Toward a consistent definition between satellite and model clear-sky radiative fluxes

A new method of determining clear-sky radiative fluxes from satellite observations for climate model evaluation is presented. The method consists of applying adjustment factors to existing satellite clear-sky broadband radiative fluxes that make the observed and simulated clear-sky flux definitions more consistent. The adjustment factors are determined from the difference between observation-based radiative transfer model calculations of monthly mean clear-sky fluxes obtained by ignoring clouds in the atmospheric column and by weighting hourly mean clear-sky fluxes with imager-based clear-area fractions. The global mean longwave (LW) adjustment factor is -2.2 W m(-2) at the top of the atmosphere and 2.7 W m(-2) at the surface. The LW adjustment factors are pronounced at high latitudes during winter and in regions with high upper-tropospheric humidity and cirrus cloud cover, such as over the west tropical Pacific, and the South Pacific and intertropical convergence zones. In the shortwave (SW), global mean adjustment is 0.5 W m(-2) at TOA and -1.9 W m(-2) at the surface. It is most pronounced over sea ice off of Antarctica and over heavy aerosol regions, such as eastern China. However, interannual variations in the regional SW and LW adjustment factors are small compared to those in cloud radiative effect. After applying the LW adjustment factors, differences in zonal mean cloud radiative effect between observations and climate models decrease markedly between 60 degrees S and 60 degrees N and poleward of 65 degrees N. The largest regional improvements occur over the west tropical Pacific and Indian Oceans. In contrast, the impact of the SW adjustment factors is much smaller.

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Related Dataset #1 : Near-Real-Time SSM/I-SSMIS EASE-Grid Daily Global Ice Concentration and Snow Extent, Version 5

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Author Loeb, Norman G.
Rose, Fred G.
Kato, Seiji
Rutan, David A.
Su, Wenying
Wang, Hailan
Doelling, David R.
Smith, William L.
Gettelman, Andrew
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2020-01-01T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T19:09:03.916922
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:23025
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Loeb, Norman G., Rose, Fred G., Kato, Seiji, Rutan, David A., Su, Wenying, Wang, Hailan, Doelling, David R., Smith, William L., Gettelman, Andrew. (2020). Toward a consistent definition between satellite and model clear-sky radiative fluxes. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7rr22dh. Accessed 26 June 2025.

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