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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Sensitivity Study of the Effects of Mineral Dust Particle Nonsphericity and Thin Cirrus Clouds on MODIS Dust Optical Depth Retrievals and Direct Radiative Forcing Calculations

Feng, Qian 2010 August 1900 (has links)
A special challenge posed by mineral dust aerosols is associated with their predominantly nonspherical particle shapes. In the present study, the scattering and radiative properties for nonspherical mineral dust aerosols at violet-to-blue (0.412, 0.441, and 0.470 μm) and red (0.650 μm) wavelengths are investigated. To account for the effect of particle nonsphericity on the optical properties of dust aerosols, the particle shapes for these particles are assumed to be spheroids. A combination of the T-matrix method and an improved geometric optics method is applied to the computation of the single-scattering properties of spheroidal particles with size parameters ranging from the Rayleigh to geometric optics regimes. For comparison, the Mie theory is employed to compute the optical properties of spherical dust particles that have the same volumes as their nonspherical counterparts. The differences between the phase functions of spheroidal and spherical particles lead to quite different lookup tables (LUTs) involved in retrieving dust aerosol properties. Moreover, the applicability of a hybrid approach based on the spheroid model for the phase function and the sphere model for the other phase matrix elements is demonstrated. The present sensitivity study, employing the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) observations and the fundamental principle of the Deep Blue algorithm, illustrates that neglecting the nonsphericity of dust particles leads to an underestimate of retrieved aerosol optical depth at most scattering angles, and an overestimate is noted in some cases. The sensitivity study of the effect of thin cirrus clouds on dust optical depth retrievals is also investigated and quantified from MODIS observations. The importance of identifying thin cirrus clouds in dust optical depth retrievals is demonstrated. This has been undertaken through the comparison of retrieved dust optical depths by using two different LUTs. One is for the dust only atmosphere, and the other is for the atmosphere with overlapping mineral dust and thin cirrus clouds. For simplicity, the optical depth and bulk scattering properties of thin cirrus clouds are prescribed a priori. Under heavy dusty conditions, the errors in the retrieved dust optical depths due to the effect of thin cirrus are comparable to the assumed optical depth of thin cirrus clouds. With the spheroidal and spherical particle shape assumptions for mineral dust aerosols, the effect of particle shapes on dust radiative forcing calculations is estimated based on Fu-Liou radiative transfer model. The effect of particle shapes on dust radiative forcing is illustrated in the following two aspects. First, the effect of particle shapes on the single-scattering properties of dust aerosols and associated dust direct radiative forcing is assessed, without considering the effect on dust optical depth retrievals. Second, the effect of particle shapes on dust direct radiative forcing is further discussed by including the effect of particle nonsphericity on dust optical depth retrievals.

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