1. Introduction
Continental shallow cumulus clouds (ShCu) are tightly coupled with the land surface and have strong impacts on the surface energy partition and the turbulent transport of momentum, heat, and moisture [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6]. They are also important for their seeding role in transitioning into hot-tower deep convective clouds with heavy precipitation [
7]. ShCu are small in horizontal extent, of around a few hundred meters to several kilometers, and they are short-lived, lasting 15 to 30 min from initiation to dissipation [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14]. With such spatiotemporal scale, ShCu cannot be explicitly resolved, but are highly parameterized in climate models. Systematic model biases in the surface energy balance and precipitation are often attributed to the parameterized processes associated with ShCu, e.g., the shallow-to-deep convection transition and the interactions among land surface, atmospheric boundary layer, clouds, and precipitation [
15,
16].
To develop a theoretical understanding and improve parameterizations, comprehensive and continuous observations on ShCu are greatly needed, especially those resolving the diurnal variation in cloud life cycle and cloud size over a vast land area with varying albedos, surface roughness, soil moisture content, and leaf area index. This is because: (1) ShCu strongly interact with the surface heating and moistening driven by the diurnally varying solar and infrared radiation; (2) observations of the initiation and continuous development of ShCu are needed to study the mechanisms controlling the transition from shallow to deep convection; (3) cloud size is important as larger clouds can grow deep and rain more easily [
17]; and (4) ShCu may form preferentially over certain land surface properties or land cover types [
18,
19].
Traditional ground-based instruments, e.g., zenith-pointing radars and lidars at the US Department Of Energy (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Southern Great Plains (SGP) site, provide high-resolution vertical-profiling ShCu data [
10,
11]; however, they provide no horizontal area coverage due to their small fields of view. In recent years, scanning cloud radars have been deployed to resolve the evolution of ShCu with certain scanning strategies, e.g., focused sector scanning mode with the radar beam steering guided by expert judgement. Recently, a novel approach of scanning cloud radars has been developed to automatically identify and track clouds with guidance from external observations, e.g., images from satellite- or surface-based cameras [
20]. However, the significant drop in radar sensitivity with distance greatly impacts the detection accuracy of ShCu, especially those that are thin and small, with low reflectivity [
21]. The largest range for successful ShCu detection is much smaller than the typical maximum detection range (20 km) of scanning cloud radars. Such spatial coverage of scanning cloud radars may not be adequate to accommodate enough sampling of ShCu in response to the highly heterogeneous land surface. In July 2017, three pairs of stereo cameras were installed at the ARM SGP site to provide the most accurate high-resolution three-dimensional measurements of the boundaries of ShCu clouds in a 6 by 6 by 6 km
3 domain every 20 s [
22]. In some respects, they are superior to any other traditional ground-based measurements with regard to observing the life cycle of the ShCu population. In one example, a parade of ShCu clouds passing over the site was reported by stereo cameras; however, they were not detected by any other vertically pointing or scanning cloud radars due to instrument sensitivities [
22].
High-spatial-resolution satellite can observe ShCu from space [
1,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28]. The horizontal resolution of Landsat data is 30 m; however, Landsat cannot provide detailed diurnal information due to its 16-day revisit time. Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard polar-orbiting satellites observe the cloud field over a large area with a much shorter revisit cycle, e.g., four times a day passing over the United States SGP regions, due to its larger viewing swath. However, such temporal resolution is still an obstacle for MODIS in capturing the diurnal variations of ShCu in response to land surface and their transition to deep convection.
The geostationary satellite supports weather monitoring, forecasting, and meteorology research [
19,
29,
30,
31]. Deriving an accurate cloud mask from geostationary satellite data has been a research topic since the launch of the first Earth-observing satellite, TIROS-1, in 1960 [
32,
33,
34,
35]. Cloud detection methods are developed based on machine learning methods, which learn from training data, and classical algorithm approaches, which are implemented using a threshold of different image parameters [
36]. Even though the probability of detecting clouds has been reported to exceed 90% in recent years [
37,
38], detection of thin and low clouds, especially those with low contrast from the underlying surface, is not simple for satellite remote sensing.
