The Reference Forward Model (RFM)
2017
Abstract The Reference Forward Model (RFM) is a general purpose line-by-line radiative transfer model, currently supported by the UK National Centre for Earth Observation. This paper outlines the algorithms used by the RFM, focusing on standard calculations of terrestrial atmospheric infrared spectra followed by a brief summary of some additional capabilities and extensions to microwave wavelengths and extraterrestrial atmospheres. At its most basic level — the ‘line-by-line’ component — it calculates molecular absorption cross-sections by applying the Voigt lineshape to all transitions up to ±25 cm −1 from line-centre. Alternatively, absorptions can be directly interpolated from various forms of tabulated data. These cross-sections are then used to construct infrared radiance or transmittance spectra for ray paths through homogeneous cells, plane-parallel or circular atmospheres. At a higher level, the RFM can apply instrumental convolutions to simulate measurements from Fourier transform spectrometers. It can also calculate Jacobian spectra and so act as a stand-alone forward model within a retrieval scheme. The RFM is designed for robustness, flexibility and ease-of-use (particularly by the non-expert), and no claims are made for superior accuracy, or indeed novelty, compared to other line-by-line codes. Its main limitations at present are a lack of scattering and simplified modelling of surface reflectance and line-mixing.
Keywords:
- Physics
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
- Transmittance
- Mathematical optimization
- Infrared spectroscopy
- Radiance
- Scattering
- Atmospheric radiative transfer codes
- Convolution
- Spectral line
- Fourier transform
- Optics
- Earth observation
- Atomic physics
- Computational physics
- Interpolation
- Robustness (computer science)
- Jacobian matrix and determinant
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
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