File(s) not publicly available
Temporal Structure of the Solar Radiation Field in Cloudy Conditions: Are Retrievals of Hourly Averages from Space Possible?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 16:28 authored by Manuel NunezManuel Nunez, Fienberg, KS, Kuchinke, CPThe authors examine the temporal variability of measured 415- and 611.7-nm spectral solar irradiance in cloudy stratocumulus conditions. This is accomplished by normalizing measured data by the equivalent irradiance for cloudless conditions and the same solar zenith angle. Spectral and other analyses of the time series exhibit fractal behavior in agreement with the multifractal model of Schertzer and Lovejoy. A three-dimensional cloud model with dimensions of 6 km × 38 km is constructed that has these fractal properties and a Monte Carlo radiative code is applied to obtain irradiances in 50-m grid elements at the surface. Model output is used to test the ability of satellites to calculate hourly irradiance with one, two, three, four, five,and six observations per hour. Root-mean-square errors are substantial-between 17% and 43% for one single satelite observation per hour. The smallest errors of around 5% are obtained with six scans per hour. These results argue that a higher frequency of satelite observations is needed to estimate hourly surface solar irradiances with acceptable accuracy. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.
History
Publication title
Journal of Applied MeteorologyVolume
44Pagination
167-185ISSN
0894-8763Department/School
School of Geography, Planning and Spatial SciencesPublisher
American Meteorological SocietyPlace of publication
United StatesRepository Status
- Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Atmospheric processes and dynamicsUsage metrics
Keywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC