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Keywords = Himawari-8 image

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18 pages, 7358 KiB  
Article
On the Hybrid Algorithm for Retrieving Day and Night Cloud Base Height from Geostationary Satellite Observations
by Tingting Ye, Zhonghui Tan, Weihua Ai, Shuo Ma, Xianbin Zhao, Shensen Hu, Chao Liu and Jianping Guo
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(14), 2469; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142469 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 240
Abstract
Most existing cloud base height (CBH) retrieval algorithms are only applicable for daytime satellite observations due to their dependence on visible observations. This study presents a novel algorithm to retrieve day and night CBH using infrared observations of the geostationary Advanced Himawari Imager [...] Read more.
Most existing cloud base height (CBH) retrieval algorithms are only applicable for daytime satellite observations due to their dependence on visible observations. This study presents a novel algorithm to retrieve day and night CBH using infrared observations of the geostationary Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI). The algorithm is featured by integrating deep learning techniques with a physical model. The algorithm first utilizes a convolutional neural network-based model to extract cloud top height (CTH) and cloud water path (CWP) from the AHI infrared observations. Then, a physical model is introduced to relate cloud geometric thickness (CGT) to CWP by constructing a look-up table of effective cloud water content (ECWC). Thus, the CBH can be obtained by subtracting CGT from CTH. The results demonstrate good agreement between our AHI CBH retrievals and the spaceborne active remote sensing measurements, with a mean bias of −0.14 ± 1.26 km for CloudSat-CALIPSO observations at daytime and −0.35 ± 1.84 km for EarthCARE measurements at nighttime. Additional validation against ground-based millimeter wave cloud radar (MMCR) measurements further confirms the effectiveness and reliability of the proposed algorithm across varying atmospheric conditions and temporal scales. Full article
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31 pages, 7444 KiB  
Article
Meteorological Drivers and Agricultural Drought Diagnosis Based on Surface Information and Precipitation from Satellite Observations in Nusa Tenggara Islands, Indonesia
by Gede Dedy Krisnawan, Yi-Ling Chang, Fuan Tsai, Kuo-Hsin Tseng and Tang-Huang Lin
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(14), 2460; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142460 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 372
Abstract
Agriculture accounts for 29% of the Gross Domestic Product of the Nusa Tenggara Islands (NTIs). However, recurring agricultural droughts pose a major threat to the sustainability of agriculture in this region. The interplay between precipitation, solar radiation, and surface temperature as meteorological factors [...] Read more.
Agriculture accounts for 29% of the Gross Domestic Product of the Nusa Tenggara Islands (NTIs). However, recurring agricultural droughts pose a major threat to the sustainability of agriculture in this region. The interplay between precipitation, solar radiation, and surface temperature as meteorological factors plays a key role in affecting vegetation (Soil-Adjusted Vegetation Index) and agricultural drought (Temperature Vegetation Dryness Index) in the NTIs. Based on the analyses of interplay with temporal lag, this study investigates the effect of each factor on agricultural drought and attempts to provide early warnings regarding drought in the NTIs. We collected surface information data from Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Meanwhile, rainfall was estimated from Himawari-8 based on the INSAT Multi-Spectral Rainfall Algorithm (IMSRA). The results showed reliable performance for 8-day and monthly scales against gauges. The drought analysis results reveal that the NTIs suffer from mild-to-moderate droughts, where cropland is the most vulnerable, causing shifts in the rice cropping season. The driving factors could also explain >60% of the vegetation and surface-dryness conditions. Furthermore, our monthly and 8-day TVDI estimation models could capture spatial drought patterns consistent with MODIS, with coefficient of determination (R2) values of more than 0.64. The low error rates and the ability to capture the spatial distribution of droughts, especially in open-land vegetation, highlight the potential of these models to provide an estimation of agricultural drought. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Remote Sensing)
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17 pages, 11839 KiB  
Article
Developing an Objective Scheme to Construct Hurricane Bogus Vortices Based on Scatterometer Sea Surface Wind Data
by Weixin Pan, Xiaolei Zou and Yihong Duan
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(9), 1528; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17091528 - 25 Apr 2025
Viewed by 358
Abstract
This study presents an objective scheme to construct hurricane bogus vortices based on satellite microwave scatterometer observations of sea surface wind vectors. When specifying a bogus vortex using Fujita’s formula, the required parameters include the center position and the radius of the maximum [...] Read more.