The latest generation of geostationary weather satellites, the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite GOES-R Series (GOES-16/-17), significantly improves the detection of clouds [
39,
40,
41]. The GOES-16 primary instrument, the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI), views the Earth with 16 different spectral bands, including two visible channels, four near-infrared channels, and ten infrared channels, providing three times more spectral information, four times greater spatial resolution, and more than five times the temporal coverage compared to the former generation [
42,
43,
44]. The GOES-16 Continental U.S. (CONUS) scans are performed every five minutes, providing coverage of the 5000 km (east/west) and 3000 km (north/south) rectangle over the CONUS. The ‘red’ visible band on ABI, 0.64 μm, has the finest spatial resolution (0.5 km at the nadir point). GOES-16′s high spatiotemporal resolution brings the new potential to detect most of the ShCu clouds continuously and simultaneously throughout their life cycle evolutions over a large region. However, there is no operational GOES-16 cloud product which can be easily used and dedicated to ShCu studies so far.
The aim of this study is to detect summertime continental ShCu by taking advantage of the high temporal and spatial resolutions of GOES-16 reflectance data and three-dimensional cloud structures retrieved from ground-based stereo cameras. We will determine an optimal detection threshold for ShCu using a newly developed GOES simulator, which projects the stereo camera reconstructed clouds towards the surface along the satellite’s slanted viewing direction. The new ShCu dataset from this study can bridge the gap aforementioned on ShCu observations. The remaining parts of the paper are organized as follows.
Section 2 introduces the data in detail.
Section 3 describes the procedures for ShCu detection. The results are presented in
Section 4, the discussion in
Section 5, and a summary in
Section 6.
2. Data
The major datasets used in this study are from two kinds of instruments: (1) ground-based stereo cameras at the ARM SGP site and (2) ABI on GOES-16.
Ground-based stereo cameras were installed in three pairs at 6 km from the central facility at the ARM SGP site in Oklahoma. Using observations from these six stereo cameras, the Clouds Optically Gridded by Stereo (COGS) data product was developed [
22]. The COGS product is a four-dimensional grid of cloudiness within a 6 km × 6 km × 6 km cube at a spatial resolution of 50 m and a temporal resolution of 20 s. Within that domain, the intersection of the fields of view of the six cameras forms a three-dimensional polygon that we will refer to here as the reconstructable region: this is the part of the domain in which clouds can be measured. The central location of the COGS product is at 36°36′19″N, 97°29′11″W. Compared to the widely used DOE ARM Active Remote Sensing of CLouds (ARSCL) product [
5,
10,
45], which is developed by merging observations from multiple vertical pointing sensors (cloud radars, lidars, and ceilometers) [
46], the COGS product improves cloud fraction and cloud size estimations. This is mainly because (1) the COGS product is not impacted by insects, while identifying and removing insect clutter from Ka-band ARM Zenith pointing Radar (KAZR) observations is one of the most challenging tasks of the operational ARSCL processing [
47,
48]; (2) COGS provides a more representative four-dimensional grid of cloudiness, while KAZR and ceilometer are ‘soda-straw’ observations with very limited spatial coverage.
COGS data used in this study are from 27 days of ShCu observations during July and August in 2018 and 2019, satisfying the following criteria: (1) cloud fraction less than 0.6; (2) no surface precipitation reported by Arkansas–Red Basin River Forecast Center (ABRFC) data; and (3) cloud top under 4 km.
In this study, we use the reflectance data in the ‘red’ visible channel from GOES-16 ABI CONUS scans—the GOES-16 cloud and moisture imagery (CMI) data product [
49,
50]. CMI provides the dimensionless quantity “reflectance factor”, which is defined as the top of atmosphere (TOA) Lambertian equivalent albedo multiplied by the cosine of the solar zenith angle. The reflectance used in this study is the red-band TOA reflectance (Lambertian equivalent albedo) [
50]. The spatial resolution varies with the distance from the GOES nadir and is approximately 650 m at the SGP region. The temporal resolution is 5 min.
The ABI Clear Sky Mask (ACM) product is an official and operational cloud mask product for GOES-16. It uses data from nine channels and a combination of spatial, temporal, and spectral tests to label clear-sky and cloud-sky pixels [
37,
51]. It provides a binary mask (clear or cloudy) every 5 min (in CONUS scan), and the horizontal resolution of ACM is 2 km. Such a resolution is not adequate for the detection of ShCu clouds, most of which are much smaller than 2 km.
