Clear sky fraction above Indonesia: an analysis for astronomical site selection
T. Hidayat, P. Mahasena, B. Dermawan, T. W. Hadi, P. W. Premadi, and, D. Herdiwijaya

TL;DR
This study analyzes satellite data over 15 years to identify regions in Indonesia with high clear sky fractions suitable for astronomical observatories, highlighting East Nusa Tenggara as a promising site.
Contribution
It develops an algorithm to assess cloud cover using satellite IR data and identifies optimal locations in Indonesia for future astronomical site development.
Findings
East Nusa Tenggara has over 70% clear sky fraction.
Satellite-based cloud detection effectively guides site selection.
Identified regions can support multi-wavelength astronomical observations.
Abstract
We report a study of cloud cover over Indonesia based on meteorological satellite data, spanning over the past 15 years (from 1996 to 2010) in order to be able to select a new astronomical site capable to host a multi-wavelength astronomical observatory. High spatial resolution of meteorological satellite data acquired from {\it Geostationary Meteorological Satellite 5} ({\it GMS 5}), {\it Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite 9} ({\it GOES 9}), and {\it Multi-functional Transport Satellite-1R} ({\it MTSAT-1R}) are used to derive yearly average clear fractions over the regions of Indonesia. This parameter is determined from temperature measurement of the IR3 channel (water vapor, 6.7 m) for high altitude clouds (cirrus) and from the IR1 channel (10.7 m) for lower altitude clouds. Accordingly, an algorithm is developed to detect the corresponding clouds. The results…
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