Friday, 2 January 2026

Hubble Glimpses Galactic Gas Making a Getaway

A nearly edge-on spiral galaxy. Its disk holds pink light from star-forming nebulae and blue light from clusters of hot stars. Thick dark clouds of dust block the strong white light from galaxy’s center. A faint, glowing halo of gas surrounds the disk, fading into the black background of space. A bluish plume of gas also extends from the galaxy’s core extending toward the lower-right corner of the image.
This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features the galaxy NGC 4388, a member of the Virgo galaxy cluster.
ESA/Hubble & NASA, S. Veilleux, J. Wang, J. Greene

A sideways spiral galaxy shines in this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image. Located about 60 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo (the Maiden), NGC 4388 is a resident of the Virgo galaxy cluster. This enormous cluster of galaxies contains more than a thousand members and is the nearest large galaxy cluster to the Milky Way.

NGC 4388 appears to tilt at an extreme angle relative to our point of view, giving us a nearly edge-on prospect of the galaxy. This perspective reveals a curious feature that wasn’t visible in a previous Hubble image of this galaxy released in 2016: a plume of gas from the galaxy’s nucleus, here seen billowing out from the galaxy’s disk toward the lower-right corner of the image. But where did this outflow come from, and why does it glow?

The answer likely lies in the vast stretches of space that separate the galaxies of the Virgo cluster. Though the space between galaxies appears empty, this space is occupied by hot wisps of gas called the intracluster medium. As NGC 4388 moves within the Virgo cluster, it plunges through the intracluster medium. Pressure from hot intracluster gas whisks away gas from within NGC 4388’s disk, causing it to trail behind as NGC 4388 moves.

The source of the ionizing energy that causes this gas cloud to glow is more uncertain. Researchers suspect that some of the energy comes from the center of the galaxy, where a supermassive black hole spins gas around it into a superheated disk. The blazing radiation from this disk might ionize the gas closest to the galaxy, while shock waves might be responsible for ionizing filaments of gas farther out.

This image incorporates new data, including several additional wavelengths of light, that bring the ionized gas cloud into view. The image holds data from several observing programs that aim to illuminate galaxies with active black holes at their centers.

Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, S. Veilleux, J. Wang, J. Greene



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Wednesday, 31 December 2025

2025 AAS Hyperwall Schedule

2 min read

2025 AAS Hyperwall Schedule

247th American Astronomical Society (AAS) Meeting

Join NASA in the Exhibit Hall (Booth #401 for Hyperwall Storytelling by NASA experts. Full Hyperwall Agenda below.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 4

6:45 – 7:00 PM Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope Dominic Benford
7:00 – 7:15 PM Storytelling with NASA: Eyes on Exoplanets Anjali Tripathi
7:15 – 7:30 PM Roman Space Telescope Update Julie McEnery
7:30 – 7:45 PM The Search for Life in the Universe with Habitable Worlds Observatory Giada Arney
7:45 – 8:00 PM The James Webb Space Telescope Engineering History Lee Feinberg

MONDAY, JANUARY 5

9:00 – 9:15AM Galaxies Across Cosmic Time with JWST and Roman Aaron Yung
9:15 – 9:30AM The Hubble Space Telescope: Next Era of Discovery Jennifer Wiseman
9:30 – 9:45AM Cosmic Pathfinders Ron Gamble
9:45- 10:00AM Preliminary Findings from the NASA Technosignatures Database Nick Siegler
5:30 – 5:45PM Habitable Worlds Observatory
From Gas to Galaxies to Life in the Universe
Kevin France
5:45 – 6:00PM Space Servicing: From Hubble to Habitable Worlds John Grunsfeld
6:00 – 6:15PM Supernova Cosmology with Roman Rebekah Hounsell
6:15- 6:30PM What Even is Bayesian Analysis, and Why Do I Care? Natasha Latouf

TUESDAY, JANUARY 6

9:00 – 9:15AM Revealing the Faintest Galaxies in the Nearby Universe with Roman Aaron Yung
9:15 – 9:30AM Open Science Training for Researchers Jennifer Wiseman
9:30 – 9:45AM Universe in 24 hours Ron Gamble
9:45- 10:00AM Beyond ADS: SciX as the Next-Generation Platform for Earth and Space Science Research Nick Siegler
5:30 – 5:45PM From Ground Tests to Science with the Wide Field Instrument Kevin France
5:45 – 6:00PM Habitable Worlds Observatory and the Search for Life John Grunsfeld
6:00 – 6:15PM Laser Interferometry Space Antenna : Measuring Low Frequency Gravitational Waves from the Universe Rebekah Hounsell
6:15- 6:30PM Our Cosmic Roots, Kinship, and Destiny with the Habitable Worlds Observatory Natasha Latouf

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7

9:00 – 9:15AM What Can Roman Do for You? Explore Its Four Community-Defined Surveys Karoline Gilbert
9:15 – 9:30AM Galaxies Benne Holwerda
9:30 – 9:45AM The NASA Exoplanet Science Institute: Making Exoplanet Science Easier Catherine Clark
5:30 – 5:45PM Science from the Roman Space Telescope Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey Robby Wilson
5:45 – 6:00PM The Pandora SmallSat: Exploring Exoplanet Atmospheres Thomas Barclay
6:00 – 6:15PM How Did the Universe Become Habitable? Get Involved with NASA’s Cosmic Origins Group Sabrina Stierwalt

THURSDAY, JANUARY 8

9:00 – 9:15AM Science with Petabyte-Scale Data: Cloud Platforms Thomas Dutkiewicz
9:15 – 9:30AM The Future of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite Nicole Schanche
9:30 – 9:45AM Is There an Atmosphere on the Habitable-Zone Planet TRAPPIST-1 e? Nestor Espinoza


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Curiosity Sends Holiday Postcard from Mars

The Curiosity rover is visible at the bottom right of this panorama image. The rover is at the top of a ridge referred to as a boxwork formation. The sky ahead of it is hazy; it's red on the left and blue on the right.
NASA/JPL-Caltech

Team members working with NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover created this “postcard” by commanding the rover to take images at two times of day on Nov. 18, 2025, spanning periods that occurred on both the 4,722nd and 4,723rd Martian days, or sols, of the mission.

The panoramas were captured at 4:15 p.m. on Sol 4,722 and 8:20 a.m. on Sol 4,723 (both at local Mars time), then merged together. Color was later added for an artistic interpretation of the scene with blue representing the morning panorama and yellow representing the afternoon one. The resulting “postcard” is similar to ones the rover took in June 2023 and November 2021. Adding color to these kinds of merged images helps different details stand out in the landscape.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech



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Tuesday, 30 December 2025

The Final Earth Observer Editor’s Corner: October–December 2025

Editor's Corner header

14 min read

The Final Earth Observer Editor’s Corner: October–December 2025

It is with a heavy heart that I announce that NASA Earth Science Communications has directed The Earth Observer to conduct an orderly shutdown of the publication. No new content will be published after Dec. 31, 2025.

While the sunset of The Earth Observer is bittersweet for our team, the good news is that all of the rich historical and descriptive content preserved on The Earth Observer’s archives page will remain accessible to the world. If you’ve never checked this page out, I highly encourage you to do so. You’ll find all of our archived issues saved in a PDF format, and – if you scroll down the page – you’ll find an annotated bibliography with links to numerous entries about a variety of topics to provide the historic context of the progress and accomplishments of the Earth Observing System (EOS).

Alan Ward, Executive Editor, The Earth Observer

Black Separator Line

More than 36 years ago, in March 1989, the first issue of The Earth Observer newsletter was released – see Figure 1. The three-page document contained one article that explained the rationale for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) forgoing earlier plans to place instruments on NASA’s first EOS polar platform – at that time envisioned as one of several large platforms operated by NASA, NOAA, Europe, and Japan, with numerous instruments on each platform. Along with this article, that first issue featured an EOS launch schedule, a list of publications and acronyms, and a personals section. Yes; personals. It’s hard to believe that a NASA newsletter would feature personals, but remember that this first issue was published at a time before the internet was widely available. The newsletter served as a bridge to quickly connect hundreds of newly chosen EOS investigators scattered worldwide with the latest EOS program developments. The content of early issues included the latest reports from Investigators Working Group meetings, payload panel reviews, and instrument science team meetings. In short, before the Web, The Earth Observer was the thread that kept the various EOS teams connected.

The history of The Earth Observer is intimately intertwined with the development of EOS; it is difficult to speak of one entity without discussing the other. Over the years, as EOS grew from an idea into actual spacecraft and instruments launching and flying in space, the newsletter began chronicling their journey. Early issues of The Earth Observer describe – often in meticulous detail – the meetings and deliberations during which the EOS concept evolved through various revisions and restructuring before the first EOS mission took flight. In the end, NASA launched three mid-sized “flagship” missions (about the size of a small bus) that became known as Terra (1999), Aqua (2002), and Aura (2004) and complemented their measurement capabilities with numerous other small-to-mid-sized missions. The result is the Earth-observing fleet in orbit above us today. Many of these missions fly in polar, low Earth, or geosynchronous orbit, while several others observe the Earth from the perspective of the International Space Station (ISS) – see Figure 2.   