An example of ShCu cloud fields on 11 July 2018 observed from both ground-based stereo cameras and GOES-16 satellite is illustrated in
Figure 1. The formulation to calculate cloud fraction is:
For COGS-3D (x-y-z) data of 50-m resolution, cloud thickness (2D, x-y) can be calculated. A two-dimensional cloud mask is generated where a pixel is labeled as cloudy if cloud thickness at the corresponding position is larger than zero.
Figure 1a shows the daytime evolution of the vertical profile of cloud fraction from 18 to 23 UTC (12 to 17 local time) based on the COGS product. ShCu cloud fields undergo an initial formation of small and thin clouds before 19 UTC, a mature development with maximum cloud vertical extent and cloud fraction between 19 and 21 UTC, and a dissipation stage towards the end of the day.
Figure 1b shows the cloud mask based on COGS data at 20:33:40 UTC (dash line on
Figure 1a); during this time, three large clouds are clearly seen within the 6 km by 6 km COGS domain.
Figure 1c shows the cloud reflectance from GOES-16 at 20:33:43 UTC on the same day over a large region in the vicinity of the SGP site, with the COGS domain denoted by the red box. The three shallow cumulus clouds on the COGS image (
Figure 1b) are shown as bright and high-reflectance objects on the GOES image (
Figure 1c).
Figure 1d shows the cloud mask from the GOES operational ACM data product. It can be clearly seen that these three ShCu clouds seen from the COGS image (
Figure 1b) are not fully reported as clouds in the GOES ACM product (
Figure 1d).
Figure 1e shows our newly developed cloud mask with the successful detection of the three ShCu clouds in the COGS domain (
Figure 1b) using GOES-16 reflectance data (
Figure 1c). The new method is discussed in detail in the following sections.
3. Methods
In the new method, a cloudy pixel is identified when the GOES reflectance exceeds the clear-sky surface reflectance (in the absence of clouds for that pixel) by a detection threshold of ShCu reflectance (∆R) [
52,
53]. This can be expressed as
In the following, we first generate diurnally varying clear-sky surface reflectance maps, Rclear(x,y,t), and then make estimates of the ShCu detection threshold, ∆R.
3.1. Determination of Clear-Sky Surface Reflectance
Clear-sky surface reflectance is determined at high resolution (ABI pixel size, approximately 650 m at SGP) based on an algorithm in [
53] and [
52] that we describe below. In [
49], it was confirmed that the patterns of clear-sky radiation using this algorithm agree well with the MODIS albedo maps. The assumption for this algorithm is that land surfaces are stable and slow-varying over a restricted time period and that the signal measured by the GOES instrument during this period can be considered only a function of the scene-viewing geometry and cloudiness [
54]. In this study, clear-sky surface reflectance climatology maps are generated for July–August based on data in 2018 and 2019. To reduce the diurnal variability effects from the solar zenith angle, while at the same time still retaining sufficient data, clear-sky surface reflectance climatology for July–August is calculated per pixel per hourly interval using 45 randomly selected days in July and August over the 2-year period.
Figure 2a shows that, for each pixel, 540 reflectance values (45 days × 12 observations per hour) are sorted to generate a cumulative distribution frequency (CDF) on 21 UTC (15 local time) with the bin spacing of 0.01. The clear-sky surface reflectance is determined as the reflectance value with the greatest gradient along the curve of the CDF. The greatest gradient corresponds to the change from cloud shadow to clear-sky surface. The reflectance values smaller than the determined surface reflectance correspond to the cloud shadow [
54]. The sample numbers in each bin are shown in
Figure 2b. To generate the CDF, adequate clear-sky cases are needed. Among the randomly selected 45 days, manual case screening of satellite images confirms around half of the cases as clear sky. The spatial variabilities of the clear-sky surface reflectance are clearly seen within the COGS 6 km by 6 km domain (
Figure 2c). The surface reflectance values in a 4° by 3.5° large domain centered at the COGS location are also calculated and shown in
Figure 2d. It is found that the clear-sky surface reflectance agrees well with the land cover map (
Figure 2e), in which higher surface reflectance is found over city and over grassland than over forest. The reflectance is small over open water in general, except for the solar salt plant region (−99.25°, 36.75°) in
Figure 2e. The land cover map for the year 2018 is from the Cropland Data Layer dataset (
https://nassgeodata.gmu.edu/CropScape/ (accessed on 11 September 2020).) hosted by CropScape for the continental United States, which has a 30-m spatial resolution [
55,
56]. This surface reflectance method works well when the land surface conditions (e.g., vegetation) are stable and vary slowly. A more detailed discussion can be found in
Section 5.