This study presents an objective scheme to construct hurricane bogus vortices based on satellite microwave scatterometer observations of sea surface wind vectors. When specifying a bogus vortex using Fujita’s formula, the required parameters include the center position and the radius of the maximum gradient of sea level pressure (R0). We first propose determining the tropical cyclone (TC) center position as the cyclonic circulation center obtained from sea surface wind observations and then establishing a regression model between R0 and the radius of 34-kt sea surface wind of scatterometer observations. The radius of 34-kt sea surface wind (R34) is commonly used as a measure of TC size. The center positions determined from HaiYang-2B/2C/2D Scatterometers, MetOp-B/C Advanced Scatterometers, and FengYun-3E Wind Radar compared favorably with the axisymmetric centers of hurricane rain/cloud bands revealed by Advanced Himawari Imager observations of brightness temperature for the western Pacific landfalling typhoons Doksuri, Khanun, and Haikui in 2023. Furthermore, regression equations between R0 and the scatterometer-determined radius of 34-kt wind are developed for tropical storms and category-1, -2, -3, and higher hurricanes over the Northwest Pacific (2022–2023). The bogus vortices thus constructed are more realistic than those built without satellite sea surface wind observations. Full article
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18 pages, 4812 KiB  
Article
A Novel Aerosol Optical Depth Retrieval Method Based on SDAE from Himawari-8/AHI Next-Generation Geostationary Satellite in Hubei Province
by Shiquan Deng, Ting Bai, Zhe Chen and Yepei Chen
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(8), 1396; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17081396 - 14 Apr 2025
Viewed by 472
Abstract
Atmospheric aerosols play an important role in the ecological environment, climate change, and human health. Aerosol optical depth (AOD) is the main measurement of aerosols. The next-generation geostationary satellite Himawari-8, loaded with the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI), provides observation-based estimates of the hourly [...] Read more.
Atmospheric aerosols play an important role in the ecological environment, climate change, and human health. Aerosol optical depth (AOD) is the main measurement of aerosols. The next-generation geostationary satellite Himawari-8, loaded with the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI), provides observation-based estimates of the hourly AOD. However, a highly accurate evaluation of AOD using AHI is still limited. In this paper, we establish a Stacked Denoising AutoEncoder (SDAE) model to retrieve highly accurate AOD using AHI. We explore the SDAE to retrieve AOD by taking the ground-observed AOD as the output and taking the AHI image, the month, hour, latitude, and longitude as the input data. This approach was tested in the Hubei province of China. Traditional machine learning methods such as Extreme Learning Machines (ELMs), BackPropagation Neural Networks (BPNNs), and Support Vector Machines (SVMs) are also used to evaluate model performance. The results show that the proposed method has the highest accuracy. We also compare the proposed method with ground-observed AOD measurements at the Wuhan University site, showing good consistency between the satellite-retrieved AOD and the ground-observed value. The study of the spatiotemporal change pattern of the hourly AOD in the Hubei province shows that the algorithm has good stability in the face of changes in the angle and intensity of sunlight. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Near Real-Time Remote Sensing Data and Its Geoscience Applications)
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33 pages, 21153 KiB  
Article
South China Sea SST Fronts, 2015–2022
by Igor M. Belkin and Yi-Tao Zang
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(5), 817; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17050817 - 27 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1091
Abstract
High-resolution (2 km), high-frequency (hourly) SST data of the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) flown onboard the Japanese Himawari-8 geostationary satellite were used to derive the monthly climatology of temperature fronts in the South China Sea. The SST data from 2015 to 2022 were [...] Read more.