EOS missions are known for their longevity; many missions (and their follow-ons) have long outlived their anticipated life cycle. Each of these missions beam back reams of raw data that must be processed and stored so that it can be accessed and used as input to computer models and scientific studies to understand past environmental conditions, place our current situation in the proper context, and make predictions about the future path our planet could follow.

Figure 2. The current NASA Earth-observing fleet consists of more than 20 missions, including the three EOS flagships – Terra, Aqua, and Aura – and a host of other smaller and mid-sized missions. Note that several missions fly on the International Space Station. There is even one observing Earth from the Earth–Sun Lagrange Point “L1” – nearly 1 million miles (980,000 km) away.
Credit: NASA SVS

During its 36-year run, The Earth Observer has borne witness to the successes, failures, frustrations, and advancements of EOS, and of the broader Earth Science endeavors of NASA and its domestic and international partners. Given that publication of this final content marks the end of an era, the newsletter team felt it appropriate to offer some perspective on the newsletter’s contribution. The feature that resulted focuses on the relationship between The Earth Observer and EOS – with specific emphasis on our reporting on satellite missions. See the online article, The Earth Observer: Offering Perspectives from Space Through Time, to learn more.

One of the final items published focuses on Terra, the first EOS flagship, which launched into the night sky on Dec. 18, 1999 from Vandenberg Space Force (then Air Force) Base (VSFB) in California on what was designed as a six-year mission of discovery. Terra’s payload included five instruments – Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER), Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES), Measurement of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT), Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR), and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) – intended to collect data that would fill in gaps in our knowledge of the Earth System (as it stood on the cusp of the 21st century, when Terra launched) and in particular, about how land interacts with the atmosphere on a regional and continental scale. The mission also focused on measuring key planetary characteristics needed to understand Earth’s changing environment (e.g., albedo, roughness, evaporation rate, and photosynthesis). The goal was to provide a holistic approach to address larger scientific questions. For more than 26 years, Terra has trained her five instruments toward Earth and gathered data to address wildfires, flooding, hurricanes, and polar ice.

As 2020 drew to a close, in order to conserve enough fuel for the end of the mission, NASA Headquarters decided it was time to for Terra to stop conducting the periodic maneuvers to maintain its 10:30 AM equator crossing. After ceasing maneuvers, the satellite began to drift, which Terra (and the other flagships) have done for the past few years. As Terra’s life draws to a close, it continues to ignite the imagination of the next generation of scientists to catapult the study of our planet for generations to come. Refer to the article, Terra: The End of An Era, to learn more about the feat of engineering that has kept the satellite gathering data two decades past the end of its “Prime Mission” and the key scientific achievements that have resulted.

Since 1997, six CERES instruments have been launched on the EOS and the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) platforms, including the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM),  Terra [2], Aqua [2], the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Platform (Suomi NPP), and the Joint Polar Satellite System–1 (JPSS-1, now named NOAA–20) mission and used to study Earth’s radiation budget (ERB) – the amount of sunlight absorbed by Earth and the amount of infrared energy emitted back to space – that has a strong influence on climate. Researchers pair measurements from CERES instruments with information gathered from other sources to clarify ERB. While the latency of CERES data prevents it from being used for weather forecasting directly, the information on ERB can be used to verify the radiation parameterization of computer models used to make weather forecasts and make predictions about future climate conditions. The ERB data can also be applied to other science research and applications that benefit society. As an example, researchers have used this data to accurately detail changes in the movement of energy from Earth – especially the role that clouds and aerosols play in Earth’s energy budget. The CERES Science Team has a long history of recording proceedings of their meetings in The Earth Observer. It is thus appropriate that a CERES STM summary should be among the last items published this newsletter. Read more about the current status of CERES in space in the article, The State of CERES: Updates and Highlights.

NOAA and NASA have partnered in many endeavors together. The Earth Observer has reported on these collaborations over the years. One well known example is the two agency’s partnership to develop and launch the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES). This mission has become the backbone of short-term forecasts and warnings of severe weather and environmental hazards. The first satellite, GOES-1, launched in 1975; the most recent, GOES-19, launched in 2024. The technology onboard has improved exponentially over the past five decades. The article, Sentinels in the Sky: 50 Years of GOES Satellite Observations, describes this progression of GOES satellites, highlights some of the data obtained, and provides insights into each of these incremental advancements over the past 50 years in this satellite series. 

Turning now to a more recent launch, the Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) satellite continues to operate nominally. The data PACE returns allow the scientific community to explore the Earth’s ocean, atmosphere, and land surfaces. In February 2025 (10 days prior to the first anniversary of the mission’s launch), the PACE community gathered at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) for the PAC3 meeting, which was so named because it combined three PACE-related activities: the PACE Postlaunch Airborne eXperiment (PACE–PAX), the third PACE Science and Applications Team (SAT3), and the PACE Validation Science Team (PVST). The PAC3 meeting included updates the key instruments on the satellite: the Ocean Color Instrument (OCI), the Hyper-Angular Rainbow Polarimeter–2 (HARP2), and the Spectropolarimeter for Planetary Exploration (SPEXone).

In addition to reporting on PACE, participants during the meeting gave updates on the latest news about the Earth Cloud Aerosol and Radiation Explorer (EarthCARE) observatory, including preparation for validation activities as part of the joint efforts of the European Space Agency (ESA) and Japan Aerospace eXploration Agency (JAXA). The article also details operational highlights, including validation and aerosol products and cloud products. Several Science and Applications Team (SAT3) groups presented results from studies using PACE data and PACE validation studies. The PACE Science Team will continue to monitor Earth and have identified strategies to continue the long-term data calibration and algorithm refinement to ensure the ongoing delivery of information to the research community. The article, Keeping Up with PACE: Summary of the 2025 PAC3 Meeting, provides a full summary of this event.

On Nov. 16, 2025, the Sentinel-6B mission launched from VSFB. The newest satellite in NASA’s Earth observing fleet measures sea levels with an accuracy of one inch every second, covering 90 percent of the oceans every 10 days. It will also contribute the record of atmospheric temperature and humidity measurements. These data are beneficial in observing movement of surface currents, monitoring the transfer of heat through the oceans and around the planet, and tracking changes in water temperature. Sentinel-6B will carry several instruments on this mission, including a radar altimeter, an advanced microwave radiometer, and a radio occultation antenna. The satellite’s observations will be paired with information from other spacecraft to provide detailed information about Earth’s atmosphere that will contribute high-resolution data for computer models to improve weather forecasting.

Sentinel-6B is another shining example of successful collaboration between NASA and NOAA, along with several European partners – ESA, the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT), Centre National d’Études Spatiales (CNES), and the European Commission. 

Sentinel-6B has publicly released an image showing some of its first observations since launch. The map shows sea levels across a vast stretch of the eastern seaboard and Atlantic Ocean – see Figure 3. The image combines data from Sentinel–6B and its “twin” Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, which launched in 2020. The data were obtained on Nov. 26, 2025 – just ten days after Sentinel-6B launched.  

Sentinel-6B, a satellite developed by NASA and its European partners to survey 90% of the world’s oceans, captured data on Nov. 26, 2025, that was used to create a map of sea levels across a vast stretch of the Atlantic Ocean.
Figure 3. Sentinel-6B (S6B) and Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich (S6MF) captured data on Nov. 26, 2025 of sea levels across a vast stretch of the Atlantic. Within the crisscrossing bands, red indicates higher water relative to the long-term average; blue indicates lower water. The tracks are layered atop the combined observations of all available sea-level satellites in addition to Sentinel-6B. S6MF currently serves as the “reference” mission, allowing data from all other altimeters to be accurately combined into maps like this one.
Credit: EUMETSAT

Together, Sentinel-6B and Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich make up the Copernicus Sentinel-6/Jason- Continuity of Service (CS) mission developed by NASA, ESA, EUMETSAT, and NOAA. Sentinel–6/Jason CS continues a series of ocean surface topography missions that began three decades ago with the NASA/CNES Ocean Topography Experiment (TOPEX)/Poseidon mission. The article, Sentinel-6B Extends Global Ocean Height Record, provides an overview of this latest addition to the NASA and to the international Earth observing fleet.

In the July–September 2025 posting of “The Editor’s Corner,” we reported on the successful launch of the joint NASA–Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) mission on July 30, 2025 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on India’s southeastern coast aboard an ISRO Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) rocket 5. Soon after launch, NISAR entered its Commissioning phase to test out systems before science operations begin. A key milestone of that phase was the completion of the deployment of the 39-ft (12-m) radar antenna reflector on Aug. 15, 2025. A few days later, on Aug. 19, 2025, NISAR obtained its first image and on Nov. 28, 2025, ISRO made the image (and others) publicly available – see Figure 4.

EC figure 4
Figure 4. The first NISAR S-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image, acquired on Aug. 19, 2025, captures the fertile Godavari River Delta in Andhra Pradesh, India. Various vegetation classes (e.g., mangroves, agriculture, arecanut plantations, aquaculture fields) are clearly seen in the image. The image highlights NISAR’s S-band SAR ability to map river deltas and agricultural landscapes with precision.
Credit: ISRO

During the Commissioning phase the S-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) has been regularly obtaining images over India and over global calibration-validation sites in various payload operating configurations. Reference targets such as Corner reflectors were deployed around Ahmedabad, Gujarat, and a few more locations in India for calibration of the images. Data acquired over Amazon rainforests were also used for calibration of spacecraft pointing and images. Based on this, payload data acquisition parameters have been fine-tuned resulting in high-quality images. The initial images have scientists and engineers excited about the potential of using S-band SAR data for various targeted science and application areas like agriculture, forestry, geosciences, hydrology, polar/Himalayan ice/snow, and oceanic studies.