3.2. The GOES Simulator
The ShCu detection threshold ∆R is estimated from GOES reflectance by cross-validation with cloud fraction (CF) from stereo cameras at the ARM SGP site. To estimate an accurate ∆R, the surface camera data and the GOES satellite data should be aligned well to observe the same cloud fields. However, the parallax issue, the displacement of cloud location and the enhancement of cloud fraction/size, occurs in satellite imaging, particularly for the surface regions with high viewing zenith angles [
57,
58,
59,
60,
61] (
Figure 3a). Due to the 48° viewing angle of GOES-16 towards SGP, the parallax shift leads to a difference between cloud images from satellites looking at clouds in a slanted view and from the COGS data product projecting clouds to the surface in the zenith direction.
To better estimate ∆R for every satellite image during the ShCu days, a GOES simulator is designed using observations from stereo cameras, projecting clouds observed in the COGS reconstructable region along the slanted viewing direction of GOES-16 to the land surface. The projected surface for the GOES simulator is the same as the ellipsoid surface used in the GOES ABI data. The elevation of the SGP central facility above the GOES ellipsoid surface is 285 m after considering the terrain correction for the GOES satellite. The satellite viewing zenith angle and satellite azimuth angle are 48.64051° and 145.23258° at the COGS domain center (36.60529°, −97.48642°). The satellite viewing zenith angle and the azimuth angle are assumed constant in the GOES simulator, which is reasonable because the dimension of the interested domain is very small compared with the Earth–satellite distance. The output from the GOES simulator is the mean path through clouds projected at each GOES ABI pixel based on COGS data every 20 s. The mean cloud path is calculated as the volume of the clouds intercepted by lines connecting the GOES satellite to locations in the GOES surface pixel, divided by the area of the GOES pixel.
When GOES-16 looks towards surface through the original 6 km × 6 km × 6 km COGS domain in the slanted view, the distance of the path, the minimum (maximum) height along the path intercepted by the COGS reconstructable region, varies from GOES pixel to pixel (
Figure 3b–d). Two example paths (green and orange lines) are provided in
Figure 3a. For the green path, the minimum and maximum heights are 0 km and 6 km, while for the orange path, the minimum height is 2 km, which indicates that, along this GOES slanted viewing path, pixels observed by GOES below 2 km are all outside of the 6 km × 6 km × 6 km COGS domain. In other words, along this slanted path, GOES observes more clouds than the GOES simulator, if any cloud occurs in the orange shaded area in
Figure 3a.
In order to best match clouds observed by the GOES satellite and GOES simulator based on COGS data, we need to select an analysis domain in which ShCu observed by GOES all come from the COGS reconstructable region. Using COGS observed shallow cumulus data during July to August in 2018 and 2019, we find that the shallow cumulus cloud base heights are all above 0.65 km, and 95% of the cloud top heights are lower than 2.55 km. Thus, a valid slanted path is selected with a minimum height lower than 0.65 km and a maximum height higher than 2.55 km. The corresponding pixels at the surface with valid slanted paths are labeled as black points in
Figure 3e (we refer to this as the GOES simulator mask hereafter).
The COGS data product projects clouds reconstructed by stereo cameras at zenith direction toward the surface over a 6 km by 6 km domain. The location of projection is shown as the red box in
Figure 3e. The GOES simulator projects clouds reconstructed by surface stereo cameras at the GOES slanted viewing direction. We found that all the GOES simulator marked points are within a 6 km by 6 km domain of the same size (magenta box in
Figure 3e), which is 0.015° north and west of the actual COGS domain. This indicates that the shifts from the actual COGS location to the satellite off-nadir displaced location are approximately 0.015° in both N-S and W-E directions.
