Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (Jan 2021)

McRALI: a Monte Carlo high-spectral-resolution lidar and Doppler radar simulator for three-dimensional cloudy atmosphere remote sensing

  • F. Szczap,
  • A. Alkasem,
  • G. Mioche,
  • G. Mioche,
  • V. Shcherbakov,
  • V. Shcherbakov,
  • C. Cornet,
  • J. Delanoë,
  • Y. Gour,
  • Y. Gour,
  • O. Jourdan,
  • S. Banson,
  • E. Bray

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-14-199-2021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14
pp. 199 – 221

Abstract

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The aim of this paper is to present the Monte Carlo code McRALI that provides simulations under multiple-scattering regimes of polarized high-spectral-resolution (HSR) lidar and Doppler radar observations for a three-dimensional (3D) cloudy atmosphere. The effects of nonuniform beam filling (NUBF) on HSR lidar and Doppler radar signals related to the EarthCARE mission are investigated with the help of an academic 3D box cloud characterized by a single isolated jump in cloud optical depth, assuming vertically constant wind velocity. Regarding Doppler radar signals, it is confirmed that NUBF induces a severe bias in velocity estimates. The correlation of the NUBF bias of Doppler velocity with the horizontal gradient of reflectivity shows a correlation coefficient value around 0.15 m s−1 (dBZ km-1)-1, close to that given in the scientific literature. Regarding HSR lidar signals, we confirm that multiple-scattering processes are not negligible. We show that NUBF effects on molecular, particulate, and total attenuated backscatter are mainly due to unresolved variability of cloud inside the receiver field of view and, to a lesser extent, to the horizontal photon transport. This finding gives some insight into the reliability of lidar signal modeling using independent column approximation (ICA).