NISAR has not one but two radars onboard. The S-band radar, described above, is India’s contribution to the mission; the L-band radar is NASA’s contribution. The L-band radar has also been active during the first few months of NISAR’s mission acquiring images of targets in the United States. Karen St. Germain [NASA HQ—Director of Earth Science Division] gave the opening presentation on the Hyperwall at NASA’s exhibit during the Fall 2025 meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) in New Orleans, LA on Dec. 15, 2025. Her presentation, which can be viewed on YouTube, has a section on NISAR that begins at approximately 5:33 time stamp on the video and includes several examples of novel applications made possible by NISAR’s L-band SAR imaging capabilities. 

During her AGU presentation, St. Germain also showed recent examples of data from the Surface Water Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission [at timestamp 0:03 on YouTube], highlighting its surface water mapping capabilities, and from PACE [at timestamp 3:34], highlighting its aerosol and biological monitoring capabilities. These missions not only detect aerosol plumes and phytoplankton blooms, but are also able to tell what type they are. She briefly mentioned the Sentinel-6B launch [see timestamp 14:02], teasing her presentation at the Town Hall meeting to be held the next day, where she officially unveiled the Sentinel-6B “first light” image shown as Figure 2 in this editorial.

To conclude, The Earth Observer staff claims a moment of editorial privilege. In a way, we conclude where The Earth Observer began, by sending a “personal message” to all the scientists, engineers, educators, and others – both past and present – who have contributed to EOS and other NASA Earth Science programs that have been covered in this newsletter.

We would like to thank all of the NASA and other leaders, team members, scientists, technicians, students, and staff who have shared your stories over the decades. This publication would not have been the success that it was for so many years without the sustained contributions of the NASA and broader Earth Science community. To all those who volunteered their time to contribute to The Earth Observer over the years, offering your reviews, your subject matter expertise, and your collaboration, we say: “Thank you.” It has been an utmost pleasure to be at the forefront of reporting on the emerging results from your endeavors and bringing this information to the EOS community. We wish you all the best in whatever comes next. While we are saddened to lose the opportunity to continue to share your successes with the Earth Science community via The Earth Observer, we will continue to cheer on your effort and look for future opportunities to publicize your successes however we can.

Barry Lefer
Associate Director of Research, Earth Science Division

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Dec 29, 2025

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The State of CERES: Updates and Highlights

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42 min read

The State of CERES: Updates and Highlights

Introduction

The Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) was initially designed in the late-1980s and early-1990s as a facility instrument for NASA’s Earth Observing System (EOS). Since its inception, NASA’s Langley Research Center (LaRC) has led this effort. CERES has a long history with seven different instruments flying on five different missions since 1997. As of today, six CERES instruments remain in orbit – two are no longer operational: the Proto-Flight Model (PFM) unit flew on the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) and functioned for a brief period, and FM2, which was powered-off in January 2025 due to battery constraints on Terra. The active CERES instruments are found on Terra (FM1), Aqua (FM3 and 4), the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (Suomi NPP) (FM5), and the first Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS-1) mission, now known as NOAA-20 (FM6). Suomi NPP and the JPSS mission are partnerships between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which owns the satellites, and NASA, which operates them.

The CERES Team has maintained a history of its Science Team (ST) Meetings, recorded in The Earth Observer. The first CERES STM to be mentioned in the newsletter was the third meeting [Jan. 1990, 2:1, 7], which was listed on the “EOS Calendar.” The earliest full STM summary captured events from the seventh meeting in Fall 1992, CERES Science Team [Jan.–Feb. 1993, 5:1, 11–16]. Since then, the periodic reports (typically spring and fall) have kept readers up to date on the status of the CERES instruments in orbit and the science results from the data gathered. With such a long history of published meeting summaries, it seems fitting that a report on the state of CERES should be among the last articles published by The Earth Observer.

The most recent CERES contribution to The Earth Observer was the article, Update on the State of CERES and Highlights from Recent Science Team Meetings [Sept.–Oct. 2023, 35:5, 43–53]. Since that time, CERES has held four STMs – bringing the total to 42. Norman Loeb [LaRC—CERES Principal Investigator (PI)] hosted all the meetings.

The four most recent meetings were:

  • The 39th CERES STM (Fall 2023) at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York, Oct. 17–19, 2023.
  • The 40th CERES STM (Spring 2024) at LaRC in Hampton, VA, May 14–16, 2024.
  • The 41st CERES STM (Fall 2024) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, CA, Oct. 1–3, 2024; and
  • The 42nd CERES STM (Spring 2025) at LaRC, May 13–15, 2025.

A Fall 2025 meeting had been scheduled at LaRC from Oct. 28–30, 2025, but was cancelled due to the Federal Government shutdown. Planning is underway for another meeting to be held in Spring 2026.

This article will focus on the Fall 2023 and Spring 2024 meetings – drawing primarily from the State of CERES presentation, programmatic content, and mission and instrument status reports delivered at those meetings. The sections on the State of CERES and Invited Presentations also include content from the Fall 2024 and Spring 2025 meetings. The Contributed Presentations from these latter meetings are not included in this article. For more details the reader is directed to the CERES website where agendas and links to individual presentations can be found for all four meetings.

The content in this article includes updates on the status of the platforms that carry CERES instruments, CERES data products and algorithms, and CERES outreach activities. The remainder of this article will consist of summaries of the invited science presentations given at these meetings, followed by selected science presentations. More information on the topics briefly mentioned in the summary from the meetings is contained in the respective presentations, which are available on the CERES website.

State of CERES

The State of CERES message is a long-standing tradition, opening the CERES STMs. At the beginning of each meeting, Norman Loeb outlined the major objectives of this group, which remained consistent from meeting to meeting. These objectives include host satellite health, instrument calibration updates, algorithm and validation status from the various Working Groups, and progress toward the next CERES reprocessing.

Loeb began the Fall 2023 meeting by reviewing the large increase in global mean surface temperature based on the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis (ERA5) model Version 5 (V5) in 2023. The highest anomaly was reported in September 2023 for the period from 1979 to 2023. The CERES absorbed solar radiation (ASR) – a measure of the difference between incoming solar energy and the energy reflected back into space – exceeded the 90% confidence interval anomaly for March through September 2023 except for May, which does not quite exceed it. The net radiation also exceeded the 90% confidence interval through May of 2023. Starting in June 2023, the Outgoing Longwave Radiation (OLR) exceeded negative 90% confidence interval, indicating a release of energy out of the atmosphere; however, the net radiation dropped below the 90% confidence interval for the remainder of the year. The 2023 value even exceeded the 2016 El Niño event. The extremely large ASR and OLR values continued into early 2024.

The CERES Terra FM2 operated in Rotating Azimuth Plane (RAP) mode until it failed in January 2025. After that, Terra FMI switched to RAP mode during Terra’s drifting period. Aqua FM3 likewise operates in RAP mode as Aqua has drifted. This mode allows for capturing data at a larger range of solar zenith angles. For 48 months, the Suomi NPP FM5 has collected rotating-azimuth data; it returned to Cross-track Mode in October 2023. The team noted a small amount of noise periodically detected on the NOAA-20 FM6 shortwave (SW) channel from November 2023 through February 2024. This noise was only observable during space view when the counts approached zero. Several analyses on Earth-viewing footprints could not identify any impact on the SW radiance.

Loeb highlighted some other efforts that are of interest to the group. The World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) started a lighthouse activity on Explaining and Predicting Earth System Change (EPESC) with a focus on understanding and predicting the Earth Energy Imbalance (EEI). This work exemplifies another effort – CERES Model Intercomparison Project (CERESMIP) experiments – that was championed by GISS. The goal is to provide a larger overlap of model output with CERES observations than the earlier Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP 6), which only observed forcing through 2014 and projected forcing after 2014. Examples of these forcings are Sea Surface Temperature (SST), sea ice concentrations, aerosol and volcanic emissions, and solar irradiance. Climate variability since 2014 is quite pronounced, including EEI, SST trends, Pacific Decadal Oscillation shift, and El Niño events.

During the Fall 2024 meeting, Loeb discussed the impacts of the shifting Terra Mean Local Equatorial Crossing Time. He explained that the SW Top of Atmosphere (ToA) flux difference between NOAA-20 and Terra are smaller in the Northern Hemisphere than the Southern Hemisphere due to closer observation times. The longwave (LW) flux difference is smaller between hemispheres. The CERES team has been collaborating with the European Space Agency’s Earth Cloud, Aerosol and Radiation Explorer (EarthCARE) project to compare results from its Broadband Radiometer (BBR) with those from CERES. Early results showed that EarthCARE’s BBR SW channel is 8% brighter than CERES, and the LW channel is very consistent with CERES – with the possible exception of very cold scenes being colder than CERES. At the May 2025 meeting, Loeb announced that a 25-year Earth Radiation Budget (ERB) record – from March 2000 to February 2025 – has been established.

Bill Smith, Jr. [LaRC] continued the presentation with a review of the progress of the CERES Edition 5 clouds algorithms. This presentation examined the status of balancing the three goals of this effort. He noted the need for consistency between the derived cloud products from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on Terra and Aqua and the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on Suomi NPP and NOAA-20 – especially given the differences in the bands on each instrument. In addition, he discussed the consistency between three generations of geostationary imagers that cover the 25 years in both timeline and across the globe. CERES uses data from NOAA’s Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES 9–18); the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites’ (EUMETSAT) Operational Meteorological Satellites (Meteosat 5–11); and the Japanese Meteorological Agency’s (JMA) Geostationary Meteorological Satellite (GMS 5), Multifunction Transport Satellite (MTSAT 1R and 2), and Himawari 8 and 9. Finally, Smith presented the accuracy of this approach compared to observations from Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization (CALIOP) on the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) mission.

In his presentations during the Fall 2024 and Spring 2025 meetings, Smith demonstrated improvements with the Edition 5 algorithm showing consistent cloud fraction between MODIS on Aqua and VIIRS on NOAA-20 – with the ocean values being within 2% for both day and night. He noted that additional work still needs to be done for land and polar night. A comparison with CALIPSO data showed that daytime cloud fraction measurements from VIIRS on NOAA-20 are more consistent than those from MODIS on Terra and Aqua. The Edition 5 nighttime algorithm fixes the overestimates in cloud fraction for high clouds, but still underestimates low clouds [below 3 km (1.9 mi)] by 10%. The geostationary imager-derived clouds common three-channel algorithm has better consistency between satellites and day and night cloud fraction. Smith also added that there are some discrepancies in cloud optical depth and particle size between the European Meteosat imager and the other geostationary satellites. The use of the K-D tree algorithm has improved consistency at night with the day cloud properties.

Wying Su [LaRC] explored how fluxes may change if the Angular Distribution Models (ADMs) are created in different weather patterns (i.e. during El Niño and La Niña events). Two sets of Terra CERES ADMs were produced – one using 24 El Niño months and the other using 24 La Niña months. The global differences between SW fluxes composed from these two sets of ADMs were 0.5 Wm-2 regardless of the period (e.g., El Niño, La Niña, or neutral phase) and showed the same regional difference patterns. Su also explained how to partition the ToA SW fluxes from CERES into visible and near-infrared (NIR) fluxes. She showed how to use spectral radiances generated using look-up tables (LUT) from the MODerate resolution atmospheric TRANsmission (MODTRAN) code and spectral radiances measured by the VIIRS imager to separate the spectrum – see Figure 1. A ratio between the modeled visible band and CERES SW radiance is derived using the LUT. For water clouds, the visible band has the highest albedo due to cloud absorption being near zero. The NIR albedo is much lower than visible band due to high cloud absorption. For ice clouds, the two albedos are closer because ice clouds are more reflective in NIR than the visible band and there is less water vapor absorption above the cloud.

CERES Figure 1
Figure 1. Using spectral radiance measurements generated using look-up tables (LUT) produced by the MODerate resolution atmospheric TRANsmission (MODTRAN) model and spectral radiances measured directly by the Visible Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), top of atmosphere shortwave fluxes from CERES can be partitioned into monthly gridded instantaneous visible (VIS) [top left] and near-infrared (NIR) [top right] albedo, CERES derived cloud fraction [bottom left], and cloud optical depth from Suomi NPP VIIRS data for context [bottom right].
Figure credit: Su et al., 2024

Lusheng Liang [LaRC, Analytical Mechanics Associates (AMA)] discussed the creation of ADMs using additional RAPS data from November 2021 (when Terra started drifting from the Mean Local Time Equatorial crossing of 10:30 AM) to April 2024. This period of observations provided data obtained at a solar zenith angle that is approximately 10° higher in the tropics than was observed during the initial period used for ADM development. New ADMs developed using data from this period have the largest impact for clear sky overland and cloudy sky over ocean versus clear sky over ocean and cloudy sky over land. Liang has also worked to improve the unfiltering coefficients, using the latest version of MODTRAN 5.4, Ping Ying’s cloud properties, two additional view zeniths, seven additional solar zenith bins, and MODIS BRDF kernels over land and snow. The application of these changes to SW and LW from total minus SW resulted in a -0.30 and 0.30 W/m2 respectively for July 2019. Since NOAA-20’s FM-6 instrument has a LW channel, the team made an effort to reduce the differences between the LW channel from the total channel minus the SW channel. They also created a correction using warmer temperatures for the model over desert areas and cooler temperatures over vegetated land.

Dave Doelling [LaRC] presented a method to compare data from two ERB instruments in the same orbit, such as CERES on NOAA-20 and Libera on JPSS-4. This method is necessary without data from Terra. This approach used the invariant target of Libya-4. He compared the results using CERES instruments on Suomi NPP and NOAA-20. He added a second target to this analysis: Deep Convective Clouds that have cloud tops below 220 K located in the Tropical Western Pacific. Another approach placed the CERES instrument in a scan mode, matching the view zenith of the geostationary orbiting satellites (i.e., Terra FM2, Aqua FM3, and METSAT-11). The geostationary imager radiances were used to determine the broadband LW flux, which was compared to the CERES-observed LW flux. The regression of these matched pairs of radiances showed that the Terra and Aqua CERES LW regression are within 0.2%. A machine learning approach to determine LW broadband flux from geostationary satellite imager radiance data showed a 75% decrease in bias and a 9% decrease in Root Mean Square Error over the multi-linear regression approach used in Edition 4. Doelling used a similar approach when working with data from the VIIRS imager, using radiance measurements to assign LW and SW fluxes to the cloud layers in the CERES footprint. When normalizing the individual portion of the footprint to the observed CERES data, the global bias is less than 1 W/m2.

In the Spring 2025 meeting, Doelling reported on the small change in monthly global variables from using MERRA-2 instead of GEOS 5.4.1 reanalysis in production of the Single Scanner Footprint (SSF) one degree and Synoptic one degree based on a minimum of a year overlap. He also highlighted the changes in the next version of SYN1deg Edition 4B. These changes included reprocessing of the three two-channel satellites (GMS-5, Met-5, and Met-7), using interpolated cloud retrievals over twilight hours (solar zenith > 60 degree), and transition to using data from NOAA-20 only and MERRA-2 reanalysis after March 2022.

Seung-Hee Ham [Analytical Mechanics Associates/LaRC] reported the availability of instantaneous Terra and Aqua CERES computed fluxes at the surface and ToA on a 1° equal angle grid [CERES Cloud and Radiative Swath (CRS1deg-Hour)] from January 2018 to December 2022. The algorithm changes to the Edition 5 Fu-Liou radiative transfer calculations reduced the LW ToA flux bias to less than 0.5 W/m2 from around 2 W/m2 with Edition 4.

Ham also discussed plans to increase the number of bands (from 18 to 29) in the Fu-Liou radiative transfer calculations and the corresponding shift in wavelength cut-off used for the bands. Nine gas species will now be used in Edition 5 for each band instead of the maximum of four species used in only one band currently. The line-by-line gas database has also been updated. These changes have less than a 2 W/m2 change in the SW and LW broadband fluxes between Edition 4 and 5, but line-by-line results show better performance.

Seiji Kato [LaRC] evaluated the computed irradiance trends at the ToA, surface, and within the atmosphere. At ToA for all-sky conditions, SW flux has been increasingly adding energy. Conversely, LW flux has been removing the additional energy, but at a smaller rate leading to an overall increase in net energy. At the surface for all-sky conditions, SW flux has been increasing energy, while LW flux has been decreasing at almost the same rate. As a result, there has been a small net increase. Within the atmosphere, the SW flux has increased more than the LW flux, but they are both positive. The global all-sky mean aerosol direct radiative effect from the synoptic one-degree (SYN1deg) was -2.2 W/m2, which was just below the -2.0 W/m2 mean from previous studies.

Paul Stackhouse [LaRC] presented the impact of transitioning the meteorology used in Fast Longwave and SHortwave Flux (FLASHFlux) to the Goddard Earth Observing Systemfor Instrument Teams (GEOS-IT) product. The global mean difference was less than 0.5 W/m2 in LW daytime surface downward flux, but the zonal bias can reach an absolute value of 5 W/m2 – see Figure 2.

CERES Figure 2
Figure 2. Global annual mean Top of Atmosphere radiative flux changes between 2022 and 2023 for [top], outgoing longwave radiation and [bottom], and reflective shortwave radiation.
Figure credit: Stackhouse et al., 2024

The Global Learning and Observation to benefit the Environment (GLOBE) clouds team ran Eclipse Challenges during the October 2023 annular and April 2024 total solar eclipses. During each event, citizen scientists were encouraged to collect temperature and clouds measurements before and after the eclipse. The participants collected 34,000 air temperature measurements (which is 2.3 times the average number of observations) and 10,000 (13 times average) cloud measurements for both events. The cloud data showed a decrease in cloudiness as the eclipse approached and an increase after, but contrails showed a steady increase. The data also showed a noticeable decrease in air temperature at the local eclipse maximum.

