Arctic clouds and surface radiation-a critical comparison of satellite retrievals and the ERA-interim reanalysis

69Citations
Citations of this article
66Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Clouds regulate the Earth's radiation budget, both by reflecting part of the incoming sunlight leading to cooling and by absorbing and emitting infrared radiation which tends to have a warming effect. Globally averaged, at the top of the atmosphere the cloud radiative effect is to cool the climate, while at the Arctic surface, clouds are thought to be warming. Here we compare a passive instrument, the AVHRR-based retrieval from CM-SAF, with recently launched active instruments onboard CloudSat and CALIPSO and the widely used ERA-Interim reanalysis. We find that in particular in winter months the three data sets differ significantly. While passive satellite instruments have serious difficulties, detecting only half the cloudiness of the modeled clouds in the reanalysis, the active instruments are in between. In summer, the two satellite products agree having monthly means of 70-80 percent, but the reanalysis are approximately ten percent higher. The monthly mean long-and shortwave components of the surface cloud radiative effect obtained from the ERA-Interim reanalysis are about twice that calculated on the basis of CloudSat's radar-only retrievals, while ground based measurements from SHEBA are in between. We discuss these differences in terms of instrument-, retrieval-and reanalysis characteristics, which differ substantially between the analyzed datasets. © 2012 Author(s).

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zygmuntowska, M., Mauritsen, T., Quaas, J., & Kaleschke, L. (2012). Arctic clouds and surface radiation-a critical comparison of satellite retrievals and the ERA-interim reanalysis. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(14), 6667–6677. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-6667-2012

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free