학술논문

First assessment of Aeolus L2A particle backscatter coefficient retrievals in the Eastern Mediterranean.
Document Type
Article
Source
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions. 7/7/2022, p1-51. 51p.
Subject
*BACKSCATTERING
*DOPPLER lidar
*PARTICULATE matter
*ATMOSPHERIC composition
*WEATHER
*AEROSOLS
*CARBONACEOUS aerosols
*TROPOSPHERIC aerosols
Language
ISSN
1867-8610
Abstract
Since 2018, the Aeolus satellite of the European Space Agency (ESA) acquires wind HLOS (horizontal line-of-sight) profiles throughout the troposphere and up to the lower stratosphere, filling a critical gap of the Global Observing System (GOS). Aeolus, carrying ALADIN, the first UV HSRL Doppler lidar ever placed in space, along with wind HLOS profiles provides also vertically resolved optical properties of particulates (aerosols, hydrometeors). The present study focuses on the assessment of Aeolus L2A particulate backscatter coefficient, retrieved by the Standard Correct Algorithm (SCA), in the Eastern Mediterranean, a region hosting a variety of aerosol species. Ground-based retrievals acquired by lidar instruments operating in Athens (capital of Greece), Thessaloniki (north Greece) and Antikythera (southwest Greece) serve as reference. All lidar stations provide routine measurements to the PANACEA (PANhellenic infrastructure for Atmospheric Composition and climatE chAnge) network. A set of ancillary data including sunphotometric observations (AERONET), reanalysis products (CAMS, MERRA-2), satellite observations (MSG-SEVIRI, MODIS-Aqua) and backward trajectories (FLEXPART) are utilized towards an optimum characterization of the probed atmospheric conditions under the absence of a classification scheme in Aeolus profiles. First, emphasis is given on the assessment of Aeolus L2A backscatter coefficient under different aerosol scenarios over Antikythera island. Due to the misdetection of the cross-polar component of the backscattered lidar signal, Aeolus underestimates backscatter by up to 33% when non-spherical mineral particles are recorded (10th July 2019). A very good performance is revealed on 3rd July 2019, when homogeneous loads of fine spherical particles are confined below 4 km. The level of agreement between spaceborne and ground-based retrievals varies with altitude when aerosol layers, composed of particles of different origin, are stratified (8th July 2020, 5th August 2020). According to the statistical assessment analysis for 46 identified cases, it is revealed a poor-to- moderate performance for the unfiltered (aerosols plus clouds) Aeolus profiles which improves substantially when cloud contaminated profiles are excluded from the collocated sample. This positive tendency is evident at both Aeolus vertical scales (regular, 24 bins and mid-bin, 23 bins) and it is justified by the drastic reduction of the bias and root-mean-square-error scores. In vertical, Aeolus performance downgrades at the lowermost bins (attributed to either the surface reflectance or the increased noise levels for the Aeolus retrievals and to the overlap issues for the ground-based profiles). Among the three PANACEA stations, the best agreement is found at the remote site of Antikythera with respect to the urban sites of Athens and Thessaloniki. Finally, all key Cal/Val aspects necessary for future relevant studies, the recommendations for a possible Aeolus follow-on mission and an overview of the ongoing related activities are thoroughly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]