UMD

University of Maryland
Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science
Surface Radiation Budget Activity



Information on the gain or loss of radiant energy at the Earth's surface is needed to address problems related to climate trends, hydrologic and biogeophysical modelling, solar energy applications, and agriculture. In recent years, the University of Maryland, Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, Surface Radiation Budget (SRB) Research Group, has been developing methods to infer components of surface radiative fluxes from satellite observations. Details are provided on the following projects:

  • GCIP/GAPP

    This is a first attempt to provide the user community with surface radiation budget (SRB) information over the United States, as generated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service (NESDIS). This activity is in support of the Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment (GEWEX) Continental Scale International Project (GCIP) and the GEWEX Americas Prediction Project (GAPP).

  • PATHFINDER

    Under the joint NOAA/NASA PATHFINDER activity, uniform, long term data sets from observations made from numerous satellites, are being prepared. Of particular interest are the ISCCP D1 and DX data (ISCCP),as gridded to 2.5 degree,and as sampled at 30 km resolution,respectively. Surface radiative fluxes at 2.5 and 0.5 degree spatial resolution, produced under the PATHFINDER program at the University of Maryland, will be provided at this Web site.

  • PAR

    In the framework of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Climate and Global Change Program objectives to improve the ability to observe, understand, and predict climate and its response to changes in global environment, an activity to derive Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR) from satellite observations, was undertaken. Capabilities were developed to derive PAR on global scale from satellite observations. At this Web site, more information on this activity and selected data sets, are provided.

  •  EOS Validation

    Under this project, validation activity in a desert ecroachment zone of sub-Sahel Africa was undertaken, in collaboration with African scientists. The site is located on the campus of the University of Ilorin, Nigeria, in the transition zone between the Sahara desert and the savanna zone of upper Nigeria. This is a climatically important region due to its location in a desert transition zone and because of the influence of the dusty Harmattan wind which is persistent for prolonged periods of time, and characterized by steady dusty conditions with high aerosol loading. Observations are made of surface radiative fluxes, as well as aerosol optical depth, as part of the AERONET network.

  • LBA

    The Large Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA) is an international research project led by Brazil. The world's tropical forests are under major stress of conversion to various forms of land use. NASA currently provides two components of the LBA program. One deals with the ecology of the region and the other deals with the hydrologic cycle. Under the hydrology component we are working towards the improvement of understanding the hydrologic cycle of this region. Spaceborne remote sensing capabilities will help to define the basin scale forcing functions, and determine how the basin functions as a regional entity. We plan to provide information on radiative fluxes that are necessary to advance the understanding of the role of water in land-atmosphere interactions; develop improved techniques for providing such information that takes into account deforestation in Rondonia and information on biomass burning in the Amazon Basin; provide data to evaluate land surface parametrization, and to test their implications for global climate and weather forecast models.

     

 

people have been here since March 25, 2002.