“…[3] Visible and infrared observations of clouds have provided vast amount of information on cloud properties; however, these techniques are limited to thin clouds or to the topmost layer of clouds, hence, cannot provide much needed information on the internal structure of clouds, such as the cloud ice mass. Passive submillimeter satellite observations can penetrate through most ice clouds and provide cloud ice mass information primarily through scattering in the Rayleigh-Mie region so that cloud temperature, cloud and surface emission, and multiple scattering that affect other remote sensing techniques are relatively unimportant [e.g., Evans et al, 1998;Wu et al, 2005;Eriksson et al, 2007;Buehler et al, 2007;Jiménez et al, 2007;Buehler et al, 2012]. Furthermore, active instruments have been proven to measure cloud ice mass with high vertical resolution [Stephens et al, 2002;Winker et al, 2009;Kumagai et al, 2003].…”