Invited Science Presentations

The CERES STM typically invites two presentations at each meeting. The summaries for these presentations appear here in chronological order. The Fall 2023 presenters looked at responses to greenhouse gas (GHG) radiative forcing. The Spring 2024 presenters explored the Earth’s hemispheric albedo symmetry and the impact of aerosol changes on the cloud radiative effect (CRE). The Fall 2024 presenters discussed preparation of forcing datasets for CMIP 7 and cloud feedback in models. The Spring 2025 presenters explored trends in spectral radiances and the radiative forcing pattern effect.

Ryan Kramer [NOAA, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory] explored the decomposition of the EEI as a tool for monitoring climate change. Kramer explained a Making Earth Systems Data Records for Use in Research Environments (MEaSURE) effort to pull together records from multi-instruments needed for decomposition of radiation forcing and radiative feedback from temperature, water vapor, ToA flux, surface albedo, and CRE – see Figure 3. The portion of the total radiative imbalance not attributed to feedback is due to radiative forcing from LW flux, 0.27 W/m2. This result – supported by observations and by results from the Suite of Community Radiative Transfer codes based on Edwards and Slingo (SOCRATES) – used a radiation scheme created by researchers at the United Kingdom Meteorological (UKMet) Office, where the radiative forcing is caused by an increase in GHG. The atmospheric cooling is balanced with sensible and latent heat flux related to precipitation. Latent heating from precipitation is inversely correlated with atmospheric radiative change. Decomposed atmosphere radiative forcing and feedback showed how GHGs radiatively heat the atmosphere but mute the trend in global precipitation. The reduction of aerosol in China since the 2008 Summer Olympics has regionally increased the SW radiative forcing. This result provides an example of the impact of mitigation efforts. GHG forcing is stronger in the tropics due to larger concentrations of water vapor and decreases in extratropical regions.

CERES Figure 3
Figure 3. Linear trends in shortwave radiative forcing from 2003 through 2018, demonstrating the direct radiative effect of changes in aerosols. Positive trends correspond to less shortwave reflection to space (more planetary absorption) over time. Estimated using Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES), Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), and CloudSat observation. [Right] Linear trends in aerosol optical depth (AOD) from 2003 through 2018 from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The AOD trends often mirror shortwave radiative forcing trends, as expected. A positive trend in shortwave radiative forcing (less reflection) stems from a negative trend in AOD.
Figure credit: Kramer et al., 2021

Susanne Bauer [GISS] examined aerosol and cloud forcing in relation to GHG forcing. Early in the twentieth century, data show aerosols counterbalanced 80% of the GHG forcing, but aerosols began to decrease at the start of this century, reducing their impact to 15% today. The direct aerosol forcing follows the mean aerosol optical depth. It reached the maximum impact in 1977 but has decreased slightly since then. The indirect aerosol forcing is four times larger than the direct forcing and reached its peak in 2007. GISS model version E.21 underpredicted the SW ToA trend and overpredicted the LW ToA – see Figure 4. The version E.3 model received a major upgrade in model physics, cloud microphysics, and turbulence scheme, resulting in substantial improvement modeling marine cirrus clouds, total cloud cover, and precipitable water vapor. The trend in LW ToA flux matches CERES in non-polar regions. While the SW all-sky trend shows improvement, it still underpredicts observations. For example, model aerosol is not picking up the biomass burning in Siberia, which seems to be an artifact of using an older emission data base for the study. The improved aerosol data results reveal a larger trend in cloud droplet number concentration compared to the observations gathered by the Terra satellite. These data remain consistent with the Precipitable Water Vapor trend.

CERES Figure 4
Figure 4. The trend in shortwave clear sky radiation change at the top of the atmosphere over the 23-year time series, from 2001 to 2023, of the CERES datasets in units of W/m2 per decade. Clear sky conditions show changes in the energy budget that are not associated with clouds for [left] CERES dataset and [right] model data using the NASA GISS Model E3.1. Notable features include negative trends over China, Europe, and the Eastern United States, and a positive trend around India, in correspondence with cleaner aerosol conditions in the first three regions and still increasing pollution in India. Energy balance changes in the Arctic and Antarctic are associated with land and sea ice changes. Some of the positive and negative trends in Canada, Russia, Central and Southern Africa, and South America are strongly impacted by biomass burning patterns.
Figure credit: Susanne Bauer/CERES

Michael Diamond [Florida State University] discussed a proposed test to evaluate whether Earth’s hemispheric albedo symmetry can be maintained. Currently, the all-sky albedo is nearly equal in both hemispheres, but the ToA clear-sky albedo is much greater in the Northern Hemisphere than the Southern Hemisphere, due to the distribution of landmasses. The Southern Hemisphere is also brighter in the visible wavelength, but darker in near-infrared spectrum. This symmetry is unique.

If the Earth was arbitrarily broken up into hemispheres, less than one-third of these hemispheres would be balanced within 1 W/m2. The solar reflection is symmetric, but outgoing LW radiation is not – with less energy leaving the Southern Hemisphere. This global imbalance is reduced with interhemispheric transport through the ocean and atmosphere.

Diamond discussed potential physical mechanisms that could maintain this symmetry (e.g., cloud feedback, solar climate intervention, or hydrological cycles). He noted that surface aerosols and high clouds increase albedo in the Northern Hemisphere, whereas low and altostratus clouds increase albedo in the Southern Hemisphere. Earth’s strong hemispheric albedo asymmetry is transient, which should allow for “natural experiments” to test the mechanism to maintain the symmetry. He discussed the moderate but long-term test for the loss of Arctic sea ice from 2002 to 2012, as well as the decline in clear-sky atmospheric reflection due to air pollution over China that peaked in 2010 and declined in 2019. He also discussed more abrupt changes, including the post-2016 decline in Antarctic sea ice, the decrease in Northern Hemisphere low cloud reflection caused by sulfur fuel regulation as enacted by the International Maritime Organization in 2020, the decreased Northern Hemisphere aerosol concentration following activity restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic, the increased Southern Hemisphere aerosol concentration during the bushfires in Australia between 2019 and 2020, and the increased Northern Hemisphere aerosol concentration reflection following the Nabro volcanic eruption in 2011 – see Figure 5. Despite these multiple events, the expected change in clear-sky albedo from the surface or aerosol change seems to be masked in the all-sky albedo through simultaneous changes in cloud reflectivity. Many of these events overlap, which complicates how to interpret the results.

CERES Figure 5
Figure 5. During the extreme 2019–2020 Black Summer bushfires in Australia, pollution levels over the Southern Ocean (as measured by aerosol optical depth, or the amount of light scattered and absorbed by pollution particles in the atmosphere) reached their highest values in approximately 20 years of monitoring by NASA’s Moderate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS).
Figure credit: Diamond et. al., 2024

Daniel McCoy [University of Wyoming] discussed his investigation of uncertainty in cloud radiative feedback in climate forcing due to changes in aerosols. At this time, extratropical cloud feedback has an uncertainty of over 2.5 W/m2. Pollution leads to an increase in aerosol concentration, which impacts cloud formation and changes the droplet number concentration. This increase results in changes to the cloud coverage and amount of liquid water content in the clouds – see Figure 6. The work of McCoy and his colleagues has constrained the change in droplet number and liquid water content with the hope of narrowing the effective radiative forcing from aerosol–cloud interaction. Using results from the Community Atmosphere Model (CAM) 6 and observations, they were able to constrain the range of possible droplet number concentration by 27% and liquid water content by 28%. These constraints reduced the effective radiation forcing to 2%. McCoy argued that this small impact is due to the interaction between precipitation efficiency and radiative susceptibility through changes in the Liquid Water Path (LWP), which results in buffering of the radiative effect by reduced radiative sensitivity.

CERES Figure 6
Figure 6. Water vapor path from the Morphed Integrated Microwave Imagery at CIMSS–Total Precipitable Water (MIMIC–TPW) product showing transient eddies moving moisture from the tropics to the extratropics. The relationship between moisture transport, precipitation, and albedo acts to set large-scale Earth system behavior.
Figure credit: Development of the MIMIC-TPW2 product is supported by the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) Risk Reduction Program and the Office of Naval Research.

David Paynter [Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL)] explored the spectral dimension of recent changes in ERB. The atmospheric state, temperature, and gas species, from each level in a grid box are used in a line-by-line (LBL) radiative code to calculate the spectra. The two codes used are the NOAA GFDL GPU-enabled Radiative Transfer (GRT) and the Reference Forward Model (RFM) from Oxford University. Paynter and colleagues used a LW radiation solver to get ToA fluxes. They then compared the monthly mean spectrally resolved ToA fluxes using ERA5 inputs for 2003 to 2021 to Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) observations. Paynter showed that there is generally good agreement between all-sky AIRS climatology and the LBL calculations, and similar spectral trends; however, some bands have larger differences in the trend. The all-sky OLR between the LBL-ERA5, CERES, and AIRS show consistent positive trends between 0.15 to 0.31 W/(m2/decade); however, the LBL-ERA5 0.11 W/(m2/decade) and the CERES -0.15 W/(m2/decade) show disagreement.