3.3. Determination of ShCu Detection Threshold ∆R
We estimate the ShCu detection threshold ∆R for each of the GOES-16 reflectance images based on the cloud fractions (CF) from the GOES simulator. The CF for the GOES simulator is calculated as the number of cloudy pixels divided by the total number of pixels within the GOES simulator mask region (
Figure 3e). A cloud path distance threshold is needed to identify whether a pixel is clear sky or cloudy. This cloud path distance threshold is estimated for each GOES simulator image based on the COGS 20s data.
The estimation of the ShCu detection threshold ∆R is based on four images (
Figure 4a–d): (Image A) a high-resolution (50 m) cloud thickness image from the COGS data; (Image B) a low-resolution (at GOES resolution) cloud thickness image derived from the high-resolution COGS data; (Image C) a cloud path distance image from the GOES simulator; and (Image D) a reflectance difference image from the GOES-16.
Here, we introduce how to prepare these four images. For a given GOES image, one snapshot of 3D COGS data is selected closest to the time of the GOES image scan over the SGP central facility. Contiguous US images from GOES-16 scans are provided every 5 min. The GOES ABI CMI product does not provide the scan time stamp for individual pixels. The pixel scan time over the SGP central facility is calculated using the GOES calibration tool, an ABI time model look up table (available at
https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOESCal/goes_tools.php (accessed on 18 March 2021)).
We then use this selected snapshot of COGS 3D data to generate two cloud thickness images (Images A and B). At each (x, y) location in the COGS domain, the cloud physical thickness is calculated (
Figure 4a, Image A). The high-resolution (50 m) COGS cloud thickness is then averaged within the GOES ABI pixel (approximately 650-m resolution at SGP) to generate a low-resolution COGS cloud thickness image (
Figure 4b, Image B).
Figure 4c (Image C) is the cloud path distance map from the GOES simulator based on the selected snapshot of COGS data. The reflectance in
Figure 4d (Image D) is calculated as the difference between the GOES reflectance and the clear-sky surface reflectance at the 0.64 μm channel. Using these four images,
Figure 4e summarizes the assumptions, major steps, and datasets used to estimate ΔR in three steps.
Firstly, we determine a cloud thickness threshold on the low-resolution cloud thickness image (Image B). From the high-resolution cloud thickness image (Image A), a reference cloud fraction (CFCOGS_HighRes) is retained by defining a cloudy pixel with the cloud physical thickness larger than zero. From the low-resolution cloud thickness image, a simple 1D look up table is generated: for a given thickness threshold, we count the number of cloud pixels with cloud thickness greater than this threshold and calculate the corresponding CF (CFCOGS_LowRes). The final thickness threshold is determined at the low-resolution COGS grid as the value making the CFCOGS_LowRes equal to CFCOGS_HigRes.
Secondly, we determine cloudy pixels on the cloud path distance map from the GOES simulator (
Figure 4c, Image C) using the thickness threshold from the step above. If the distance through clouds is larger than the cloud thickness threshold, we identify this pixel as cloudy, and then we calculate the CF (CF
simulator) as the ratio of the number of cloudy pixels over the number of total pixels in the GOES simulator mask region (
Figure 3e).
Lastly, we determine the ShCu detection threshold ΔR. A simple 1D look up table is generated: for a given reflectance detection threshold, ΔR, the number of cloud pixels is identified with the reflectance greater than this threshold and the CF (CF
GOES) is calculated on the reflectance difference images (
Figure 4d, Image D) in the GOES simulator mask region (
Figure 3e). The final reflectance detection threshold, ΔR, is determined as the value making the CF
GOES equal to CF
simulator.
To estimate an accurate ΔR, the cloud images from the GOES simulator and the GOES reflectance data should be aligned well to observe the same cloud fields as much as possible. GOES can observe multi-layer clouds, e.g., ShCu in COGS cube overlapping with high clouds above 6 km outside the COGS cube; however, COGS can only observe clouds under 6 km. In other words, clouds higher than 6 km outside the COGS reconstructable region can be observed by GOES but not by the GOES simulator. To best facilitate an apple-to-apple comparison of cloud fractions for an accurate determination of ΔR, in the last step aforementioned, we further (1) select images with GOES mean reflectance less than 0.2 to exclude a few images with multi-layer clouds; (2) select the pair of GOES simulator and GOES images with their normalized cross-correlation larger than 0.5. Normalized cross-correlation, usually its two-dimensional version, is a metric to evaluate the degree of similarity between two images [
57]. Two-dimensional fast Fourier transform convolutions of the image are used to compute the correlation to make the calculation faster [
58].
