Satellite retrieval of aerosol properties over the ocean using polarization as well as intensity of reflected sunlight
- 27 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
- Vol. 102 (D14) , 16989-17013
- https://doi.org/10.1029/96jd02425
Abstract
Most current and proposed satellite remote sensing of tropospheric aerosols relies upon radiance measurements that are interpreted using algorithms that determine best fits to precalculated scattered sunlight for one or more “standard” aerosol models. However, the number of different types of aerosol and the substantial space and time variations typically encountered can pose a severe uniqueness problem even for the multiple constraints provided by multispectral radiances of a scene at a number of observation zenith angles. Experience with polarimetry remote sensing on planetary missions has demonstrated that the measurement of polarization as well as the radiance can resolve such uniqueness problems. We use numerically accurate solutions of the vector radiative transfer equation for a realistic atmosphere‐ocean model to theoretically simulate several types of satellite aerosol retrievals over the ocean utilizing radiance measurements alone, polarization measurements alone, and radiance and polarization measurements combined. We have restricted all simulations to a single near‐infrared wavelength of 0.865 μm and assumed that aerosols are spherical, monomodal, and nonabsorbing. These simplifications permit a study of practical scope that tests the retrieval algorithms under exactly the same conditions, thus clearly demonstrating their relative capabilities. In agreement with previous analyses, we have found that radiance‐only algorithms using multiple‐viewing‐angle observations perform far better than those based on single‐viewing‐angle measurements. However, even multiple‐viewing‐angle radiance measurements taken at a single wavelength are not always sufficient to determine the aerosol optical thickness, effective radius, and refractive index with high enough accuracy. In contrast, high‐accuracy, single‐wavelength, multiple‐viewing‐angle polarimetry alone is capable of uniquely retrieving all three aerosol characteristics with extremely high accuracy (±0.015 in aerosol optical thickness, ±0.03 μm in effective radius, and ±0.01 in refractive index). Furthermore, the accuracy of the optical thickness retrieval can be slightly improved by simultaneously using radiance measurements. Our analysis demonstrates that algorithms utilizing high‐accuracy polarization as well as radiance measurements are much less dependent on the availability and use of a priori information and can be expected to provide a physically based retrieval of aerosol characteristics (optical thickness, refractive index, and size) with accuracy needed for long‐term monitoring of global climate forcings and feedbacks.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- The POLDER mission: instrument characteristics and scientific objectivesIEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 1994
- Retrieval of water-leaving radiance and aerosol optical thickness over the oceans with SeaWiFS: a preliminary algorithmApplied Optics, 1994
- Climate Forcing by Anthropogenic AerosolsScience, 1992
- A multiangle imaging spectroradiometer for terrestrial remote sensing from the earth observing systemInternational Journal of Imaging Systems and Technology, 1991
- Sun and dust versus greenhouse gases: an assessment of their relative roles in global climate changeNature, 1990
- Fourier series expansion of the transfer equation in the atmosphere-ocean systemJournal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 1989
- An Iterative Radiative Transfer Code For Ocean-Atmosphere SystemsJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1982
- Light scattering in planetary atmospheresSpace Science Reviews, 1974
- Interpretation of the Polarization of VenusJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1974
- Multiple Scattering of Polarized Light in Planetary Atmospheres Part II. Sunlight Reflected by Terrestrial Water CloudsJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1971