David Thompson [Colorado State University/University of East Anglia] studied the pattern associated with ToA radiative response to changes in surface temperature. Historically, this has been accomplished by looking at the local radiative response due to local change in temperature or to global-mean temperature change. The first reflects a two-way interaction between the local radiative flux and local temperature that identifies areas that are changing. The second results are more difficult to interpret because the local response is multiplied by the same value. Thus, Thompson proposed a third method of evaluating the changes by using the global-mean radiative response to changes due to local changes in temperature. This approach identifies positive values with warm temperatures and downward radiative fluxes. The temperature variability over the Eastern Tropical Pacific contributes to positive values in the global internal feedback parameter. The reverse happens in the Western Tropical Pacific. Another advantage of this method is that the contribution of local feedback to the global feedback is easy to calculate. Using the CERES monthly-mean Energy Balanced and Filled (EBAF) data, the global weighted feedback is -1.1 W/m2 with global oceans contributing -0.2 W/m2 and global land -0.9 W/m2. The Eastern Tropical Pacific contribution is 0.1 W/m2 and the Western Tropical Pacific contribution is -0.1 W/m2. This approach can be applied to models to see which are representative of the observations. Preindustrial runs of the model generally reproduce the negative Western Tropical Pacific anomaly; however, Thompson noted that most models do not capture the positive anomaly in the Eastern Tropical Pacific.

Contributed Science Presentation

The following section provides highlights from the contributed science presentations. The content is grouped by Earth radiation instruments that are in development; new techniques for use in climate models and analysis of their results; applications of machine learning; and observational datasets and their analysis.

Future Earth Radiation Instruments

It should be noted that the information shared below reflects the mission plans at the time of the meeting. The mission goals may have changed as a result of changing budgets, agency priorities, and other factors.

Kory Priestly [LaRC] discussed the Athena Economical Payload Integration (EPIC) pathfinder mission using the NovaWurks Hyper Integrated Satlet small satellite platform that is integrated with a spare CERES LW detector and calibration module flight hardware. This setup was designed to test the novel building block approach to satellites as a potential path for the next ERB instrument at a reduced cost. [UPDATE: The Athena mission launched successfully on July 23, 2025. Unfortunately, after being released from the rocket the spacecraft started tumbling and could not be recovered.]

Tristan L’Ecuyer [University of Wisconsin–Madison] presented the science being answered by the Polar Radiant Energy in the Far InfraRed Experiment (PREFIRE) – see Photo 1. The instrument will quantify the far-infrared spectrum beyond 15 mm, which accounts for over 50% of the OLR in polar regions. Additionally, the atmospheric greenhouse effect is sensitive to thin clouds and small water vapor concentration that have strong far infrared signatures. PREFIRE consists of two CubeSats in near polar orbits. The instrument has a miniaturized infrared spectrometer covering 5 to 53 mm with 0.84 mm sampling and an operational life of one year. A complete infrared emission spectrum will provide fingerprints to differentiate between several important feedback processes (e.g., cloudiness and water vapor) that leads to Arctic warming, sea ice loss, ice sheet melt, and sea level rise. [UPDATE: The two PREFIRE CubeSats launched successfully in May and June of 2024, with first light images following in September 2024; public release of PREFIRE data products occurred in June 2025.]

CERES Photo 1
Photo 1. NASA’s Polar Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment (PREFIRE) mission will measure the amount of heat Earth emits into space from two of the coldest, most remote regions on the planet.
Photo credit: NASA

Peter Pilewskie [Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP)] announced that Libera will be integrated on Joint Polar Satellite System-4 (JPSS-4), which eliminates the need to remove JPSS-3 from storage. This change will affect the launch order. He also presented a comparison between the Compact Total Irradiance Monitor (CTIM) CubeSat and CERES observations. Pilewskie noted that CTIM uses the same Vertically Aligned Carbon Nanotube (VACANT) detectors that Libera will use. Even though CTIM is designed to measure Total Solar Irradiance, the spacecraft has been oriented to get Earth views during spacecraft eclipse with the Sun (nighttime). CTIM provides a ~170-km (105-mi) footprint – which is about eight times larger than that of CERES. The mean relative difference between CERES and CTIM matches are -1.8% varying between -1.5% for FM6 and 2.0% for FM1.

Climate Model Developments and Analysis

Paulina Czarnecki [Columbia University] introduced a method to use a small number of wavelengths to determine broad band radiative fluxes and heating rates as an alternative to the correlated K parameterization approach. It uses a simple optimization algorithm and a linear model to achieve accuracy similar to correlated K-distribution. The approach uses a small set of spectral points – 16 in the study – to predict the vertically resolved net flux within 1 W/m2 under clear-sky conditions.

Sean Cohen [Columbia University] addressed the impact of rising surface temperature on precipitation. This information is required to determine the relationship between hydrological sensitivity and radiative cooling sensitivity, where convective heating is balanced by radiative cooling. When carbon dioxide (CO2) increases, it masks changes in emission from water vapor, resulting in mean rainfall changes when atmospheric transmission changes at a rate of 2%/K. The “symmetry” of the water vapor spectral window causes atmospheric transmission to change at a near constant rate with the surface temperature. This hydrological sensitivity peaks at subtropical surface temperatures – see Figure 7.

CERES Figure 7
Figure 7. A comparison of an ensemble of General Circulation Model results [faded lines] to predictions from the author’s pen-and-paper model under a constant carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration of 400 ppm (orange) and under varied CO2 concentration (black). The gray line shows the prediction from the source scaling. [Inset] The percent change in mean rainfall [hydrological sensitivity (HS)] with surface temperature as predicted by these same analytical models (same color labels).
Figure credit: Cohen et al., 2025

George Tselioudis [GISS] explored how shifts in the atmospheric zonal mean circulation changed the CRE. The poleward shift in the location of the Hadley Cell (with corresponding high clouds following it) occurred in both hemispheres; however, it produced SW CRE warming during North Atlantic winter, contrary to SW CRE cooling in both Southern Hemisphere summer and winter. The Southern Hemisphere high cloud shift does not reduce the total cloud amount that occurred in the North Atlantic. The jet stream shift only had an impact during North Atlantic winter. The LW CRE produced a dipole of warming at the previous and new Hadley Circulation positions. The magnitude of LW CRE changes increased with larger upward velocity changes. The SW CRE is dependent on both change in vertical velocity and stability (EIS). Based on these observational findings, Tselioudis evaluated the CMIP 5 and 6 results. Both model results showed lower midlatitude SW CRE warming, but CMIP 5 produced a larger dependence on the climatological Hadley circulation whereas CMIP 6 did not. CMIP 6 models are less dependent on vertical velocity than the earlier set, which allow them to produce Southern Hemisphere SW CRE warming.

Gregory Cesana [GISS] investigated the tropical stratocumulus and shallow cumulus SW feedback, which explains part of the spread in climate sensitivity in the CMIP 5 and 6 models. Observationally, inferred low-cloud feedback is driven by stratocumulus clouds with very little input from cumulus clouds. In the model, cloud type is determined from the mean low cloud fraction in the tropics. When the model cloud fraction is smaller, the cloud is assumed to be cumulus. When it is greater, the cloud is considered to be stratocumulus. CMIP 6 underestimates both low cloud types, but especially in the high stratocumulus regions along the western coasts of continents. Both models favor cumulus over stratocumulus regimes, but the bias for CMIP 6 is less than CMIP 5. The increased model stratocumulus is correlated with increased low-cloud feedback – see Figure 8. If the increased stratocumulus clouds in CMIP 6 matched observations, the mean low cloud feedback would have doubled to 0.7 W/m2 K.

CERES Figure 8
Figure 8. [Left to Right] Maps of stratocumulus (Sc) and shallow cumulus (Cu) cloud feedback for [top to bottom] CALIPSO and CERES observations, the Climate Model Intercomparison Project model (CMIP 6), and CMIP 5 models. The means are given in the upper left corner of each map. The linear correlation coefficients between observations and CMIP 6 and CMIP 5 models are 0.39 and 0.20 for Sc, and 0.30 and 0.22 for Cu, respectively. Collectively, CMIP 6 models substantially improved depiction of Sc cloud feedback both in terms of mean and pattern correlation compared to CMIP 5, and also for Cu clouds to a lesser extent. Both models underestimate the magnitude of the positive feedback – and therefore the warming due to low clouds in response to climate change.
Figure credit: Cesana et. al., 2023

Patrick Taylor [LaRC] explored the cloud–sea ice feedback mechanism – see Photo 2. He explained that results from CMIP 5 and 6 show the largest variation in climate projections in the Arctic – where surface albedo feedback is the biggest contribution to the inter-model differences. He evaluated the difference between ice-free and ice surfaces on either side of the marginal ice zone – a part of the seasonal ice zone ranging from 100- to 200-km (62- to 124-mi) wide that extends from the ice edge into the ice pack. The cloud property differences are strongly tied to the differences in thermodynamic profiles, whereas the ice edge (part that is over open water) has warmer, moister, and weaker lower tropospheric stability than the ice pack, leading to more positive turbulent surface fluxes at the ice edge. The feedback from surface properties and lower tropospheric thermodynamics profile are critical to sea ice loss. This sea ice–cloud feedback is positive in the fall and winter and negative in the spring.