5. Discussions
In this section, we discuss the performance of the best-fit constant ΔR value of 0.045 and the applicability of this shallow cumulus detection threshold.
We first conduct several sensitivity tests on the constant detection threshold ΔR.
Figure 5c also shows the distributions of the percent errors of CFs from satellite data estimated using 0.035 and 0.055 in addition to 0.045. The larger probability for a small percent error, the better the result. We found that there is a smaller PDF (and CDF) with percent errors smaller than 10% (first bin in
x-axis) when using constant ΔR values of 0.035 or 0.055 as compared with using 0.045, which suggests the better performance of 0.045.
Using 5 min data, the mean CF bias using different ΔR values is further calculated with respect to the different ranges of in-cloud thickness, which is the mean thickness of the cloudy pixels on each COGS image (
Figure 8a). In general, the mean bias is very close to zero when ΔR equals 0.045, much smaller than when using 0.035 or 0.055. The mean bias is negative (positive) when the in-cloud thickness is less (greater) than 150 m, but the CF mean bias values are always within ±0.013. The mean CF bias values are also calculated in the different CF ranges (
Figure 8b). Using ΔR as 0.045, the mean biases are within ±0.02 when CF is less than 0.4. When CF is larger than 0.4, using a smaller ΔR (e.g., 0.035) yields better results than using 0.045. However, the occurrence probability of continental shallow cumulus CF larger than 0.4 is very small [
11,
62]. In the comparisons of hourly mean CFs estimated using dynamic and constant ΔR thresholds (
Figure 8c), the mean biases are within ±0.01 in all the CF ranges when using ΔR of 0.045.
By using constant ΔR 0.045 as the detection threshold, we further investigate the detection probability with respect to cloud fraction and cloud thickness. Within the COGS domain, we calculate the in-cloud thickness and cloud fraction for each GOES ABI grid based on the high-resolution (50 m) COGS data product. A cloudy pixel in the 50-m-resolution COGS product is defined as a cloud thickness larger than 0. The grid cloud fraction is calculated as the ratio of the number of cloudy pixels over the number of total pixels within one GOES ABI grid.
For each GOES ABI grid, satellite reflectance data at each grid will be used to identify it as either cloudy or clear sky using the ΔR threshold of 0.045.
Figure 9a shows the joint probability of the identified cloudy pixels at different bins of in-cloud thickness and cloud fraction. Note that probabilities are only shown in the bins with sample numbers (
Figure 9b) larger than 100. The probabilities larger than 50% (in reddish colors) indicate that the grid is prone to be identified as cloudy rather than clear sky. As shown in
Figure 9a, when the cloud thickness is smaller than 250 m, 50% probability can be achieved with lower cloud fractions as cloud thickness increases. For example, the 50% probability is found for a cloud thickness of 100 m (second bin in
x-axis) with a cloud fraction of 0.5, and for a cloud thickness of 150 (200) meters with a cloud fraction of 0.4 (0.3), while for a cloud thickness of 250 m with a cloud fraction of 0.2, 60% of the cases in that bin are identified as cloudy. When the cloud thickness is greater than 250 m, the cases in those bins are usually also associated with high cloud fractions, e.g., 0.5 or above. Moreover, for those bins, usually 60% or more of the cases will be identified as cloudy.
In this study, we suggest using GOES ABI ‘red’ channel reflectance with a constant cloud detection threshold (0.045) to detect ShCu clouds at SGP. However, further validations might be needed at other locations to test the universal applicability of such ShCu detection threshold values. Our study is designed for the ShCu detection in particular, which is a missing part in the operational GOES ABI cloud mask, rather than to provide a method to detect all kinds of clouds under different conditions. The shallow cumulus cloud detection threshold may not work well for multi-layer clouds, such as cirrus clouds overlapping with ShCu. Case selection by screening satellite images is necessary to ensure that there are no higher-level clouds above lower-level ShCu, such that the clouds detected using our method are valid shallow cumulus. Additional observations from the GOES ABI 1.38 channel can be useful to detect cirrus clouds [
63].
