Paper
23 December 1994 Alpine cloud climatology: seasonal changes
Martina Kaestner, Karl Theodor Kriebel
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Clouds play an important role in the hydrological cycle and they are a climatic component. It is therefore necessary to known the distribution of clouds. A high-spatial resolution climatology of monthly mean cloud cover has been produced from the daily afternoon passages of the NOAA satellites since September 1991. The APOLLO (AVHRR Processing scheme Over cLouds, Land and Ocean) algorithm has been applied to AVHRR data to obtain a pixel by pixel cloud mask for an area of 560 X 560 km2 over the Alps and their forelands. Cloud cover is calculated for subareas of 14 X 15 km2 for the following classifications: all clouds, thick clouds, thin clouds, thick clouds with low, medium or high tops. This regional cloud climatology reveals topometeorological features like an increased cloud cover in the luff regions at the edges of the Alps. A strong horizontal inhomogeneity on a regional scale is typical in summertime. The seasonal changes of cloud cover are greater in the south than in the north of the Alps due to different climate types. Although the APOLLO algorithm still needs improvement it has proved to be a powerful tool for cloud detection and classification.
© (1994) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Martina Kaestner and Karl Theodor Kriebel "Alpine cloud climatology: seasonal changes", Proc. SPIE 2309, Passive Infrared Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere II, (23 December 1994); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.196661
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KEYWORDS
Clouds

Climatology

Satellites

Climate change

Aluminium phosphide

Calibration

Environmental sensing

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