scholarly journals TRIS. I. Absolute Measurements of the Sky Brightness Temperature at 0.6, 0.82, and 2.5 GHz

2008 ◽  
Vol 688 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Zannoni ◽  
A. Tartari ◽  
M. Gervasi ◽  
G. Boella ◽  
G. Sironi ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (17) ◽  
pp. 5845-5863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian A. MacKenzie ◽  
Simon F. B. Tett ◽  
Anders V. Lindfors

Abstract Clear-sky brightness temperature measurements from the High-Resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder (HIRS) are simulated with two climate models via a radiative transfer code. The models are sampled along the HIRS orbit paths to derive diurnal climatologies of simulated brightness temperature analogous to an existing climatology based on HIRS observations. Simulated and observed climatologies are compared to assess model performance and the robustness of the observed climatology. Over land, there is good agreement between simulations and observations, with particularly high consistency for the tropospheric temperature channels. Diurnal cycles in the middle- and upper-tropospheric water vapor channels are weak in both simulations and observations, but the simulated diurnal brightness temperature ranges are smaller than are observed with different phase and there are also intermodel differences. Over sea, the absence of diurnal variability in the models’ sea surface temperatures causes an underestimate of the small diurnal cycles measured in the troposphere. The simulated and observed climatologies imply similar diurnal sampling biases in the HIRS record for the tropospheric temperature channels, but for the upper-tropospheric water vapor channel, differences in the contributions of the 24- and 12-hourly diurnal harmonics lead to differences in the implied bias. Comparison of diurnal cycles derived from HIRS-like and full model sampling suggests that the HIRS measurements are sufficient to fully constrain the diurnal behavior. Overall, the results suggest that recent climate models well represent the major processes driving the diurnal behavior of clear-sky brightness temperature in the HIRS channels. This encourages further studies of observed and simulated climate trends over the HIRS era.


The Bilderberg continuum atmosphere (B.c.a.) model of the Sun (Gingerich & de Jager 1968) has a temperature minimum of 4600 K between the photosphere and low chromosphere, which is based mainly on observations in the ultraviolet. This layer of the solar atmosphere is observable in both the ultraviolet and infrared spectral regions. However, at the time that the B.c.a. model was developed, there were no absolute measurements of the brightness temperature between 12 um and 1 mm although there was some evidence to indicate the shape of the expected minimum in this spectral region. Since then several experiments have been performed from aircraft and high altitude balloons with the object of measuring the brightness temperature of the sun at long infrared wavelengths. The measurement described in this paper made use of a Michelson interferometer employing Fourier transform multiplex techniques and was flown from a balloon to a height of 32.6 km from the N.C.A.R. Balloon Flight Station, Texas, U.S.A., in September 1969. The beam splitter consisted of a stretched film of Melinex 8 um thick and the detector used was a Golay cell. Radiation of wavelengths shorter than about 45 um was completely attenuated by optical filtering with black Melinex, polyethylene loaded with a uranium salt and by the quartz window of the detector. The Michelson interferometer was used with a continuous movement of one of its mirrors at 4 pm s-1 and further shortwave attenuation was achieved by suitable electrical filtering of the signal frequencies in the resulting interferogram.


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