CERES Photo 2
Photo 2. Surface albedo is a measure of reflected sunlight from Earth’s surface. This measurement provides critical information for modeling Earth’s climate, particularly in polar regions; however, computer models struggle to simulate albedo. This photo gives some idea why. The terrain in the Arctic is highly variable, which, along with the heterogeneity in snow and/or ice cover on the surface, make surface albedo one of the most challenging physical variables to represent in climate models.
Photo credit: Taylor et al., 2024

Doyeon Kim [LaRC—NASA Postdoctoral Program] discussed factors that explain the current Arctic albedo and possible future changes in this region. She noted that the Arctic undergoes rapid warming during the summer with an accompanying decrease in surface albedo each year until it starts to increase again in the fall – see Figure 9. Researchers use the output from the Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP) and CMIP 6 to infer future changes to albedo. In her analysis, Kim decomposed surface albedo into five terms: sea ice albedo in ice region, sea ice concentration, albedo spatial variation, ice region, and albedo in ocean region. She explained that the ice albedo term drives most changes in AMIP where the ice concentration is held constant. Sea ice concentration and ice region terms become important for the CMIP 6 model where they can change.

Kim went on to look at the monthly averages of albedo, pointing out that March and September show large differences. The multimodal mean exhibits a large spread in the ice albedo. The CMIP 6 spread is significantly influenced by both seasonal and spatial variations. During the early summer months, the ice region term contributes to albedo spread across the Barents, Kara, and Laptev Seas and Greenland Sea. The ice albedo term during the late summer contributes to albedo in the East Siberian, Chukchi, and Beaufort Seas and Central Arctic Sea. A significant inter-model spread may be the primary factor that is contributing to the variability observed in Arctic warming across the different model simulations. Kim discussed the significant difference in surface albedo between CERES and the CMIP 6 models. Both ice fraction and ice albedo have a substantial effect on the model spread of albedo. Time series data indicate that sea ice albedo and concentration remain relatively unchanged in response to global warming while the ice region term decreases significantly.

CERES Figure 9
Figure 9. Present-day Arctic surface albedo from the CMIP 6 multi-model mean (2001–2014) compared with Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) observations. Panels (a–d) show CMIP 6 multi-model mean albedo for March, April–May, June–August, and September, while panels (e–h) show corresponding CERES retrievals.
Figure credit: Doyeon Kim/NASA Langley Research Center

Application of Machine Learning

Ben Scarino [LaRC, Analytical Mechanics Association (AMA)] explored the consistency of skin temperature (i.e., temperature at the surface) and the temperature 2-m (6.5-ft) above the ground from reanalysis and satellite and ground observations, respectively. He reported that the Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO) does not assimilate either skin or ground temperature into their reanalysis, producing large biases in those values. Conversely, ERA5 does assimilate 2-m temperature in the reanalysis, which reduce variations by 1 K. The introduction of a Deep Neural Network (DNN) adjusts the reanalysis skin temperature to the observed satellite skin temperature – see Figure 10.

CERES Figure 10
Figure 10. An estimate of clear-sky satellite skin temperature bias for day [left column] and night [right column] between GEOS-IT model and satellite observations [top row] and between satellite predictions – using a deep neural network (DNN) – and satellite observations [bottom row]. Use of the DNN reduced the bias between predicted and observed skin temperatures and lowered the standard deviation.
Figure credit: Scarino et al., 2023

Sunny Sun-Mack [LaRC, AMA] described her efforts to train a Neural Network to identify single and multilayer ice-over-water and cloud top height using the Cloud Aerosol Lidar with Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO), CloudSat, and MODIS [CCCM] pixel-level product from 2008. For single layer cloud top heights, the neural network reduced the standard deviation of difference by nearly half. For the ice cloud top height in multilayer clouds, the standard deviation of difference is one-third. The neural network showed the same “skill” with lower multilayer cloud top heights as it did with single and multilayer upper cloud top heights – (e.g., standard deviation of difference is similar). The single layer cloud base showed similar skill to cloud top height, but the upper cloud base height was slightly worse than the cloud top height. The current algorithm using only imager data cannot differentiate multilayer clouds and creates a single water cloud that does not allow the flux to be calculated properly.

Jay Garg [LaRC/ADNET Systems, Inc] described improvements in SW surface flux using a Machine Learning technique over parameterized instantaneous CERES footprint fluxes. He trained a Neural Network model using the Fu-Liou calculated CERES CRS surface fluxes. This approach reduced the bias from 25 Wm-2 to almost 0 and the Root Mean Square (RMS) Error from nearly 100 to 13 W/m2 for SW surface fluxes. The LW flux statistics showed the bias reduced from 2 Wm-2 to nearly 0 and RMS Error from 12 to 3.5 W/m2 compared to the parameterized flux. These results nearly match the CRS values. Garg explained the plan to implement the Neural Network in the FLASHFlux SSF product – see Figure 11.

CERES Figure 11
Figure 11. Artificial Neural Network differences between the Neural Network LW fluxes and the computed values globally for Jan. 4, 2020. The differences are consistently small across all areas (scale range is -15 to 15 Wm-2). The authors (see Credit below) note the need to improve some areas over continents and areas involving cloud patterns.
Figure credit: Garg et al., 2024

Takmeng Wong [LaRC] presented recent progress on an imager independent instantaneous flux product to replace the current Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE)-like product. Wong described the use of a Random Forest classification technique to determine if the scene is clear (defined as 99.9% cloud free) or cloudy. This approach allowed the CERES radiances to be unfiltered – see Figure 12. Wong and colleagues developed separate models for day and night as well as for surface types (e.g., water, land, desert, and ice and snow). Wong discussed how an Artificial Neural Network was used to convert radiances to a flux. Similar to the radiance models, Wong and colleagues did separate analyses for day and night and for the four surface types for both clear and cloudy conditions. The results from this approach were shown superior to the ERBE-like fluxes but not reaching the accuracy of the SSF using imager-derived clouds.

CERES Figure 12
Figure 12. The number of clear footprints per 1 degree region for [Left] Earth Radiation Budget Experiment algorithm applied to CERES and [right] random forest results from CERES data. The right figure demonstrates a significantly reduced number of falsely identified clear pixels.
Figure credit. Wong et al., 2024

Eshkol Eytan [University of Colorado, Boulder] focused his work on the cloud twilight zone, an area of transition between clear and cloudy skies, such as cloud halo, cloud fragment, and thin clouds only seen in forward scatter. The clear sky reflectance increases, which is wavelength dependent the closer it is to the cloud. Eytan looked for this feature in the LW data. The lower bound for low clouds is ~0.75 W/m2. The fraction of what is considered clear is 60% cloudiness. The cloud twilight zone contribution to the CRE is ~0.8 W/m2 for warm clouds and ~8 W/m2 for all clouds. Eytan broke down MODIS data into 200-km2 (77-mi2) regions and applied a cloud mask. The team then looked at how different channels react with distance. Eytan and colleagues analyzed both visible and LW channels on MODIS. This work determined a pure clear sky value based on distance from known clouds and how it differs from the individual pixel radiance squared divided by the standard deviation obtained in the box. When the twilight spectral measure is greater than one, it signifies cloud contamination. The pure clear MODIS pixels within a CERES footprint are averaged to get a true clear-sky radiance. Often a CERES footprint exceeds the pure clear area. Eytan then explained how he used the clear sky measurement to determine a normalized factor for MODIS data to estimate CRE. He used machine learning between CERES radiances and MODIS radiances at different wavelengths to get pure clear-sky fluxes in homogenous areas. After training on CERES footprint, he then applied MODIS data to smaller areas. The shift of CRE to a higher value, from -6 W/m2 to -10 W/m2 with imager pixels, produced a more confident cloud mask – reducing uncertainty by a third. This value is still larger than the estimated aerosol direct radiative field. Applying the same technique to the thermal portion of the CRE is 1 and 1.5 W/m2.

Observational Datasets and Analysis

Lazaros Oreopoulos [GSFC] presented a new approach for classifying cloudiness at monthly time scales that preserves some of the variability of the original MODIS daily pixel observations. Starting from the 12 previously defined MODIS cloud regimes (CRs) that classified cloud mixtures according to how cloud top pressure and optical depth co-vary on daily scales, he grouped mixtures of CRs occurring regionally over a month using k-means clustering. He classified the geographical distribution of mean occurrences of the resulting eight monthly climatological cloud regimes as “Regimes of Regimes” (RORs) – see Figure 13. When examining the CRE of the RORs, he found that ROR5 contained large amounts of shallow convection. CR10 exhibited strong shortwave and longwave CRE trends because of declining CR10 populations.

CERES Figure 13
Figure 13. Geographical distributions of mean population density [expressed as relative frequency of occurrence (RFO)] for the eight climatological cloud regimes, also called “Regimes of Regimes” (RORs), derived from 20 years of MODIS cloud retrievals.
Figure credit: Oreopoulos et al., 2023

Maria Hakuba [NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)] provided an update on the WCRP Global Energy and Water Exchanges (GEWEX) Data and Analysis Panel assessment of the EEI. Quality control led to a skew in the Ocean Heat Content estimates, mapping techniques, and mask and coverage. The year-to-year variability did not follow the CERES EEI; however, a combination of in-situ and altimetry data for hybrid estimates resulted in very good agreement. The agreement with the JPL geodetic ocean heat uptake with the correct expansion efficiency was also good. The net all-sky was positive across all zones. The net clear-sky trend matched all-sky. The net-CRE showed negative trends in Northern Hemisphere deep tropics and high latitudes. The SW and LW CRE complement each other both globally and zonally. The positive SW CRE dominated in the tropics with fewer, lower, and thinner clouds.