High-resolution (2 km), high-frequency (hourly) SST data of the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) flown onboard the Japanese Himawari-8 geostationary satellite were used to derive the monthly climatology of temperature fronts in the South China Sea. The SST data from 2015 to 2022 were processed with the Belkin–O’Reilly algorithm to generate maps of SST gradient magnitude GM. The GM maps were log-transformed to enhance contrasts in digital maps and reveal additional features (fronts). The combination of high-resolution, cloud-free, four-day-composite SST imagery from AHI, the advanced front-preserving gradient algorithm BOA, and digital contrast enhancement with the log-transformation of SST gradients allowed us to identify numerous mesoscale/submesoscale fronts (including a few fronts that have never been reported) and document their month-to-month variability and spatial patterns. The spatiotemporal variability of SST fronts was analyzed in detail in five regions: (1) In the Taiwan Strait, six fronts were identified: the China Coastal Front, Taiwan Bank Front, Changyun Ridge Front, East Penghu Channel Front, and Eastern/Western Penghu Islands fronts; (2) the Guangdong Shelf is dominated by the China Coastal Front in winter, with the eastern and western Guangdong fronts separated by the Pearl River outflow in summer; (3) Hainan Island is surrounded by upwelling fronts of various nature (wind-driven coastal and topographic) and tidal mixing fronts; in the western Beibu Gulf, the Red River Outflow Front extends southward as the Vietnam Coastal Front, while the northern Beibu Gulf features a tidal mixing front off the Guangxi coast; (4) Off SE Vietnam, the 11°N coastal upwelling gives rise to a summertime front, while the Mekong Outflow and associated front extend seasonally toward Cape Camau, close to the Gulf of Thailand Entrance Front; (5) In the Luzon Strait, the Kuroshio Front manifests as a chain of three fronts across the Babuyan Islands, while west of Luzon Island a broad offshore frontal zone persists in winter. The summertime eastward jet (SEJ) off SE Vietnam is documented from five-day mean SST data. The SEJ emerges in June–September off the 11°N coastal upwelling center and extends up to 114°E. The zonally oriented SEJ is observed to be located between two large gyres, each about 300 km in diameter. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Remote Sensing)
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29 pages, 12829 KiB  
Article
Evaluating the Relationship Between Vegetation Status and Soil Moisture in Semi-Arid Woodlands, Central Australia, Using Daily Thermal, Vegetation Index, and Reflectance Data
by Mauro Holzman, Ankur Srivastava, Raúl Rivas and Alfredo Huete
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(4), 635; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17040635 - 13 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1235
Abstract
Wet rainfall pulses control vegetation growth through evapotranspiration in most dryland areas. This topic has not been extensively analyzed with respect to the vast semi-arid ecosystems of Central Australia. In this study, we investigated vegetation water responses to in situ root zone soil [...] Read more.
Wet rainfall pulses control vegetation growth through evapotranspiration in most dryland areas. This topic has not been extensively analyzed with respect to the vast semi-arid ecosystems of Central Australia. In this study, we investigated vegetation water responses to in situ root zone soil moisture (SM) variations in savanna woodlands (Mulga) in Central Australia using satellite-based optical and thermal data. Specifically, we used the Land Surface Water Index (LSWI) derived from the Advanced Himawari Imager on board the Himawari 8 (AHI) satellite, alongside Land Surface Temperature (LST) from MODIS Terra and Aqua (MOD/MYD11A1), as indicators of vegetation water status and surface energy balance, respectively. The analysis covered the period from 2016 to 2021. The LSWI increased with the magnitude of wet pulses and showed significant lags in the temporal response to SM, with behavior similar to that of the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI). By contrast, LST temporal responses were quicker and correlated with daily in situ SM at different depths. These results were consistent with in situ relationships between LST and SM, with the decreases in LST being coherent with wet pulse magnitude. Daily LSWI and EVI scores were best related to subsurface SM through quadratic relationships that accounted for the lag in vegetation response. Tower flux measures of gross primary production (GPP) were also related to the magnitude of wet pulses, being more correlated with the LSWI and EVI than LST. The results indicated that the vegetation response varied with SM depths. We propose a conceptual model for the relationship between LST and SM in the soil profile, which is useful for the monitoring/forecasting of wet pulse impacts on vegetation. Understanding the temporal changes in rainfall-driven vegetation in the thermal/optical spectra associated with increases in SM can allow us to predict the spatial impact of wet pulses on vegetation dynamics in extensive drylands. Full article
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26 pages, 24954 KiB  
Article
Development of a Novel One-Dimensional Nested U-Net Cloud-Classification Model (1D-CloudNet)
by Minjie Deng, Yong Han, Yan Liu, Li Dong, Qicheng Zhou, Yurong Zhang, Ximing Deng and Tianwei Lu
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(3), 519; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17030519 - 3 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 963
Abstract
Cloud classification is fundamental to advancing climate research and improving weather forecasting. However, existing cloud classification models are constrained by several limitations. For instance, simple statistical methods depend heavily on prior knowledge, leading to frequent misclassifications in regions with high latitudes or complex [...] Read more.
