Recent Updates to the NASA/GEWEX SRB Longwave Flux Algorithm

The NASA/GEWEX (Global Energy and Water Exchanges project) Surface Radiation Budget (SRB) project produces longwave and shortwave radiative fluxes for the surface and top-of-atmosphere (TOA) (see, Stackhouse et al., 2011, GEWEX News). The primary inputs of cloud and meteorology data have been underg...

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Hauptverfasser: Mikovitz, J Colleen, Paul W Stackhouse, Jr, Gupta, Shashi K, Cox, Stephen J, Zhang, Taiping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The NASA/GEWEX (Global Energy and Water Exchanges project) Surface Radiation Budget (SRB) project produces longwave and shortwave radiative fluxes for the surface and top-of-atmosphere (TOA) (see, Stackhouse et al., 2011, GEWEX News). The primary inputs of cloud and meteorology data have been undergoing improvements in quality and spatial and temporal resolution. In anticipation of the release of these data, the SRB longwave flux algorithm has been updated both to accommodate these data and to improve the algorithm used in deriving radiative fluxes. Changes in the inputs and algorithm are as follows: - Synchronized algorithm with version used by NASA CERES (Rose et al. 2006). - Atmospheric aerosols were added. - Beta version of ISCCP H cloud properties used. - Beta version of ISCCP nnHIRS temperature and humidity used. - Option of using a newly derived beta Princeton land surface temperature and diurnal Seaflux sea surface temperature as surface skin temperature added - Updated ozone profile with GISS ozone and MEaSUREs GOZCARDS. - Updated maps of surface topography, vegetation type, and snow/ice by ISCCP. The beta GLW v4 IP has enhanced the output fluxes by adding pristine-sky (no clouds or aerosols) fluxes. The new version also computes fluxes at selected atmospheric levels (including the tropopause) rather than just at the surface and TOA. The purpose of this study is to explore the effect of the above changes on the surface and top-of-atmosphere fluxes. These fluxes are compared to the previous version (release 3.1). We show preliminary results for the mid-seasonal months of 2007.