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Title: Line-by-line calculations of atmospheric fluxes and cooling rates: Application to water vapor

Journal Article · · Journal of Geophysical Research
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1029/92JD01419· OSTI ID:110935
; ;  [1]
  1. Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc., Cambridge, MA (United States)

A model for the accelerated calculation of clear sky fluxes based on the line-by-line radiance model FASCODE has been developed and applied to the calculation of cooling rates for atmospheric water vapor. The model achieves computational accuracies for the longwave upwelling and downwelling fluxes of the order of 0.2%, an accuracy well within current limitations imposed by uncertainties in the spectral parameters, the line shape, and the associated continua. For the same treatment of line shape, the Voigt profile with a 10 cm{sup {minus}1} cutoff and no continuum, the results from the present model are in acceptable agreement with those from two other line-by-line models reported as part of the intercomparison of radiation codes used in climate models (ICRCCM). For this line profile and the mid-latitude summer atmosphere, the largest difference between the results from the authors model and the Goddard Laboratory for Atmospheres (GLA) model occurs for the downwelling flux at the surface, with the present model providing a value greater than that from GLA. The differences are generally consistent with greater atmospheric opacity from the present model, attributable to the inclusion of a self-broadening component for the half width for water and to finer spectral sampling in the lower-pressure regime. In the spectral domain there exists a mapping between the altitude and the molecular absorption strength as weighted by the Planck function. The extremely high correlation between the outgoing spectral radiance at the top of the atmosphere and the spectral cooling rate profile suggests that the measurement of the outgoing spectral radiance can provide important information about atmospheric state that is not available from spectrally integrated quantities. These results also indicate the critical importance of the spectral region from 100 to 600 cm{sup {minus}1} for the radiative transfer associated with atmospheric water vapor. 30 refs., 28 figs., 5 tabs.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
110935
Journal Information:
Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 97, Issue D14; Other Information: PBD: 20 Oct 1992
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English