DOAJ Open Access 2017

Comparison of the GOSAT TANSO-FTS TIR CH volume mixing ratio vertical profiles with those measured by ACE-FTS, ESA MIPAS, IMK-IAA MIPAS, and 16 NDACC stations

K. S. Olsen K. Strong K. A. Walker K. A. Walker C. D. Boone +15 lainnya

Abstrak

The primary instrument on the Greenhouse gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT) is the Thermal And Near infrared Sensor for carbon Observations (TANSO) Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS). TANSO-FTS uses three short-wave infrared (SWIR) bands to retrieve total columns of CO<sub>2</sub> and CH<sub>4</sub> along its optical line of sight and one thermal infrared (TIR) channel to retrieve vertical profiles of CO<sub>2</sub> and CH<sub>4</sub> volume mixing ratios (VMRs) in the troposphere. We examine version 1 of the TANSO-FTS TIR CH<sub>4</sub> product by comparing co-located CH<sub>4</sub> VMR vertical profiles from two other remote-sensing FTS systems: the Canadian Space Agency's Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment FTS (ACE-FTS) on SCISAT (version 3.5) and the European Space Agency's Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) on Envisat (ESA ML2PP version 6 and IMK-IAA reduced-resolution version V5R_CH4_224/225), as well as 16 ground stations with the Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC). This work follows an initial inter-comparison study over the Arctic, which incorporated a ground-based FTS at the Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory (PEARL) at Eureka, Canada, and focuses on tropospheric and lower-stratospheric measurements made at middle and tropical latitudes between 2009 and 2013 (mid-2012 for MIPAS). For comparison, vertical profiles from all instruments are interpolated onto a common pressure grid, and smoothing is applied to ACE-FTS, MIPAS, and NDACC vertical profiles. Smoothing is needed to account for differences between the vertical resolution of each instrument and differences in the dependence on a priori profiles. The smoothing operators use the TANSO-FTS a priori and averaging kernels in all cases. We present zonally averaged mean CH<sub>4</sub> differences between each instrument and TANSO-FTS with and without smoothing, and we examine their information content, their sensitive altitude range, their correlation, their a priori dependence, and the variability within each data set. Partial columns are calculated from the VMR vertical profiles, and their correlations are examined. We find that the TANSO-FTS vertical profiles agree with the ACE-FTS and both MIPAS retrievals' vertical profiles within 4 % (± ∼  40 ppbv) below 15 km when smoothing is applied to the profiles from instruments with finer vertical resolution but that the relative differences can increase to on the order of 25 % when no smoothing is applied. Computed partial columns are tightly correlated for each pair of data sets. We investigate whether the difference between TANSO-FTS and other CH<sub>4</sub> VMR data products varies with latitude. Our study reveals a small dependence of around 0.1 % per 10 degrees latitude, with smaller differences over the tropics and greater differences towards the poles.

Penulis (20)

K

K. S. Olsen

K

K. Strong

K

K. A. Walker

K

K. A. Walker

C

C. D. Boone

P

P. Raspollini

J

J. Plieninger

W

W. Bader

W

W. Bader

S

S. Conway

M

M. Grutter

J

J. W. Hannigan

F

F. Hase

N

N. Jones

M

M. de Mazière

J

J. Notholt

M

M. Schneider

D

D. Smale

R

R. Sussmann

N

N. Saitoh

Format Sitasi

Olsen, K.S., Strong, K., Walker, K.A., Walker, K.A., Boone, C.D., Raspollini, P. et al. (2017). Comparison of the GOSAT TANSO-FTS TIR CH volume mixing ratio vertical profiles with those measured by ACE-FTS, ESA MIPAS, IMK-IAA MIPAS, and 16 NDACC stations. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-10-3697-2017

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2017
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.5194/amt-10-3697-2017
Akses
Open Access ✓