4.7 Article

An Evaluation of Two Decades of Aerosol Optical Depth Retrievals from MODIS over Australia

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14112664

Keywords

AOD; MODIS; MAIAC; DB; aerosol; Australia; optical depth; CAMS; AERONET

Funding

  1. Grantham Institute-Climate Change and the Environment
  2. NERC's support of the National Centre for Earth Observation [NE/R016518/1]
  3. Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme - BEIS
  4. Defra

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This article presents an evaluation of MODIS retrievals of Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) in Australia from 2001 to 2020. The study compares the Deep Blue (DB) and Multi-Angle Implementation of Atmospheric Correction (MAIAC) algorithms and investigates the differences in their performance in different regions and seasons. The results show that MAIAC values are generally higher than DB values, but the patterns of behavior vary across regions and seasons. Site-level comparisons suggest that MAIAC slightly outperforms DB in terms of correlation and root-mean-square error, especially for most surface types.
We present an evaluation of Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) retrievals from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) over Australia covering the period 2001-2020. We focus on retrievals from the Deep Blue (DB) and Multi-Angle Implementation of Atmospheric Correction (MAIAC) algorithms, showing how these compare to one another in time and space. We further employ speciated AOD estimates from Copernicus Atmospheric Monitoring Service (CAMS) reanalyses to help diagnose aerosol types and hence sources. Considering Australia as a whole, monthly mean AODs show similar temporal behaviour, with a well-defined seasonal peak in the Austral summer. However, excepting periods of intense biomass burning activity, MAIAC values are systematically higher than their DB counterparts by, on average, 50%. Decomposing into seasonal maps, the patterns of behaviour show distinct differences, with DB showing a larger dynamic range in AOD, with markedly higher AODs (Delta AOD similar to 0.1) in northern and southeastern regions during Austral winter and summer. This is counter-balanced by typically smaller DB values across the Australian interior. Site level comparisons with all available level 2 AOD data from Australian Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) sites operational during the study period show that MAIAC tends to marginally outperform DB in terms of correlation (R-MAIAC = 0.71, RDB = 0.65) and root-mean-square error (RMSEMAIAC = 0.065, RMSEDB = 0.072). To probe this behaviour further, we classify the sites according to the predominant surface type within a 25 km radius. This analysis shows that MAIAC's advantage is retained across all surface types for R and all but one for RMSE. For this surface type (Bare, comprising just 1.2% of Australia) the performance of both algorithms is relatively poor, (R-MAIAC = 0.403, R-DB = 0.332).

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