The first generic and climatological aerosol retrievals using AirMISR data
are presented. Multiangle observations at 672 and 867 nm, in a cloud-free r
egion over dark water in Monterey Bay on June 29, 1999, yield complementary
generic and climatological results. The generic retrieval produces cross-s
ection-weighted, column-mean aerosol properties: midvisible aerosol optical
depth between 0.05 and 0.10, with a preference for values on the low side
of the range, particle number-mean characteristic radius between 0.25 and 0
.45 mum, and imaginary index of refraction <0.004, with 0.0 as the most lik
ely value. These properties correspond to a "medium-to-large, spherical'' c
olumn-average particle. The climatological retrieval identifies a maritime
air mass, having a total aerosol optical depth about 0.1, and mixing ratio
for sea-salt particles (large, spherical) of 50%, based on optical depth in
MISR Band 2, and 40% for the sulfate plus carbonaceous (medium, spherical)
components, to an accuracy of about +/- 15%. These results are in good agr
eement with the limited nearby surface-based and aircraft observations avai
lable. The analysis also shows that over dark water, pixel-to-pixel scene v
ariability can contribute more to the retrieval uncertainty than camera cal
ibration and that high spatial variance of the reflectance, in addition to
geometric considerations, is a better indicator of Sun glint contamination
than geometry alone. This work represents an early step toward the goal of
using MISR multiangle data to add spatial detail and information about temp
oral variability to the global aerosol climatology.