Cloud classification is fundamental to advancing climate research and improving weather forecasting. However, existing cloud classification models are constrained by several limitations. For instance, simple statistical methods depend heavily on prior knowledge, leading to frequent misclassifications in regions with high latitudes or complex terrains. Machine learning approaches based on two-dimensional images face challenges such as data scarcity and high annotation costs, which hinder accurate pixel-level cloud identification. Additionally, single-pixel classification methods fail to effectively exploit the spatial correlations inherent in cloud structures. In this paper, we introduce the one-dimensional nested U-Net cloud-classification model (1D-CloudNet), which was developed using Himawari-8 and CloudSat data collected over two years (2016–2017), comprising a total of 27,688 samples. This model is explicitly tailored for the analysis of one-dimensional, multi-channel images. Experimental results indicate that 1D-CloudNet achieves an overall classification accuracy of 88.19% during the day and 87.40% at night. This represents a 3–4% improvement compared to traditional models. The model demonstrates robust performance for both daytime and nighttime applications, effectively addressing the absence of nighttime data in the Himawari-8 L2 product. In the future, 1D-CloudNet is expected to support regional climate research and extreme weather monitoring. Further optimization could enhance its adaptability to complex terrains. Full article
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25 pages, 6720 KiB  
Article
Forest Fire Discrimination Based on Angle Slope Index and Himawari-8
by Pingbo Liu and Gui Zhang
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(1), 142; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17010142 - 3 Jan 2025
Viewed by 1102
Abstract
In the background of high frequency and intensity forest fires driven by future warming and a drying climate, early detection and effective control of fires are extremely important to reduce losses. Meteorological satellite imagery is commonly used for near-real-time forest fire monitoring, thanks [...] Read more.
In the background of high frequency and intensity forest fires driven by future warming and a drying climate, early detection and effective control of fires are extremely important to reduce losses. Meteorological satellite imagery is commonly used for near-real-time forest fire monitoring, thanks to its high temporal resolution. To address the misjudgments and omissions caused by solely relying on changes in infrared band brightness values and a single image in forest fire early discrimination, this paper constructs the angle slope indexes ANIR, AMIR, AMNIR, ∆ANIR, and ∆AMIR based on the reflectance of the red band and near-infrared band, the brightness temperature of the mid-infrared and far-infrared band, the difference between the AMIR and ANIR, and the index difference between time-series images. These indexes integrate the strong inter-band correlations and the reflectance characteristics of visible and short-wave infrared bands to simultaneously monitor smoke and fuel biomass changes in forest fires. We also used the decomposed three-dimensional OTSU (maximum inter-class variance method) algorithm to calculate the segmentation threshold of the sub-regions constructed from the AMNIR data to address the different discrimination thresholds caused by different time and space backgrounds. In this paper, the Himawari-8 satellite imagery was used to detect forest fires based on the angle slope indices thresholds algorithm (ASITR), and the fusion of the decomposed three-dimensional OTSU and ASITR algorithm (FDOA). Results show that, compared with ASITR, the accuracy of FDOA decreased by 3.41% (0.88 vs. 0.85), the omission error decreased by 52.94% (0.17 vs. 0.08), and the overall evaluation increased by 3.53% (0.85 vs. 0.88). The ASITR has higher accuracy, and the fusion of decomposed three-dimensional OTSU and angle slope indexes can reduce forest fire omission error and improve the overall evaluation. Full article
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30 pages, 13659 KiB  
Article
Spatial Gap-Filling of Himawari-8 Hourly AOD Products Using Machine Learning with Model-Based AOD and Meteorological Data: A Focus on the Korean Peninsula
by Youjeong Youn, Seoyeon Kim, Seung Hee Kim and Yangwon Lee
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(23), 4400; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16234400 - 25 Nov 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1646
Abstract
Given the complex spatiotemporal variability of aerosols, high-frequency satellite observations are essential for accurately mapping their distribution. However, optical remote sensing encounters difficulties in detecting Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) over cloud-covered regions, creating data gaps that limit comprehensive environmental analysis. This study introduces [...] Read more.
