Litcius/Paper detail

Development of a Random-Forest Cloud-Regime Classification Model Based on Surface Radiation and Cloud Products

Joseph Sedlar, Laura Riihimaki, Kathleen Lantz, David D. Turner

2021Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Various methods have been developed to characterize cloud type, otherwise referred to as cloud regime. These include manual sky observations, combining radiative and cloud vertical properties observed from satellite, surface-based remote sensing, and digital processing of sky imagers. While each method has inherent advantages and disadvantages, none of these cloud-typing methods actually includes measurements of surface shortwave or longwave radiative fluxes. Here, a method that relies upon detailed, surface-based radiation and cloud measurements and derived data products to train a random-forest machine-learning cloud classification model is introduced. Measurements from five years of data from the ARM Southern Great Plains site were compiled to train and independently evaluate the model classification performance. A cloud-type accuracy of approximately 80% using the random-forest classifier reveals that the model is well suited to predict climatological cloud properties. Furthermore, an analysis of the cloud-type misclassifications is performed. While physical cloud types may be misreported, the shortwave radiative signatures are similar between misclassified cloud types. From this, we assert that the cloud-regime model has the capacity to successfully differentiate clouds with comparable cloud–radiative interactions. Therefore, we conclude that the model can provide useful cloud-property information for fundamental cloud studies, inform renewable energy studies, and be a tool for numerical model evaluation and parameterization improvement, among many other applications.

Topics & Concepts

Cloud computingShortwaveRadiative transferEnvironmental scienceRemote sensingCloud topCloud coverMeteorologyRandom forestLongwaveComputer scienceCloud heightMachine learningGeologyGeographyPhysicsOperating systemQuantum mechanicsAtmospheric aerosols and cloudsSolar Radiation and PhotovoltaicsFire effects on ecosystems