10th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography

P5.11

Determination of ice water path and mass median particle size using multichannel microwave measurements

Guosheng Liu, Florida State Univ., Tallahassee, FL; and J. A. Curry

The method of simultaneously retrieving ice water path and mass median diameter using microwave data at two frequencies is examined and implemented for tropical clouds. To develop the retrieval algorithm, we first derived a bulk mass-size relation for ice particles in tropical clouds based on microphysical data collected during Central Equatorial Pacific Experiment. This relation effectively allows ice particle density to decrease with particle size. In implementing the retrieval algorithm, we used 150 and 220 GHz Millimeter-wave Imaging Radiometer data collected during Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean Atmosphere Response Experiment. Ice water path and mass median diameter are determined based on a lookup table generated by a radiative transfer model. The lookup table depends on cloud types, cloud liquid water path, and atmospheric temperature and moisture profiles, etc. Error analyses were performed by a Monte Carlo procedure in which atmospheric profiles, ice cloud height, liquid water content, surface temperature, and instrument noise vary randomly within their uncertainty range through a Latin hypercube sampling scheme. The rms error in the retrievals is then assessed and presented in a two dimensional diagram of ice water path and mass median diameter. It is shown that the simultaneous retrieval method using 150 and 220 GHz may be used for clouds with ice water path larger than 200 gm-2 and mass median diameter larger than 200 mm. To obtain meaningful retrievals for "thinner" clouds, higher microwave frequencies are needed. It is also shown that liquid water clouds that are in the same altitude of ice clouds interfere the retrievals to a significant degree. To obtain reasonable ice water path and mass median size retrievals, it is necessary first to group clouds into several classes, then to apply separate algorithm to different classes. The accuracy of the retrievals also depends on cloud types, with the best accuracy for cirrus and the worst for the mid-top mixed phase cloud.

Poster Session 5, Retrieval of Atmoshperic Profiles and Constituents: Part II
Wednesday, 12 January 2000, 3:00 PM-5:00 PM

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