11th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography
    

Poster Session 2

 Climatology and Long-term Satellite Studies
 Organizer: Gary Jedlovec, NASA/Global Hydrology and Climate Center, Huntsville, AL
 P2.1specifying satellite orbits for high accuracy climate monitoring  extended abstract
Daniel B. Kirk-Davidoff, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; and R. M. Goody and J. G. Anderson
 P2.2Longwave and window angular distribution models from CERES/TRMM radiance measurements  extended abstract
Natividad Manalo-Smith, AS&M, Hampton, VA; and N. G. Loeb
 P2.3Limb biases in CO2 cloud height algorithms with respect to high altitude cirrus  extended abstract
R. Lynn Rose, Aeromet, Inc., Tulsa, OK; and M. Bedrick, K. Swanson, and B. Morrison
 P2.4Internal consistency of the NVAP water vapor dataset  extended abstract
Ronnie J. Suggs, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; and G. J. Jedlovec
 P2.5Radiative impact of clouds and water vapor variations above 300 mb from long-term NVAP and ISCCP observations.  extended abstract
G. Garrett Campbell, CIRA/Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; and T. H. Vonder Haar, J. Fosythe, A. Kankiewicz, R. Engelen, and S. Woo
 P2.6Long Term Changes in Cloud Cover Detected in HIRS Data  
Donald Wylie, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
 P2.7An alternative long term OLR data set  
Christopher Collimore, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and D. E. Waliser, G. L. Smith, T. D. Bess, D. F. Young, D. W. Martin, and K. A. Bush
 P2.8A 10-year climatology of cloud properties and radiation fluxes based on the AVHRR Polar Pathfinder Data Set  
Xuanji Wang, CIMSS/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and J. R. Key and M. Pavolonis
 P2.9Climate analysis with the 21-yr HIRS Pathfinder radiance clear-sky data set  extended abstract
Darren L. Jackson, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; and J. J. Bates
 P2.10Comparisons of cloud analyses from independent infrared and sounder retrievals  extended abstract
Robert P. d'Entremont, AER, Lexington, MA; and D. P. Wylie
P2.11Cloud climate investigations in Scandinavia during the last decade using high-resolution NOAA AVHRR data  extended abstract
Karl-Göran Karlsson, SMHI, Norrköping, Sweden; and A. Dybbroe
 P2.12Initiation of a high resolution tropical cloud climatology  extended abstract
Mary Bedrick, Aeromet, Inc., Tulsa, OK; and K. Swanson, L. Rose, and B. Morrison
 P2.13An analysis of cloud and rainfall distributions over deforested Amazonia using TRMM and GOES measurements  extended abstract
Frédéric J. Chagnon, MIT, Cambridge, MA; and A. J. Negri, J. Wang, L. Xu, R. M. Adler, and R. L. Bras
 P2.14Mesoscale satellite climatologies in costa rica  
Bernadette H. Connell, CIRA/Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; and V. Castro Leon
 P2.15PLUMES ABOVE THUNDERSTORMS ANVILS AND THEIR CONTRIBUTIONS TO CROSS TROPOPAUSE TRANSPORT OF WATER VAPOR IN MIDLATITUDES  extended abstract
Pao K. Wang, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI
 P2.16Wind regime GOES cloud cover composites for the Wakefield, VA County Warning Area  
Cynthia L. Combs, CIRA/Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; and N. A. Stuart, M. DeMaria, and T. H. Vonder Haar
 P2.17Investigations of liquid water path spatial variability using MODIS  extended abstract
Robert Wood, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; and D. L. Hartmann
 P2.18The influence of Antarctic cloud and surface properties on cloud radiative forcing at the surface  extended abstract
Michael J. Pavolonis, CIMSS/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and J. R. Key
 P2.19ENSO in Highly Reflective Cloud: A fresh look  
David W. Martin, SSEC/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and C. C. Collimore and M. H. Hitchman
 P2.20Development of a climatology of cloud properties derived from GOES over the southeastern Pacific for PACS  extended abstract
J. Kirk Ayers, AS&M, Hampton, VA; and P. Minnis, D. F. Young, W. L. Smith, and L. Nguyen
 P2.21A prototype Benchmark Thermal Radiance Measurement  extended abstract
John A. Dykema, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; and J. G. Anderson and R. M. Goody
 P2.22Aerosol optical depth over land from the AVHRR pathfinder atmosphere data set  extended abstract
Kenneth R. Knapp, CIRA/Colorado State Univ. and NOAA/NESDIS/ORA, Camp Springs, MD
 P2.23Temporal Scales of the Areal Coverage and Precipitation of Monsoonal Convective Cloud Systems Over the Tropical Indian Ocean  extended abstract
Eric M. Wilcox, SIO/Univ. of California, La Jolla, CA
 P2.24Water vapor transport over the tropical oceans during El Niño and La Niña and its implication for the tropical circulation: A satellite approach  extended abstract
Byung-Ju Sohn, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea; and F. R. Robertson, E. A. Smith, and S. C. Park
 P2.25VARIABILITY IN UTH and Water Cycle Dynamics  extended abstract
John J. Bates, NOAA/ETL, Boulder, CO
 P2.26An Assessment of Upper Tropospheric Humidity Measurements from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program  
Brian J. Soden, NOAA/GFDL, Princeton, NJ; and D. Turner, R. Ferrare, B. Lesht, and J. Goldsmith
 P2.27DIURNAL VARIABILITY OF SATELLITE DERIVED PRECIPITABLE WATER IN THE AMAZON BASIN  extended abstract
Tracy L. DeLiberty, Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE; and J. A. Callahan
 P2.28Tropical precipitable water climatology for equatorial waves  
Paul E. Roundy, Penn State Univ., University Park, PA
 P2.29DIFFERENCES IN THE RESPONSE OF SATELLITE PRECIPITATIONS ESTIMATES TO ENSO  extended abstract
Wesley Berg, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO; and C. Kummerow
 P2.30A TRMM-calibrated infrared technique for convective and stratiform rainfall: Analysis and validation  extended abstract
Andrew J. Negri, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; and L. Xu and R. F. Adler
 P2.31Global trends (1979 to 2001) in mean and extreme rainfall from a new satellite-gauge merged data set  
Scott Curtis, JCET/Univ. of Maryland Baltimore County, Greenbelt, MD; and R. F. Adler, G. J. Huffman, E. J. Nelkin, and D. T. Bolvin
 P2.32Standard Errors of the estimated trend in channel 2 of the microwave sounding unit  
David S. Crosby, NOAA/NESDIS/ORA, Camp Springs, MD; and M. D. Goldberg, T. Mo, and Z. Cheng
 P2.33Interannual Variations in HIRS Observations of the Temperature Inversion over the Antarctic Plateau  
Steven A. Ackerman, CIMSS/Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and R. Frey and J. Key
 P2.34Global satellite-based study of the diurnal range of land surface temperature  
Ivan Csiszar, CIRA and NOAA/NESDIS/ORA, Camp Springs, MD; and G. Gutman

Monday, 15 October 2001: 2:15 PM-4:00 PM

* - Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting

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