2,103 research outputs found
Radiation studies from meteorological satellites
Earth albedo variability and outgoing infrared radiation - data from TIROS satellite
Study of the lower stratospheric thermal structure and total ozone from Nimbus-4 IRIS
The global distribution of temperature in the stratosphere from 100 to 10 mbar and the total ozone in the atmosphere are remotely sensed from the Nimbus-4 IRIS measurements for a period of about one year. The temperature and ozone data are presented in the form of monthly mean global maps. The standard deviations of temperature and ozone with respect to zonal averages are calculated. The mean and the variable state of the stratosphere are discussed with the help of these observations. The lower stratosphere in the tropical regions reveals a significant wave number one pattern in the circulation. The Arctic and Antarctic stratospheric winter circulation regimes display a different behavior apparently due to the ocean and orographic differences
Remote sensing of atmospheric ozone using the 9.6 micron region
Remote sensing of atmospheric ozone using infrared interferometer
Convective and stratiform rain: Multichannel microwave sensing over oceans
Measurements made by the Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) radiometer over the oceans, at 19, 37, and 85 GHz in dual polarization, are used to develop a model to classify rain into light-stratiform, moderately convective, and heavy convective types in the mesoscale convective systems (MCS). It is observed that the bulk of the 19- and 37-GHz data are linearly correlated with respect to one another, and generally increase together in brightness as the mean rain rate in the field of view (FOV) of the radiometer increases. However, a significant fraction of the data from these channels departs from this linear relationship, reflecting the nonuniform rain that is convective vs. the relatively light stratiform rain. It is inferred from the SSM/I data, in a MCS, when the slope dT sub 3/dT sub 19 is greater than unity there are optically thin clouds which produce light uniform rain. On the other hand, when dT sub 3/dT sub 19 is close to unity, the rain cells have an open structure and correspond to the convective type of rain. The openings between the cells are apparently a result of the downdrafts and/or entrainment. Relatively low values of 85-GHz brightness temperatures that are present when dT sub 37/dT sub 19 is close to unity support these views and, in addition, leads us to conclude that when the convection is heavy this brightness temperature decreases due to scattering by hydrometeors. On the basis of this explanation of the SSM/I data, an empirical rain retrieval algorithm is developed. Radar backscatter observations over the Atlantic Ocean next to Florida are used to demonstrate the applicability of this method. Three monthly mean maps of rainfall over the oceans from 50 degrees N to 50 degrees S, are presented to illustrate the ability of this method to sense seasonal and interannual variations of rain
Equilibrium Temperature Structure in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere
Radiative equilibrium temperature structure in earth mesosphere and lower thermospher
A simple method to incorporate water vapor absorption in the 15 microns remote temperature sounding
The water vapor absorption in the 15 micron CO2 band, which can affect the remotely sensed temperatures near the surface, are estimated with the help of an empirical method. This method is based on the differential absorption properties of the water vapor in the 11-13 micron window region and does not require a detailed knowledge of the water vapor profile. With this approach Nimbus 4 IRIS radiance measurements are inverted to obtain temperature profiles. These calculated profiles agree with radiosonde data within about 2 C
Record of the Bivalve Gastropod Berthelinia limax (Kawaguti and Saba 1959) from the Indian Ocean
A living bivalve gastropod of the order Sacoglossa found in Japan by Kawaguti and Baba in J959, was described as a new genus and species Tamanovalva limax
Remote sensing of precipitable water over the oceans from Nimbus-7 microwave measurements
Global maps of precipitable water over derived from scanning multichannel microwave radiometer (SMMR) data reveal salient features associated with ocean currents and the large scale general circulation in the atmosphere. Nimbus-7 SMMR brightness temperature measurements in the 21 and 18 GHz channels are used to sense the precipitable water in the atmospheric over oceans. The difference in the brightness temperature (T sub 21 -T sub 18), both in the horizontal and vertical polarization, is found to be essentially a function of the precipitable water in the atmosphere. An equation, based on the physical consideration of the radiative transfer in the microwave region, is developed to relate the precipitable water to (T sub 21 - T sub 18). It shows that the signal (T sub 21- T sub 18) does not suffer severely from the noise introduced by variations in the sea surface temperature, surface winds, and liquid water content in non rain clouds. The rms deviation between the estimated precipitable water from SMMR data and that given by the closely coincident ship radiosondes is about 0.25 g/ sq c
HAADF-STEM block-scanning strategy for local measurement of strain at the nanoscale
Lattice strain measurement of nanoscale semiconductor devices is crucial for
the semiconductor industry as strain substantially improves the electrical
performance of transistors. High resolution scanning transmission electron
microscopy (HR-STEM) imaging is an excellent tool that provides spatial
resolution at the atomic scale and strain information by applying Geometric
Phase Analysis or image fitting procedures. However, HR-STEM images regularly
suffer from scanning distortions and sample drift during image acquisition. In
this paper, we propose a new scanning strategy that drastically reduces
artefacts due to drift and scanning distortion, along with extending the field
of view. The method allows flexible tuning of the spatial resolution and
decouples the choice of field of view from the need for local atomic
resolution. It consists of the acquisition of a series of independent small
subimages containing an atomic resolution image of the local lattice. All
subimages are then analysed individually for strain by fitting a nonlinear
model to the lattice images. The obtained experimental strain maps are
quantitatively benchmarked against the Bessel diffraction technique. We
demonstrate that the proposed scanning strategy approaches the performance of
the diffraction technique while having the advantage that it does not require
specialized diffraction cameras
Estimation of sea surface temperature from remote sensing in the 11-13 micron window region
The Nimbus 3 and 4 IRIS spectral data in the 11-13 micron water vapor window region are analyzed to determine the sea surface temperature (SST). The high spectral resolution data of IRIS are averaged over approximately 1 micron wide intervals to simulate channels of a radiometer to measure the SST. Three channels are utilized to measure SST over cloud-free oceans. However, two of these channels are sufficient in routine SST determination. The differential absorption properties of water vapor in the two channels enable one to determine the water vapor absorption correction without detailed knowledge of the vertical profiles of temperature and water vapor. The feasibility of determining the SST is demonstrated globally with Nimbus 3 data where cloud-free areas can be selected with the help of albedo data from the MRIR experiment on board the same satellite
- …
