Spectral derivative analysis of solar spectroradiometric measurements: Theoretical basis

Spectral derivative analysis, a commonly used tool in analytical spectroscopy, is described for studying cirrus clouds and aerosols using hyperspectral, remote sensing data. The methodology employs spectral measurements from the 2006 Biomass‐burning Aerosols in Southeast Asia field study to demonstr...

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Published in:Journal of geophysical research. Atmospheres Vol. 119; no. 14; pp. 8908 - 8924
Main Authors: Hansell, R. A., Tsay, S.-C., Pantina, P., Lewis, J. R., Ji, Q., Herman, J. R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Washington Blackwell Publishing Ltd 27-07-2014
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Summary:Spectral derivative analysis, a commonly used tool in analytical spectroscopy, is described for studying cirrus clouds and aerosols using hyperspectral, remote sensing data. The methodology employs spectral measurements from the 2006 Biomass‐burning Aerosols in Southeast Asia field study to demonstrate the approach. Spectral peaks associated with the first two derivatives of measured/modeled transmitted spectral fluxes are examined in terms of their shapes, magnitudes, and positions from 350 to 750 nm, where variability is largest. Differences in spectral features between media are mainly associated with particle size and imaginary term of the complex refractive index. Differences in derivative spectra permit cirrus to be conservatively detected at optical depths near the optical thin limit of ~0.03 and yield valuable insight into the composition and hygroscopic nature of aerosols. Biomass‐burning smoke aerosols/cirrus generally exhibit positive/negative slopes, respectively, across the 500–700 nm spectral band. The effect of cirrus in combined media is to increase/decrease the slope as cloud optical thickness decreases/increases. For thick cirrus, the slope tends to 0. An algorithm is also presented which employs a two model fit of derivative spectra for determining relative contributions of aerosols/clouds to measured data, thus enabling the optical thickness of the media to be partitioned. For the cases examined, aerosols/clouds explain ~83%/17% of the spectral signatures, respectively, yielding a mean cirrus cloud optical thickness of 0.08 ± 0.03, which compared reasonably well with those retrieved from a collocated Micropulse Lidar Network Instrument (0.09 ± 0.04). This method permits extracting the maximum informational content from hyperspectral data for atmospheric remote sensing applications. Key Points Determine contributions of aerosols/cirrus to measured hyperspectral dataDifferences in derivative spectra permit detecting low optical thickness cirrusSpectral derivatives are valuable for atmospheric remote sensing
Bibliography:istex:F17FEA2B555298F16860797431E9D6C28FA80F07
ArticleID:JGRD51535
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ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 23
ISSN:2169-897X
2169-8996
DOI:10.1002/2013JD021423