Publication | Open Access
Satellite remote sensing of Asian aerosols: a case study of clean, polluted, and Asian dust storm days
104
Citations
52
References
2010
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringAir QualitySatellite Aerosol RetrievalAerosol AbsorptionEarth ScienceAerosol TransportAtmospheric ScienceAerosol SamplingAtmospheric SensingAerosol FormationAerosol ReflectanceGeographyAsian AerosolsCase StudyRemote SensingOptical Remote SensingAir PollutionLand Surface Reflectance
Abstract. In East Asia, satellite observation is important because aerosols from natural and anthropogenic sources have been recognized as a major source of regional and global air pollution. However, retrieving aerosols properties from satellite observations over land can be difficult because of the surface reflection, complex aerosol composition, and aerosol absorption. In this study, a new aerosol retrieval method called as the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite aerosol retrieval (MSTAR) was developed and applied to three different aerosol event cases over East Asia. MSTAR uses a separation technique that can distinguish aerosol reflectance from top-of-atmosphere (TOA) reflectance. The aerosol optical thickness (AOT) was determined by comparing this aerosol reflectance with pre-calculated values. Three case studies show how the methodology identifies discrepancies between measured and calculated values to retrieve more accurate AOT. The comparison between MODIS and the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) showed improvement using the suggested methodology with the cluster-based look-up-tables (LUTs) (linear slope = 0.94, R = 0.92) than using operational MODIS collection 5 aerosol products (linear slope = 0.78, R = 0.87). In conclusion, the suggested methodology is shown to work well with aerosol models acquired by statistical clustering of the observation data in East Asia.
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Accuracy assessments of aerosol optical properties retrieved from Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) Sun and sky radiance measurements A. Smirnov, B. N. Holben, Michael D. King, Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres Aerosol Robotic NetworkSurface ReflectanceEngineeringOptical Particle SizingAtmospheric Science | 2000 | 2K |
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