THE DIURNAL AND SEASONAL RADIATIVE EFFECTS OF CIRRUS CLOUDS UTILIZING LARGE AIRBORNE AND SPACE-BORNE LIDAR DATASETS
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Abstract
Cirrus clouds are globally the most common cloud type, however, their
radiative impact on the Earth remains a large source of uncertainty in global climate
models. Cirrus are unique in that they are absorptive to terrestrial outgoing longwave
radiation, while also relatively transmissive to incoming solar radiation. The
interactions of this greenhouse and albedo effect determine the sign and magnitude of
cirrus radiative effects. Cirrus are microphysically complex, and can exhibit a variety
of different ice crystal shapes and sizes depending on the thermodynamic environment
in which they form, and their dynamic formation mechanism. Our ability to reliably
model cirrus radiative effects is dependent upon accurate observations and
parameterizations incorporated into radiative transfer simulations. Laser lidar
instruments provide valuable measurements of cirrus clouds unavailable by other radar
systems, passive remote sensors, or in-situ instruments alone.
In this dissertation I developed and tested an improved calibration technique for
the ACATS lidar instrument, and its impact on the direct retrieval of cirrus HSRL
optical properties. HSRL retrievals theoretically have reduced uncertainty over those
from a standard backscatter lidar. ACATS flew on two field campaigns in 2012 and
2015 where it was unable to consistently calibrate its etalon. It has been operating from
the lab in NASA GSFC collecting zenith pointing data of cirrus layers where the
improved calibration has resulted in consistent and reliable separation of the particulate
and Rayleigh signal components.
The diurnal trend of cirrus influence on the global scale has primarily been
limited to data provided by satellites in sun-synchronous orbit, which provide only a
snapshot of conditions at two times a day. Utilizing data from the CATS lidar aboard
the ISS I investigated cirrus at four periods throughout the day in morning, afternoon,
evening, and night across all seasons. Cirrus radiative effects were found to have a large
latitudinal dependence, and have a greater potential to cool than many studies suggest
with their primary warming contributions skewed towards the nighttime hours.
Constrained lidar retrievals reduce the assumptions made in retrieving cirrus
optical properties. Utilizing the expansive airborne CPL dataset from six flight
campaigns I model the radiative effects of over twenty thousand constrained cirrus
observations. Mid-latitude cirrus were found to have a mean positive daytime forcing
equivalent to that of the CO2 greenhouse effect. However, synoptic cirrus were found
to have a greater warming effect than convective cirrus, which were more likely to have
a cooling effect.