4.5 Article

Aerosol and Cloud Detection Using Machine Learning Algorithms and Space-Based Lidar Data

Journal

ATMOSPHERE
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/atmos12050606

Keywords

lidar; aerosol; cloud; machine learning

Funding

  1. ISS NASA Research Office (NRO)
  2. NASA Science Mission Directorate (SMD)
  3. NASA Earth Science Technology Office (ESTO)

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Clouds and aerosols are crucial in determining the atmospheric radiation budget, but uncertainties remain in understanding the future climate system. Machine learning techniques applied to CATS data have shown improvements in signal-to-noise ratio, number of detected layers, and accuracy in detecting atmospheric features during daytime operations.
Clouds and aerosols play a significant role in determining the overall atmospheric radiation budget, yet remain a key uncertainty in understanding and predicting the future climate system. In addition to their impact on the Earth's climate system, aerosols from volcanic eruptions, wildfires, man-made pollution events and dust storms are hazardous to aviation safety and human health. Space-based lidar systems provide critical information about the vertical distributions of clouds and aerosols that greatly improve our understanding of the climate system. However, daytime data from backscatter lidars, such as the Cloud-Aerosol Transport System (CATS) on the International Space Station (ISS), must be averaged during science processing at the expense of spatial resolution to obtain sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for accurately detecting atmospheric features. For example, 50% of all atmospheric features reported in daytime operational CATS data products require averaging to 60 km for detection. Furthermore, the single-wavelength nature of the CATS primary operation mode makes accurately typing these features challenging in complex scenes. This paper presents machine learning (ML) techniques that, when applied to CATS data, (1) increased the 1064 nm SNR by 75%, (2) increased the number of layers detected (any resolution) by 30%, and (3) enabled detection of 40% more atmospheric features during daytime operations at a horizontal resolution of 5 km compared to the 60 km horizontal resolution often required for daytime CATS operational data products. A Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) trained using CATS standard data products also demonstrated the potential for improved cloud-aerosol discrimination compared to the operational CATS algorithms for cloud edges and complex near-surface scenes during daytime.

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