Given the complex spatiotemporal variability of aerosols, high-frequency satellite observations are essential for accurately mapping their distribution. However, optical remote sensing encounters difficulties in detecting Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) over cloud-covered regions, creating data gaps that limit comprehensive environmental analysis. This study introduces a spatial gap-filling method for Himawari-8/Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) hourly AOD data, using a Random Forest (RF) model that integrates meteorological variables and model-based AOD data. Developed and validated over South Korea from 1 January to 31 December 2019, the model effectively improved data coverage from 6% to 100%. The approach demonstrated high performance in blind tests, achieving a root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.064 and a correlation coefficient (CC) of 0.966. Meteorological analysis indicated optimal model performance under cold, dry conditions (RMSE: 0.047, CC: 0.956), compared to humid conditions (RMSE: 0.105, CC: 0.921). Validation against Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) ground observations showed that, while the original Himawari-8 data exhibited higher accuracy (RMSE: 0.189, CC: 0.815, n = 346), the gap-filled dataset maintained reasonable precision (RMSE: 0.208, CC: 0.711) and significantly increased the number of valid data points (n = 4149). Furthermore, the gap-filled dataset successfully captured seasonal AOD patterns, with values ranging from 0.245–0.300 in winter to 0.381–0.391 in summer, providing a comprehensive view of aerosol dynamics across South Korea. Full article
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24 pages, 6198 KiB  
Article
The China Coastal Front from Himawari-8 AHI SST Data—Part 2: South China Sea
by Igor M. Belkin, Shang-Shang Lou, Yi-Tao Zang and Wen-Bin Yin
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(18), 3415; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16183415 - 14 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 999
Abstract
High-resolution (2 km) high-frequency (hourly) SST data from 2015 to 2021 provided by the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) onboard the Japanese Himawari-8 geostationary satellite were used to study spatial and temporal variability of the China Coastal Front (CCF) in the South China Sea. [...] Read more.
High-resolution (2 km) high-frequency (hourly) SST data from 2015 to 2021 provided by the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) onboard the Japanese Himawari-8 geostationary satellite were used to study spatial and temporal variability of the China Coastal Front (CCF) in the South China Sea. The SST data were processed with the Belkin and O’Reilly (2009) algorithm to generate monthly maps of the CCF’s intensity (defined as SST gradient magnitude GM) and frontal frequency (FF). The horizontal structure of the CCF was investigated from cross-frontal distributions of SST along 11 fixed lines that allowed us to determine inshore and offshore boundaries of the CCF and calculate the CCF’s strength (defined as total cross-frontal step of SST). Combined with the results of Part 1 of this study, where the CCF was documented in the East China Sea, the new results reported in this paper allowed the CCF to be traced from the Yangtze Bank to Hainan Island. The CCF is continuous in winter, when its intensity peaks at 0.15 °C/km (based on monthly data). In summer, when the Guangdong Coastal Current reverses and flows eastward, the CCF’s intensity is reduced to 0.05 °C/km or less, especially off western Guangdong, where the CCF vanishes almost completely. Owing to its breadth (50–100 km, up to 200 km in the Taiwan Strait), the CCF is a very strong front, especially in winter, when the total SST step across the CCF peaks at 9 °C in the Taiwan Strait. The CCF’s strength decreases westward to 6 °C off eastern Guangdong, 5 °C off western Guangdong, and 2 °C off Hainan Island, all in mid-winter. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Remote Sensing)
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23 pages, 24947 KiB  
Article
Quality Assessment and Application Scenario Analysis of AGRI Land Aerosol Product from the Geostationary Satellite Fengyun-4B in China
by Nan Wang, Bingqian Li, Zhili Jin and Wei Wang
Sensors 2024, 24(16), 5309; https://doi.org/10.3390/s24165309 - 16 Aug 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1172
Abstract
The Advanced Geostationary Radiation Imager (AGRI) sensor on board the geostationary satellite Fengyun-4B (FY-4B) is capable of capturing particles in different phases in the atmospheric environment and acquiring aerosol observation data with high spatial and temporal resolution. To understand the quality of the [...] Read more.
The Advanced Geostationary Radiation Imager (AGRI) sensor on board the geostationary satellite Fengyun-4B (FY-4B) is capable of capturing particles in different phases in the atmospheric environment and acquiring aerosol observation data with high spatial and temporal resolution. To understand the quality of the Land Aerosol (LDA) product of AGRI and its application prospects, we conducted a comprehensive evaluation of the AGRI LDA AOD. Using the 550 nm AGRI LDA AOD (550 nm) of nearly 1 year (1 October 2022 to 30 September 2023) to compare with the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET), MODIS MAIAC, and Himawari-9/AHI AODs. Results show the erratic algorithmic performance of AGRI LDA AOD, the correlation coefficient (R), mean error (Bias), root mean square error (RMSE), and the percentage of data with errors falling within the expected error envelope of ±(0.05+0.15×AODAERONET) (within EE15) of the LDA AOD dataset are 0.55, 0.328, 0.533, and 34%, respectively. The LDA AOD appears to be overestimated easily in the southern and western regions of China and performs poorly in the offshore areas, with an R of 0.43, a Bias of 0.334, a larger RMSE of 0.597, and a global climate observing system fraction (GCOSF) percentage of 15% compared to the inland areas (R = 0.60, Bias = 0.163, RMSE = 0.509, GCOSF = 17%). Future improvements should focus on surface reflectance calculation, water vapor attenuation, and more suitable aerosol model selection to improve the algorithm’s accuracy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Trends in Air Quality Sensing)
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18 pages, 5958 KiB  
Article
Oceanic Precipitation Nowcasting Using a UNet-Based Residual and Attention Network and Real-Time Himawari-8 Images
by Xianpu Ji, Xiaojiang Song, Anboyu Guo, Kai Liu, Haijin Cao and Tao Feng
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(16), 2871; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16162871 - 6 Aug 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2591
Abstract
Qualitative precipitation forecasting plays a vital role in marine operational services. However, predicting heavy precipitation over the open ocean presents a significant challenge due to the limited availability of ground-based radar observations far from coastal regions. Recent advancements in deep learning models offer [...] Read more.
Qualitative precipitation forecasting plays a vital role in marine operational services. However, predicting heavy precipitation over the open ocean presents a significant challenge due to the limited availability of ground-based radar observations far from coastal regions. Recent advancements in deep learning models offer potential for oceanic precipitation nowcasting using satellite images. This study implemented an enhanced UNet model with an attention mechanism and a residual architecture (RA-UNet) to predict the precipitation rate within a 90 min time frame. A comparative analysis with the standard UNet and UNet with an attention algorithm revealed that the RA-UNet method exhibited superior accuracy metrics, such as the critical ratio index and probability of detection, with fewer false alarms. Two typical cases demonstrated that RA-UNet had a better ability to forecast monsoon precipitation as well as intense precipitation in a tropical cyclone. These findings indicate the greater potential of the RA-UNet approach for nowcasting heavy precipitation over the ocean using satellite imagery. Full article
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25 pages, 15972 KiB  
Article
CACM-Net: Daytime Cloud Mask for AGRI Onboard the FY-4A Satellite
by Jingyuan Yang, Zhongfeng Qiu, Dongzhi Zhao, Biao Song, Jiayu Liu, Yu Wang, Kuo Liao and Kailin Li
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(14), 2660; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16142660 - 20 Jul 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1182
Abstract
Accurate cloud detection is a crucial initial stage in optical satellite remote sensing. In this study, a daytime cloud mask model is proposed for the Advanced Geostationary Radiation Imager (AGRI) onboard the Fengyun 4A (FY-4A) satellite based on a deep learning approach. The [...] Read more.
Accurate cloud detection is a crucial initial stage in optical satellite remote sensing. In this study, a daytime cloud mask model is proposed for the Advanced Geostationary Radiation Imager (AGRI) onboard the Fengyun 4A (FY-4A) satellite based on a deep learning approach. The model, named “Convolutional and Attention-based Cloud Mask Net (CACM-Net)”, was trained using the 2021 dataset with CALIPSO data as the truth value. Two CACM-Net models were trained based on a satellite zenith angle (SZA) < 70° and >70°, respectively. The study evaluated the National Satellite Meteorological Center (NSMC) cloud mask product and compared it with the method established in this paper. The results indicate that CACM-Net outperforms the NSMC cloud mask product overall. Specifically, in the SZA < 70° subset, CACM-Net enhances accuracy, precision, and F1 score by 4.8%, 7.3%, and 3.6%, respectively, while reducing the false alarm rate (FAR) by approximately 7.3%. In the SZA > 70° section, improvements of 12.2%, 19.5%, and 8% in accuracy, precision, and F1 score, respectively, were observed, with a 19.5% reduction in FAR compared to NSMC. An independent validation dataset for January–June 2023 further validates the performance of CACM-Net. The results show improvements of 3.5%, 2.2%, and 2.8% in accuracy, precision, and F1 scores for SZA < 70° and 7.8%, 11.3%, and 4.8% for SZA > 70°, respectively, along with reductions in FAR. Cross-comparison with other satellite cloud mask products reveals high levels of agreement, with 88.6% and 86.3% matching results with the MODIS and Himawari-9 products, respectively. These results confirm the reliability of the CACM-Net cloud mask model, which can produce stable and high-quality FY-4A AGRI cloud mask results. Full article
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21 pages, 9076 KiB  
Article
Satellite Remote Sensing False Forest Fire Hotspot Excavating Based on Time-Series Features
by Haifeng Wang, Gui Zhang, Zhigao Yang, Haizhou Xu, Feng Liu and Shaofeng Xie
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(13), 2488; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16132488 - 7 Jul 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2069
Abstract
Satellite remote sensing has become an important means of forest fire monitoring because it has the advantages of wide coverage, few ground constraints and high dynamics. When utilizing satellites for forest fire hotspot monitoring, two types of ground hotspots, agricultural and other fire [...] Read more.
Satellite remote sensing has become an important means of forest fire monitoring because it has the advantages of wide coverage, few ground constraints and high dynamics. When utilizing satellites for forest fire hotspot monitoring, two types of ground hotspots, agricultural and other fire hotspots can be ruled out through ground object features. False forest fire hotspots within forested areas must be excluded for a more accurate distinction between forest fires and non-forest fires. This study utilizes spatio-temporal data along with time-series classification to excavate false forest fire hotspots exhibiting temporal characteristics within forested areas and construct a dataset of such false forest fire hotspots, thereby achieving a more realistic forest fire dataset. Taking Hunan Province as the research object, this study takes the satellite ground hotspots in the forests of Hunan Province as the suspected forest fire hotspot dataset and excludes the satellite ground hotspots in the forests such as fixed heat sources, periodic heat sources and recurring heat sources which are excavated. The validity of these methods and results was then analyzed. False forest fire hotspots, from satellite ground hotspots extracted from 2019 to 2023 Himawari-8/9 satellite images, closely resemble the official release of actual forest fires data and the accuracy rate in the actual forest fire monitoring is 95.12%. This validates that the method employed in this study can improve the accuracy of satellite-based forest fire monitoring. Full article
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16 pages, 15964 KiB  
Article
Quantifying the Impact of Aerosols on Geostationary Satellite Infrared Radiance Simulations: A Study with Himawari-8 AHI
by Haofei Sun, Deying Wang, Wei Han and Yunfan Yang
Remote Sens. 2024, 16(12), 2226; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16122226 - 19 Jun 2024
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1429
Abstract
Aerosols exert a significant influence on the brightness temperature observed in the thermal infrared (IR) channels, yet the specific contributions of various aerosol types remain underexplored. This study integrated the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) atmospheric composition reanalysis data into the Radiative Transfer [...] Read more.
Aerosols exert a significant influence on the brightness temperature observed in the thermal infrared (IR) channels, yet the specific contributions of various aerosol types remain underexplored. This study integrated the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) atmospheric composition reanalysis data into the Radiative Transfer for TOVS (RTTOV) model to quantify the aerosol effects on brightness temperature (BT) simulations for the Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) aboard the Himawari-8 geostationary satellite. Two distinct experiments were conducted: the aerosol-aware experiment (AER), which accounted for aerosol radiative effects, and the control experiment (CTL), in which aerosol radiative effects were omitted. The CTL experiment results reveal uniform negative bias (observation minus background (O-B)) across all six IR channels of the AHI, with a maximum deviation of approximately −1 K. Conversely, the AER experiment showed a pronounced reduction in innovation, which was especially notable in the 10.4 μm channel, where the bias decreased by 0.7 K. The study evaluated the radiative effects of eleven aerosol species, all of which demonstrated cooling effects in the AHI’s six IR channels, with dust aerosols contributing the most significantly (approximately 86%). In scenarios dominated by dust, incorporating the radiative effect of dust aerosols could correct the brightness temperature bias by up to 2 K, underscoring the substantial enhancement in the BT simulation for the 10.4 μm channel during dust events. Jacobians were calculated to further examine the RTTOV simulations’ sensitivity to aerosol presence. A clear temporal and spatial correlation between the dust concentration and BT simulation bias corroborated the critical role of the infrared channel data assimilation on geostationary satellites in capturing small-scale, rapidly developing pollution processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Remote Sensing for High Impact Weather and Extremes)
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