SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS OF OCEANIC HIGH-LATITUDE DRIZZLE USING A COMBINED RADAR-RADIOMETER RETRIEVAL

July 24, 2024

Spencer Jones

Committee: Christian Kummerow (Advisor); Christine Chiu Christopher Grassotti (NOAA); Chandra Venkatachalam (Electrical and Computer Engineering)

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Abstract

The high latitude oceans are problematic for satellite estimations of precipitation due to the high frequency of occurrence of light drizzle and snowfall. Microwave radiometric observations are sensitive to integrated cloud water path and provide good sampling for robust statistics but lack skill in distinguishing precipitation onset from cloud water and cloud ice due to radiation scattering. Precipitation radars to date have lacked sensitivity to drizzle, and cloud radars have suffered from both the uncertainties inherent in Z-R relations and poor sampling due to nadir-only scans. This study combines coincident active and passive microwave observations from CloudSat’s Cloud Profiling Radar (CPR) and the Advanced Scanning Microwave Radiometer (AMSR2) to resolve cloud and hydrometeor distribution parameters and to force consistency between the two independent sets of coincident observations. Consistency between the radar and radiometer is found by using an optimal estimation (OE) retrieval algorithm, a physics-based technique that simultaneously resolves the most likely atmospheric state given both radar and radiometer observations as well as a priori information.

The OE algorithm uncertainties are estimated using a method that attempts to emulate the departure in observation space of retrieved states from the unknown true state. The focus on observational uncertainties and the accuracy obtained by using nondiagonal observational error covariance matrices allows the algorithm both to resolve states that are radiatively consistent and to reduce the level of nonuniqueness found in dealing with passive observations alone. The result is an estimation of drizzle frequency and intensity that are consistent with both the CPR and AMSR2 observations for the high latitude oceans. We find that zonal means of retrieved high-latitude drizzle below 0.25 mm hr-1 from these combined observations (0.263 mm day-1) falls slightly above those of CloudSat estimates (0.244 mm day-1), provided by the 2C-RAIN-PROFILE and 2C-SNOW-PROFILE products (Lebsock 2018; Wood and L’Ecuyer 2018), and far below that of radiometer-only estimates (0.920 mm day-1) provided by GPROF (Kummerow et al. 2015).