Remote Sensing (Feb 2023)
Study on Influencing Factors of the Information Content of Satellite Remote-Sensing Aerosol Vertical Profiles Using Oxygen A-Band
Abstract
Aerosol vertical distribution is decisive and hard to be constrained. It is of great significance for the study of atmospheric climate and environment. Oxygen absorption A-bands (755–775 nm) provide a unique opportunity to acquire vertical aerosol profiles from satellites over a large spatial coverage. To investigate the ability of O2 A-bands in retrieving aerosol vertical distribution, the dependence of retrieval on satellite observation geometry, spectral resolution, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), size distribution, and a priori knowledge is quantified using information content theory. This work uses the radiative transfer model UNL to simulate four aerosol modes and the instrument noise model. The simulations show that a small scattering angle leads to an increase in the total amount of observed aerosol profile information, with the degrees freedom of signal (DFS) of a single band increasing from 0.4 to 0.85 at high spectral resolution (0.01 nm). The total DFS value of O2 A-bands varies accordingly between 1.2–2.3 to 3.8–5.1 when the spectral resolution increases from 1 nm to 0.01 nm. The spectral resolution has a greater impact on DFS value than the impact from SNR (an improvement of roughly 41–53% resulted from the change in spectral resolution and the SNR led to 13–18%). The retrieval is more sensitive to aerosols with a coarse-dominated mode. The improvement in spectral resolution on information acquisition is demonstrated using the DFS and the posterior error at various previous errors and resolutions.
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