4.7 Article

Estimation of Aerosol Layer Height from OLCI Measurements in the O(2)A-Absorption Band over Oceans

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 15, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs15164080

Keywords

aerosol layer height; O-2 absorption; OLCI; radiative transfer; sensitivity study

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This study investigates the estimation of aerosol layer height (ALH) using satellite-based radiance measurements and presents a sensitivity study and uncertainty estimation for dust and smoke cases. The results show that under the assumption of a known aerosol type, ALH can be accurately retrieved using OLCI satellite data. The successful retrieval of ALH using OLCI data is validated against measurements from the TROPOMI instrument.
The aerosol layer height (ALH) is an important parameter that characterizes aerosol interaction with the environment. An estimation of the vertical distribution of aerosol is necessary for studies of those interactions, their effect on radiance and for aerosol transport models. ALH can be retrieved from satellite-based radiance measurements within the oxygen absorption band between 760 and 770 nm (O(2)A band). The oxygen absorption is reduced when light is scattered by an elevated aerosol layer. The Ocean and Land Colour Imager (OLCI) has three bands within the oxygen absorption band. We show a congruent sensitivity study with respect to ALH for dust and smoke cases over oceans. Furthermore, we developed a retrieval of the ALH for those cases and an uncertainty estimation by applying linear uncertainty propagation and a bootstrap method. The sensitivity study and the uncertainty estimation are based on radiative transfer simulations. The impact of ALH, aerosol optical thickness (AOT), the surface roughness (wind speed) and the central wavelength on the top of atmosphere (TOA) radiance is discussed. The OLCI bands are sufficiently sensitive to ALH for cases with AOTs larger than 0.5 under the assumption of a known aerosol type. With an accurate spectral characterization of the OLCI O(2)A bands better than 0.1 nm, ALH can be retrieved with an uncertainty of a few hundred meters. The retrieval of ALH was applied successfully on an OLCI dust and smoke scene. The found ALH is similar to parallel measurements by the Tropospheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI). OLCI's high spatial resolution and coverage allow a detailed overview of the vertical aerosol distribution over oceans.

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