The Discrepancy between Measured and Modeled Downwelling Solar Irradiance at the Ground: Dependence on Water Vapor

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Abstract

Moderate resolution spectra of the downwelling solar irradiance at the ground in north central Oklahoma were measured during the Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program Intensive Observation Period in the fall of 1997. Spectra obtained under cloud-free conditions were compared with calculations using a coarse resolution radiative transfer model to examine the dependency of model-measurement bias on water vapor. It was found that the bias was highly correlated with water vapor and increased at a rate of 9 Wm-2 per cm of water. The source of the discrepancy remains undetermined because of the complex dependencies of other variables, most notably aerosol optical depth, on water vapor. Copyright 2000 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Pilewskie, P., Rabbette, M., Bergstrom, R., Marquez, J., Schmid, B., & Russell, P. B. (2000). The Discrepancy between Measured and Modeled Downwelling Solar Irradiance at the Ground: Dependence on Water Vapor. Geophysical Research Letters, 27(1), 137–140. https://doi.org/10.1029/1999GL011085

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