Four Years of Global Cirrus Cloud Statistics Using HIRS

Donald P. Wylie Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

Search for other papers by Donald P. Wylie in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
,
W. Paul Menzel Satellite Applications Laboratory, NOAA/NESDIS, Madison, Wisconsin

Search for other papers by W. Paul Menzel in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
,
Harold M. Woolf Satellite Applications Laboratory, NOAA/NESDIS, Madison, Wisconsin

Search for other papers by Harold M. Woolf in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
, and
Kathleen I. Strabala Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

Search for other papers by Kathleen I. Strabala in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Full access

Abstract

Trends in global upper-tropospheric transmissive cirrus cloud cover are beginning to emerge from a four-year cloud climatology using NOAA polar-orbiting High-Resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder (HIRS) multispectral data. Cloud occurrence, height, and effective emissivity am determined with the C02 slicing technique on the four years of data (June 1989–May 1993). There is a global preponderance of transmissive high clouds, 42% on the average; about three-fourths of these are above 500 hPa and presumed to be cirrus. In the ITCZ, a high frequency of cirrus (greater than 50%) is found at all times; a modest seasonal movement tracks the sun. Large seasonal changes in cloud cover occur over the oceans in the storm belts at midlatitudes; the concentrations of these clouds migrate north and south with the seasons following the progressions of the subtropical highs (anticyclones). More cirrus is found in the summer than in the winter in each hemisphere.

A significant change in cirrus cloud cover occurs in 1991, the third year of the study. Citrus observations increase from 35% to 43% of the data, a change of eight percentage points. Other cloud forms, opaque to terrestrial radiation, decrease by nearly the same amount. Most of the increase is thinner cirrus with infrared optical depths below 0.7. The increase in cirrus happens at the same time as the 1991–92 El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo. The cirrus changes occur at the start of the ENSO and persist into 1993 in contrast to other climatic indicators that return to near pre-ENSO and volcanic levels in 1993.

Abstract

Trends in global upper-tropospheric transmissive cirrus cloud cover are beginning to emerge from a four-year cloud climatology using NOAA polar-orbiting High-Resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder (HIRS) multispectral data. Cloud occurrence, height, and effective emissivity am determined with the C02 slicing technique on the four years of data (June 1989–May 1993). There is a global preponderance of transmissive high clouds, 42% on the average; about three-fourths of these are above 500 hPa and presumed to be cirrus. In the ITCZ, a high frequency of cirrus (greater than 50%) is found at all times; a modest seasonal movement tracks the sun. Large seasonal changes in cloud cover occur over the oceans in the storm belts at midlatitudes; the concentrations of these clouds migrate north and south with the seasons following the progressions of the subtropical highs (anticyclones). More cirrus is found in the summer than in the winter in each hemisphere.

A significant change in cirrus cloud cover occurs in 1991, the third year of the study. Citrus observations increase from 35% to 43% of the data, a change of eight percentage points. Other cloud forms, opaque to terrestrial radiation, decrease by nearly the same amount. Most of the increase is thinner cirrus with infrared optical depths below 0.7. The increase in cirrus happens at the same time as the 1991–92 El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo. The cirrus changes occur at the start of the ENSO and persist into 1993 in contrast to other climatic indicators that return to near pre-ENSO and volcanic levels in 1993.

Save