Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

This site is currently in beta, and your feedback is helping shape its ongoing development.

SPLASH Field Study; NOAA PSL thermodynamic profiles retrieved from ASSIST infrared radiances with the optimal estimation physical retrieval TROPoe (NCEI Accession 0303808)

Published by NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Department of Commerce | Metadata Last Checked: January 29, 2026 | Last Modified: 2025-04-29T00:00:00.000+00:00
This dataset contains daily files with thermodynamic profiles retrieved with the optimal estimation physical retrieval TROPoe (TROPoe, Turner and Löhnert 2014; Turner and Blumberg 2019; Turner and Löhnert 2021). The profiles are retrieved every 10 min from instantaneous radiances observed with an Atmospheric Sounder Spectrometer by Infrared Spectral Technology (ASSIST, Rochette et al. 2009). The ASSIST was deployed at Roaring Judy in the East River Watershed in Colorado (38.7169321 N, 106.853031 W, 2494 m above mean sea level) from 21 October 2021 to 28 January 2022 as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere, and Surface for Hydrometeorology (SPLASH) campaign. The spectral bands used in the retrieval are in the wavenumber range from 612 - 905.4 cm-1 and are specified in Turner and Löhnert (2021). Additional input data in TROPoe are cloud base height from a collocated ceilometer, temperature, water vapor mixing ratio, and pressure from colocated near-surface measurements and from hourly analysis profiles from the operational Rapid Refresh (RAP, Benjamin et al. 2021) weather prediction model at the closest grid point. The latter are used only outside the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) above 4 km above ground level (AGL) and provide information in the middle and upper troposphere where little to no information content is available from the infrared radiances. In addition to these temporally resolved input data, TROPoe requires an a priori dataset (prior) which provides mean climatological estimates of thermodynamic profiles and specifies how temperature and humidity covary with height as an input (for details see e.g. Djalalova et al. 2022). The prior is a key component of the retrieval and provides a constraint on the ill-posed inversion problem. For this study, we computed the prior from operational radiosondes launched near Denver, CO, and re-centered the mean profiles of water vapor and temperature to account for the elevation difference between the East River Valley and the launch site near Denver to get a more representative prior. The file format is netcdf and the file naming conventions are NOAA_PSL_ASSIST_RoaringJudy_yyyymmdd.cdf with yyyy: Year mm: Month dd: Day The time stamp of all data is in UTC. Note that the vertical resolution of the retrieved profiles decreases with height, because of the broadening of the weighting function as a function of height. Thus, there are relatively few independent pieces of information in the profiles, this is reflected in the cumulative degree of freedom variables. The majority of the information from the ASSIST is in the lowest 2-3 km, above that most information comes from the RAP model. Because of strong emission in the infrared from clouds, clouds strongly impact the ability to retrieve profiles from the ASSIST and care should be taken when analyzing the retrievals in the presence of clouds.

Find Related Datasets

Click any tag below to search for similar datasets

0303808 AIR TEMPERATURE BAROMETRIC PRESSURE Carbon Dioxide - Air cloud height Cloud Optical Depth dew point Divergence Methane (CH4) Mixing Ratio nitrous oxide (N2O) RELATIVE HUMIDITY in situ NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory University of Colorado Boulder, Cooperative Institute for Research In Environmental Sciences meteorology DOC/NOAA/OAR/ESRL/PSL > Physical Sciences Laboratory, Earth System Research Laboratory, OAR, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce UCO/CIRES > Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado SPLASH - Study of Precipitation, the Lower Atmosphere, and Surface for Hydrometeorology EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY > CARBON AND HYDROCARBON COMPOUNDS > ATMOSPHERIC CARBON DIOXIDE EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC TEMPERATURE EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC TEMPERATURE > SURFACE TEMPERATURE > DEW POINT TEMPERATURE EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC WATER VAPOR > WATER VAPOR INDICATORS > HUMIDITY > HUMIDITY MIXING RATIO EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC WATER VAPOR > WATER VAPOR INDICATORS > HUMIDITY > RELATIVE HUMIDITY EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC WINDS > WIND DYNAMICS > DIVERGENCE EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > CLOUDS > CLOUD MICROPHYSICS > CLOUD OPTICAL DEPTH/THICKNESS EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > CLOUDS > CLOUD PROPERTIES > CLOUD HEIGHT EARTH SCIENCE > OCEANS > OCEAN CHEMISTRY base_time cdfs_temperature cdfs_waterVapor dewpt height hour pressure rh sigma_temperature sigma_waterVapor theta thetae time_offset waterVapor Atmospheric Sounder Spectrometer by Infrared Spectral Technology (ASSIST) CONTINENT > NORTH AMERICA > UNITED STATES OF AMERICA > COLORADO L1E07P

data.gov

An official website of the GSA's Technology Transformation Services

Looking for U.S. government information and services?
Visit USA.gov