JGR-Atmospheres, AGU

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Low-latitude boundary layer clouds as seen by CALIPSO

Brian Medeiros, Louise Nuijens, Chiara Antoniazzi & Bjorn Stevens

ABSTRACT

The distribution of low-level cloud in the tropical belt is investigated using 6 months of Level 2 retrievals from CALIPSO at 333 m and 1 km horizontal resolutions. Regional patterns of tropical clouds emerge from the data, matching expectations from existing observations. The advantage of the lidar is highlighted by the distribution of cloud-top height, revealing the preponderance of low-level clouds over the tropical oceans. Over land, cloud-top is more uniformly distributed under the influence of diurnal variation. The integrated cloud-top distribution suggests tropical, marine low-cloud amount around 25-30%; a merged CALIPSO-CloudSat product has a similar cloud-top distribution, and includes a complementary estimate of cloud fraction based on the lidar detections. The low-cloud distribution is similar to that found in fields of shallow cumulus observed during the RICO field study. The similarity is enhanced by sampling near the RICO site or sampling large-scale conditions similar to those during RICO. This finding shows how satellite observations can help to generalize findings from detailed field observations.

Citation:
Medeiros, B., L. Nuijens, C. Antoniazzi, and B. Stevens (2010), Low-latitude boundary layer clouds as seen by CALIPSO, J. Geophys. Res., 115, D23207, doi:10.1029/2010JD014437.

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