Authors:
Dr. Steven Dewitte | ROB | Belgium
Luca Schifano | Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium (RMIB)
Dr. Mustafah Meftah | Université Paris-Saclay, UVSQ, CNRS, LATMOS/IPSL, 78280, Guyancourt, France
Dr. Lien Smeesters | Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
Dr. Thorsten Mauritsen | Stockholm University
Thomas Hocking | Stockholm University
Dr. Linda Megner | Stockholm University
Dr. Özgur Karatekin | Royal Observatory of Belgium
Monitoring the Earth Radiation Budget (ERB) and in particular the Earth Energy Imbalance (EEI), is of paramount importance for a predictive understanding of global climate change [Hansen et al, 2011], [Von Schuckmann et al, 2016], [Dewitte & Clerbaux, 2018], [Dewitte et al, 2019], [Dewitte, 2020]. Currently the ERB is monitored by the NASA CERES program [Wielicki et al, 1996], [Loeb et al, 2018] from the complementary morning and afternoon sun synchronuous orbits. The only CERES instrument in the morning orbit flies on the Terra satellite since 2000, and has no foreseen US follow-on mission. We propose the European follow-on mission Advanced Solar-TERrestrial Imbalance eXplorer (ASTERIX), based on proven technology, that allows progress in accuracy and stability, and that can be accomodated in a 6U cubesat.
The Earth Energy Imbalance (EEI) is defined as the small difference between the two nearly equal terms of the incoming solar radiation, and the outgoing terrestrial radiation lost to space. Making a significant measurement of the EEI from space is very challenging, and requires a differential measurement with one single instrument of both the incoming solar radiation and the outgoing terrestrial radiation. The instrument that allows such a differential measurement is an improved wide field of view electrical substitution cavity radiometer [Schifano et al, 2020a]. The estimated accuracy in a stand-alone earth observation mode is 0.44 W/m2. A demonstration of the differential sun-earth measurement can be made with the flat sensors of the UVQSsat [Meftah et al, 2020], currently in space.
The wide field of view radiometer will observe the earth from limb to limb. A single measurement footprint is a circle with a diameter around 6300 km. For the discrimination of cloudy and clear skies, a higher spatial resolution is needed. This will be obtained from two wide field of view cameras, a visible wide field of view camera for the characterisation of the spatial distribution of the reflected solar radiation [Schifano et al, 2020b], and a thermal infrared wide field of view camera for the characterisation of the spatial distribution of the emitted thermal radiation [Schifano et al, 2021].
The visible wide field of view camera is based on a flight proven Commercial Of The Shelf (COTS) RGB CMOS camera, completed with a custom designed or COTS wide field of view lens. For our current conceptual design [Schifano et al, 2020b], the estimated resolution is 2.2 km at nadir, and the estimated stand-alone accuracy is 3 %. We have assembled and characterised a COTS prototype of the wide field of view thermal camera.
The thermal wide field of view camera is based on a flight proven Commercial Of The Shelf (COTS) microbolometer array, completed with a custom designed or COTS wide field of view lens. For our current conceptual design [Schifano et al, 2021], the estimated resolution is 4.4 km at nadir, and the estimated stand-alone accuracy is 5 %. We are currently testing a prototype of the TIRI thermal camera [Okada et al, 2021] for the HERA asteroid mission.
We are currently studying the sampling of the ERB from different satellite orbits [Hocking et al, 2021], as a first step towards the end to end simulation of the ASTERIX mission.
References
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[Dewitte & Clerbaux, 2018] Dewitte, S., Clerbaux, N. (2018). Decadal Changes of Earth’s Outgoing Longwave Radiation.
[Dewitte et al, 2019] Dewitte, S., Clerbaux, N., Cornelis, J. (2019). Decadal changes of the reflected solar radiation and the earth energy imbalance.
[Dewitte, 2020] Dewitte, S. (2020). Editorial for Special Issue “Earth Radiation Budget”.
[Wielicki et al, 1996] Wielicki, B. A., Barkstrom, B. R., Harrison, E. F., Lee III, R. B., Smith, G. L., & Cooper, J. E. (1996). Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES): An earth observing system experiment. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 77(5), 853-868.
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[Schifano et al, 2020a] Schifano, L., Smeesters, L., Geernaert, T., Berghmans, F., Dewitte, S. (2020). Design and analysis of a next-generation wide field-of-view earth radiation budget radiometer. Remote Sensing, 12(3), 425.
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[Schifano et al, 2020b] Schifano, L., Smeesters, L., Berghmans, F., Dewitte, S. (2020). Optical system design of a wide field-of-view camera for the characterization of earth’s reflected solar radiation. Remote Sensing, 12(16), 2556.
[Schifano et al, 2021] Schifano, L., Smeesters, L., Berghmans, F., Dewitte, S. (2021). Wide-field-of-view longwave camera for the characterization of the earth’s outgoing longwave radiation. Sensors, 21(13), 4444.
[Okada et al, 2021] Okada, T., Tanaka, S., Sakatani, N., Shimaki, Y., Arai, T., Senshu, H., ... & Karatekin, Ö. (2021). Thermal infrared imaging experiment of S-type binary asteroids in the Hera mission (No. EPSC2021-317). Copernicus Meetings.
[Hocking et al, 2021] Hocking, T., Dewitte, S., Mauritsen, T., Megner, L., Schifano, L. (2021, September). How can the Earth energy imbalance be measured over the coming decades?. In CFMIP 2021 Virtual Meeting.