Jake Gristley [NOAA’s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Science (CIRES)/University of Colorado, Boulder] explored the angular dimension of ERB with the Wide Field of View camera planned for the Libera mission. The camera is a 2048 x 2048-pixel array that samples the entire Earth disk subtended from the satellite. It provides 1-km (0.62-mi) pixel spacing at nadir with a single spectral channel at 555 nm. This technique produces more data than can be downloaded. The ADM sampling methods Gristley used encompass the Libera Point Spread Function and minimize the amount of data that must be transmitted.

Seung-Hee Ham discussed how to evaluate cloud volumes using CALIPSO, CloudSat, and MODIS observations separately and in combination to determine the strengths and weakness of each approach. CloudSat misses thin cirrus and low clouds; CALIPSO misses low and mid clouds as a result of signal attenuation; and MODIS misses high and low clouds and over detects mid clouds. Ham described a trend from 2008 to 2017 that shows an increase in the upper-most clouds and a decrease in underlying clouds. She also looked at the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) signal that showed varying responses based on latitude bands. The increase in high clouds above 10 km (6.2 mi) represent an increase in clouds with a temperature between 220 and 240 K. The colder cloud emission and smaller OLR provide positive cloud feedback.

Brent Roberts [NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)] presented applications of CERES surface fluxes in the Regional Visualization and Monitoring System (in French SERVIR). SERVIR is a joint initiative of NASA, United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and leading geospatial organizations in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. SERVIR uses satellite data and geospatial technology in innovative solutions to improve resilience and sustainable resource management. The projects are driven by demand to meet community needs and values. The CERES fluxes are used input into crop and land surface modeling through NASA’s Prediction of Worldwide Energy Resources (POWER) tool. Another example of where CERES data are used as input is for the Regional Hydrologic Extremes and Assessment System (RHEAS), which is a framework for providing nowcast and forecasts of streamflow and crop yields that has been deployed in Eastern Africa and Southeast Asia. The South Asia Land Data Assimilation System (SALDAS) uses the NASA GEOS Subseasonal to Seasonal (S2S) prediction system and long-term observational records or assimilations to evaluate climate anomalies. The GEOS-S2S information is downscaled to 5 km (3 mi) using Land Information System or Land surface Data Toolkit, which is combined with information from POWER and the Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Monitoring (IMERG GPM). The value of CERES surface fluxes is more accurate over the model data when compared to Surface Radiation Budget (SURFRAD) network observations. Roberts explained future plans to refine the downscaling approach to take advantage of satellite-based radiative fluxes.

David Rutan, [ADNET Systems] validated the CERES CRS data product at Siple Dome, Antarctica. The CRS is a CERES footprint-based application of the Fu-Liou Radiative Transfer Model. At the high polar latitude, Terra and Aqua provide multiple passes each day allowing the diurnal cycle to be captured. The calculated LW surface downward flux is consistently too low under both clear and cloudy skies. Whereas the SW surface downward flux is low for cloudy conditions but matches well under clear skies. The surface upward flux comparison demonstrates LW is very low for cloudy skies and improves for clear skies. Conversely, SW is low for cloudy conditions and again matches well with clear skies. Despite the bias, the CERES fluxes captured the dynamic changes in observed radiances. The difference between fluxes calculated by the GMAO GEOS 5.4.1 model, MODIS, and AIRS observed fluxes are shown in Figure 14. The model has a low bias for skin and air [2-m (6-ft) off the ground] temperature and a dry bias in the troposphere compared to the observations.

CERES Figure 14
Figure 14. The calculated data fairly well in the shortwave down, particularly when the sky is clear. The longwave down, the calculations are cold, because it is largely influenced by the near surface air temperature. When Rutan and his team compared current input (GEOS-541) to input for the Edition 5 version of the cloud regimes (GEOS-IT), they found that the current surface air temperature is too low in the Antarctic.
Figure credit: Rutan et al., 2023

Norman Loeb presented the CERES approach for a seamless climate data record across multiple satellite transitions applied to the EBAF ToA data product. All CERES instruments are anchored to FM1 via intercalibration using coincident measurements. Low Earth Orbiting (LEO) and Geostationary Earth Orbiting (GEO) imager radiances are placed on the same radiometric scale using a combination of ray-matching and invariant targets. Loeb explained the next step that used overlap between successive missions to anchor the level 3 (L3) data product from different satellites to a common reference. He then addressed the question of incorporating a new broadband instrument into the data after a 46-month data gap using computed fluxes from a SYN1deg product or the ERA5. All methods introduced a bias greater than 0.1 W/m2 than currently expressed using EBAF.

Virginia Sawyer [GSFC/Science Systems and Application, Inc.] provided an update on aerosol trends and changes for Dark Target – a satellite algorithm for retrieving aerosol properties from MODIS and other sensors by looking for brightness changes, which is more effective for dark surfaces (e.g., forests and oceans). Sawyer reported that the Collection 6.1 Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) over land was higher for Terra than for Aqua early in the record. After 2015, however, the two records became more consistent. The Suomi NPP AOD tracks closely to Terra and Aqua, but the NOAA-20 data produce lower aerosol values. This same pattern is seen over the oceans, but the Terra and Aqua do not converge after 2015. Sawyer reported that the preliminary results for MODIS Collection 7 (C7) do not significantly change Aqua results but do increase Terra AOD over land. This finding increases the Terra–Aqua offset. Sawyer indicated that MODIS C7 will include new Dark Target and Deep Blue, a companion algorithm to Dark Target but designed to excel over bright surfaces (e.g., deserts) by using blue/UV bands where aerosols are prominent. Likewise, she reported that the C7 MODIS Deep Blue algorithm will be expanded to retrieve over the ocean, similar to the current version for VIIRS.

Tyler Hanke [University of Illinois] introduced the concept of emergent constraint that combines some current observable climate quantity and its future projections with an observational estimate to constrain future projections. He used ENSO as a potential emergent constraint on the pattern effect. ENSO in both the Eastern Pacific and Central Pacific have associated all-sky radiation patterns that are dominated by low-cloud radiative effect anomalies that are primarily driven by SST. The increase in SST decreases low-clouds and weakens the inversion. These features were identified in both CMIP 6 models and the CERES EBAF product.

Xianglei Huang [University of Michigan] provided OLR trends from CERES, AIRS, and Cross-track Infrared Sounder (CrIS) on Suomi NPP and NOAA-20. The AIRS data showed about half the trend that CERES had over 20 years, but within the uncertainty of both measurements. He reviewed the various sources of differences: ADMs, calibration, and extrapolation. Huang explained that Suomi NPP CrIS data have known issues in the mid-IR channel, so NOAA-20 CrIS must be used for the analysis. A review of the past 10 years shows much closer agreement – around 0.055 W/m2 per year. Huang said that there are enough data to begin to look at spectral trends, which will a focus of his future endeavors.

Patrick Taylor [LaRC] provided an overview of the Arctic Radiation-Cloud-aerosol-Surface Interaction Experiment (ARCSIX), which is designed to quantify the contributions of surface properties, clouds, aerosols, and precipitation to the Arctic summer surface radiation budget and sea ice melt. Taylor explained how the field experiment will increase the field’s knowledge of the coupling between radiative processes and sea ice surface properties that influence the summer sea ice melt processes that control Arctic cloud regimes and their properties. It also controls the ability to monitor Arctic clouds, radiation, and sea ice processes from space. Even though the thin Arctic clouds can be radiatively important, they are challenging to observe with passive instruments, such as MODIS. The surface albedo is the largest uncertainty in intermodel differences in the Arctic. Two periods of aircraft measurements are available from Greenland between mid-May to mid-June and late-July to mid-August 2024. During the Fall 2024 meeting, Taylor reported that the Wallops Flight Facility (WFF) P-3 completed 19 flights, the LaRC Gulfstream-III had 15 flights, and SPEC Incorporated Learjet had 10 flights out of Pituffik Space Base in northwest Greenland. Altogether the ARCSIX flights accounted for nearly 350 flight hours. Taylor reported that (at the time of the Spring 2025 meeting) these data were still being prepared for public release.

Conclusion

Much like many of the CERES STMs that have preceded them, the last four meetings addressed the current state of CERES instruments, data products and algorithms, and outreach activities. The meetings began with a discussion on global mean surface temperature, progress on cloud algorithms, and changes in SW flux into different components of the electromagnetic spectrum. In addition, the CERES discussions compared ERB instruments, irradiance trends at different levels of the atmosphere, and information shared by citizen scientists during eclipse events in 2023 and 2024. Invited presentations evaluated how to parse radiation forcing and feedback to understand different atmospheric parameters and the use of different models, including Neural Network models, to examine the data gathered by CERES. The presentations also examined the concentration and distribution of aerosols in relation to different cloud types and droplet number and their relationship to climate sensitivity. Several presentations focused on the Arctic, especially with regard to albedo and ice extent. Several projects combined work from CERES and other instruments on the satellite platforms to examine single and multi-layer ice-over-water and cloud top in the atmosphere. The work over the two-year period has brought together a diverse group of experts to clarify atmospheric dynamics to understand changes in radiative flux to improve predictions of future climate conditions.

Walter Miller
NASA’s Langley Research Center/ADNET Systems, Inc.
walter.f.miller@nasa.gov

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Dec 29, 2025

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