Asian dust aerosol: Optical effect on satellite ocean color signal and a scheme of its correction
- 27 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
- Vol. 102 (D14) , 17119-17130
- https://doi.org/10.1029/96jd03747
Abstract
The paper first exhibits the influence of the Asian dust aerosol (KOSA) on a coastal zone color scanner (CZCS) image which records erroneously low or negative satellite‐derived water‐leaving radiance especially in a shorter wavelength region. This suggests the presence of spectrally dependent absorption which was disregarded in the past atmospheric correction algorithms. On the basis of the analysis of the scene, a semiempirical optical model of the Asian dust aerosol that relates aerosol single scattering albedo (ωA) to the spectral ratio of aerosol optical thickness between 550 nm and 670 nm is developed. Then, as a modification to a standard CZCS atmospheric correction algorithm (NASA standard algorithm), a scheme which estimates pixel‐wise aerosol optical thickness, and in turn ωA, is proposed. The assumption of constant normalized water‐leaving radiance at 550 nm is adopted together with a model of aerosol scattering phase function. The scheme is combined to the standard algorithm, performing atmospheric correction just the same as the standard version with a fixed Angstrom coefficient except in the case where the presence of Asian dust aerosol is detected by the lowered satellite‐derived Angstrom exponent. Some of the model parameter values are determined so that the scheme does not produce any spatial discontinuity with the standard scheme. The algorithm was tested against the Japanese Asian dust CZCS scene with parameter values of the spectral dependency of ωA, first statistically determined and second optimized for selected pixels. Analysis suggests that the parameter values depend on the assumed Angstrom coefficient for standard algorithm, at the same time defining the spatial extent of the area to apply the Asian dust scheme. The algorithm was also tested for a Saharan dust scene, showing the relevance of the scheme but with different parameter setting. Finally, the algorithm was applied to a data set of 25 CZCS scenes to produce a monthly composite of pigment concentration for April 1981. Through these analyses, the modified algorithm is considered robust in the sense that it operates most compatibly with the standard algorithm yet performs adaptively in response to the magnitude of the dust effect.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
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