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A new NIR-channel in SURFRAD’s MFRSRs: consistency, intercomparison, products
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  • Hagen Telg,
  • Kathleen Lantz,
  • JOHN Augustine,
  • Gary Hodges,
  • Diane Stanitski
Hagen Telg
NOAA

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Kathleen Lantz
NOAA
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JOHN Augustine
NOAA
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Gary Hodges
NOAA
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Diane Stanitski
NOAA
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Abstract

We present an intercomparison and consistency study of aerosol optical depth (AOD) retrievals from the 1625 nm channel that has recently been added to the SURFRAD’s Multi-Filter Rotating Shadowband Radiometer (MFRSR) instruments. In addition, a Multi-Filter Radiometer (MFR) has been installed at the SURFRAD sites to measure upwelling radiation in the same wavelength bands. SURFRAD (Surface Radiation Budget Monitoring) is a NOAA measurement network with the prime directive to determine the surface radiative budget. It is composed of seven sites across the United States and two mobile facilities. Each site is equipped with an MFRSR which measures global and diffuse solar radiation in one broadband and six narrow band spectral channels. MFRSR retrivals include several aerosol optical properties including the spectrally resolved AOD at 415, 500, 673, 870, 940, and 1625 nm. With particular focus on the AOD from the 1625 nm channel we discuss measurement uncertainties based on instrument limitations, uncertainties from the retrieval algorithm, and statistical considerations. Some of the SURFRAD sites have a colocated CIMEL sunphotometer that in some instances is equipped with a 1625 nm channel. While the two datasets are highly correlated we observe various deviations. We furthermore present an aerosol particle size distribution retrieval based on the AOD from 5 narrow band MFRSR channels. Here we put particular emphasis on the 1625 nm channel and its potential to improve the retrieval of the coarse mode fraction of the size distribution.