperature sounding
- Derived atmospheric temperature profiles show
good agreement with radiosonde data. - Using a similar approach, other atmospheric
properties can be sensed. - Examples include the precipitable water vapor
distribution and the concentration of certain
gases such as ozone (O3). - A radiosonde is a balloon-borne instrument
platform with radio transmitting capabilities. - Comparison with ground truth is important when
characterizing a sensors performance.
116Application ground-based temperature sounding
- Estimating the temperature profile T(z) for a
scatter-free atmosphere using data from an
up-looking ground-based radiometer.
117Application ground-based temperature sounding
- As was done previously, the temperature profile
will be derived in the lower atmosphere using the
brightness temperature around an resonance
frequency for oxygen. - We know that
- Where TEXTRA is the extraterrestrial brightness
temperature
Note a change in the integration limits for the
up-looking case.
118Application ground-based temperature sounding
- We again define a temperature weighting function
W(f,z) as - so that the atmospheric component Ta(f) is
- So to first order
- where
- Substituting we get
119Application ground-based temperature sounding
120Application ground-based temperature sounding
- For a weighting function of the form
- we find
- therefore
121Application ground-based temperature sounding
122Application ground-based temperature sounding