The procedure to generate the clear-sky reflectance maps can be applied to other locations over land with prevailing ShCu populations. However, it does have some limitations. It is not suitable for surfaces with very high reflectance. For example, fresh snow cover during wintertime has high visible reflectance similar to the reflectance of clouds, which may lead to large uncertainty in distinguishing between the clear-sky values and the cloud detection. Moreover, short-term changes in the land surface properties must be considered, if any. For example, during May and June, the winter wheat harvest takes place in the SGP region. The reflectance of the winter wheat will change before and after the harvest. Cloud detection cannot be based on only one surface reflectance map for the SGP warm season. Another example is the Eufaula Lake (−96°–95.5°; 35°–35.5°), labeled as open water in
Figure 2e, which is impounded by the Eufaula dam. The lake reflectance changes when the Eufaula dam provides flood control, as the reflectance of turbid and clear water in the Eufaula Lake at the visible channel is very different [
64]. The surface reflectance method introduced in this study may not work well with such large variation over a lake with a dam during flooding season. In our study, because the vegetation change is not significant in July and August at SGP, the surface reflectance map was generated using four months of data in July and August from 2018 and 2019. However, the accuracy of the estimated surface reflectance could be improved by using observations from a running time period, such as using 60-day observations to estimate the surface reflectance [
54].
Although further investigation may be needed to confirm its applicability to other regions, this new method enables the detection of small and short-lived ShCu during daytime. This ShCu detection method makes it feasible to trace the deep convective clouds back to their “seeds”, the shallow cumulus. Such capability bridges the gaps in observational studies, especially in detecting the initiating life stages in shallow to deep convection transition. The method can provide a large sample set of ShCu clouds at the SGP region from GOES observations both occurring over different locations and in different stages of their life cycles. It allows us not only to analyze ShCu cloud object characteristics but also to identify relationships among cloud size, rain likelihood, the environmental conditions, and land surface properties. Such data may improve the general understanding of rain production and help to constrain ShCu clouds and their impacts in climate models.
The framework developed in this study can be applied to other satellite sensors, such as the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) onboard Himawari-8, if similar observations (e.g., stereo cameras) are available at ground level. When there are more ShCu cases observed by ground-based stereo cameras, especially those with GOES-16 and GOES-17 concurrently, further improvement of ShCu detection may be possible by using a dual-satellite (GOES-16 and GOES-17) approach with simultaneous satellite measurements.
6. Conclusions
In this study, summertime continental ShCu are detected by taking advantage of the high temporal and spatial resolutions of GOES-16 reflectance data and three-dimensional cloud structures retrieved from ground-based stereo cameras. A ShCu cloudy pixel is identified when GOES reflectance exceeds the clear-sky surface reflectance by a detection threshold of ShCu reflectance ΔR. We first derive the diurnally varying clear-sky surface reflectance maps. Next, the detection threshold for shallow cumulus (∆R) is determined according to the accurate cloud statistics from the surface stereo cameras. When images from satellite and ground-based stereo cameras are compared, the effect of the cloud parallax issue on GOES satellite images is carefully considered through a newly developed GOES simulator, which projects stereo camera reconstructed clouds towards the surface along the GOES-16′s slanted viewing direction. The dynamic ShCu detection threshold ΔR is determined by making the GOES CF equal to the CF from the GOES simulator.
When ground-based observations are not available as a constraint to estimate the dynamic reflectance threshold ΔR, similar cloud size distributions and cloud fractions can be reproduced using a constant cloud detection threshold (0.045) at the ARM SGP site. The best-fit constant ΔR (0.045) is determined as the value causing the smallest CF difference between using the dynamic ΔR values and the constant ΔR. Several sensitivity tests on the constant detection threshold ΔR confirm the better performance when using ΔR of 0.045 than when using other values (e.g., 0.035 or 0.055). Cloud size distribution, and the diurnal cycles of cloud fraction and cloud size, are also derived to show a reasonable performance of 0.045 as the shallow cumulus detection threshold ΔR. The mean biases for hourly mean cloud fraction are within 1 percent compared with the results using the dynamic ΔR.
Detection of the low-level, small, and short-lived ShCu during daytime is a missing feature in the current GOES cloud mask product. Using the method presented in this study, a new ShCu dataset can be generated at SGP to bridge the observational gap in detecting ShCu, which may transition into deep precipitating clouds, and to facilitate further studies on the ShCu development over a heterogenous land surface.