CloudCatcher is a beautiful new citizen science project on the Zooniverse app: here’s why you should take part
18 May 2020
No
-  

 

 

Caroline Cox is a Research Scientist in the Earth Observation and Atmospheric Science Division at RAL Space.

No
Satellite image of the UK in summer

​​​​​The UK in summer captured by Sentinel-3. 

Credit: Copernicus data - processed by RAL Space

Her role is to provide expert support for the SLSTR instrument as well as undertaking independent research projects on cirrus clouds and the retrieval of sea surface temperatures. She is part of a team who are developing CloudCatcher a new citizen science project supporting climate research. She explains why we need your help!

Here at RAL Space we love looking at satellites images of the Earth, and seeing the different formations and textures of the clouds. They look beautiful. However, when we make temperature measurements of the Earth's surface, we need a clear view of it, and clouds can obscure this view. 

Accurate surface temperature measurements are needed to help monitor and predict climate change. They are also useful in day-to-day weather forecasting models. Satellites such as Sentinel-3, with the Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer on-board, make such measurements. It is a big team effort to produce the surface temperature data, with many different stages. One important stage is cloud identification. Clouds stop our temperature sensor getting a good measurement of the surface below. We need to identify when the sensor is viewing cloud, so these views are not included when generating surface temperatures, and thereby ​interfering with the data.

We have automated cloud-screening routines that work really well much of the time, but of course, they are not perfect. Some types of cloud are a struggle to identify (e.g. low, warm or patchy cloud) and certain conditions can hamper it too (e.g. near coastlines, at dusk, over snow). Cloudy pixels are missed, and clear sky can even be falsely classed as cloud too, resulting in lost data.The CloudCatcher project icon

Since the measurements made by the satellite are important, we need to check their quality. The performance of our cloud screening has a direct impact on this and therefore needs monitoring. However, checking how well the cloud screening works is quite tricky. One way to do it is to have a 'cloud expert' carefully inspect many pixels of a subset of the images for cloud and clear-sky. This is time consuming and often only done on a small set of data. We think that everyone is a cloud expert, and that is why we have developed CloudCatcher, a new citizen science project.

We ask the question, just how accurate is our cloud mask? Help us to answer this by identifying clouds in real satellite images. By having a set of images screened by people, we can make a comparison with our automated cloud screening. It will help us to score our cloud screening performance, and point us to the areas that need more attention, thereby improving our methods. 

Now, CloudCatcher is a 'beta' project on the Zooniverse platform, meaning it is ready for testing by a pool of volunteers. We would really like you to try it out and give us your feedback to help make it even better before a bigger launch later on. Classify as many images as you like to give us our first set of results to work on. Your feedback will be valuable to us, and you will be able to view some beautiful scenes of the Earth while taking part in a real scientific project. 

How to take part

1. Have a go at CloudCatcher!​

You can access the project on any web browser on a laptop or PC​.

2. Send us your feedback! The project is still in development and we'd love your help to improve it and make sure it's a successful project  that is enjoyable and engages a wide variety of people. Here's how you can help us:

Satellite image of the Saharan desert

Images:

Middle: CloudCatcher avatar. Credit: CloudCatcher/ RAL Space 

Bottom: Clouds over the Saharan desert captured by Sentinel-3. Credit: Copernicus data / processed by RAL Spac​e

Contact: