Skip to content

To bring about breakthroughs in international space research

  • Home
  • Onderzoeksvragen
  • Pijlers
  • Missies
  • Over ons
  • Contact
Home
    Home

    SRON | Wetenschappelijk ruimteonderzoek Nederland

    To bring about breakthroughs in international space research

    Home
    • Onderzoeksvragen
    • Pijlers
      • Wetenschap
      • Technologie
      • Instrumentatie
      • Onze mensen
      • Impact
    • Missies
    • Over ons
    • Actueel
    • Contact
    • SRON Academy
    • Werken bij
    • Bezoek aan SRON
    Home
      • Onderzoeksvragen
        • Hoe ontrafelen we de fysica achter zwarte gaten?
        • Hoe kunnen we de zwakste exoplaneten waarnemen?
        • Waar worden broeikasgassen uitgestoten?
        • Hoe speciaal is de aarde in de context van het heelal?
        • Hoe ontstaan en groeien zwarte gaten?
        • Hoe beïnvloeden aerosolen het klimaat?
        • Hoe ontstaan sterren en planeten?
        • Hoe beïnvloedt klimaatverandering het leven op aarde?
      • Pijlers
        • Wetenschap
          • Aardobservatie
            • Methaan
            • Aerosolen en Wolken
            • CO2
            • Koolmonoxide
          • Astrofysica
            • Lage energie
            • Hoge energie
            • Exoplaneten
        • Technologie
        • Instrumentatie
          • Nanotechnologie
          • Cryogenica
          • Optica
          • Electronica
          • PA/QA kwaliteit
          • Mechanica / Realisatie
        • Onze mensen
        • Impact
      • Missies
        • Actief
          • ALMA
          • GUSTO
          • PACE
          • Sentinel-5p
          • SPEX airborne
          • XRISM
        • In ontwikkeling
          • ARIEL
          • LISA
          • Metop-SG A
        • Legacy
          • BeppoSAX
          • STO2
      • Over ons
        • Faciliteiten
        • Geschiedenis
      • Actueel
      • Contact
      • SRON Academy
      • Werken bij
      • Bezoek aan SRON
      • Privacy policy
      01/09/2015

      Carbon monoxide total columns from SCIAMACHY 2.3 μm atmospheric reflectance measurements: towards a full-mission data product (2003-2012)

      We present a full-mission data product of carbon monoxide (CO) vertical column densities using the 2310-2338 nm SCIAMACHY reflectance measurements over clear sky land scenes for the period January 2003-April 2012. The retrieval employs the SICOR algorithm, which will be used for operational data processing of the Sentinel-5 Precursor mission, combined with a SCIAMACHY specific radiometric soft-calibration to mitigate instrumental issues. The retrieval approach infers simultaneously carbon monoxide, methane and water vapour column densities together with a Lambertian surface albedo from individual SCIAMACHY measurements employing a non-scattering radiative transfer model. To account for the radiometric instrument degradation including the formation of an ice-layer on the 2.3 μm detector-array, we consider clear sky measurements over the Sahara as a natural calibration target. For these specific measurements, we spectrally calibrate the SCIAMACHY measurements and determine a spectral radiometric offset and the width of the instrument spectral response function as a function of time for the entire operational phase of the mission. We show that the smoothing error of individual clear sky CO retrievals is less than ±1 ppb and thus this error contribution has not to be accounted for in the validation considering the much higher retrieval noise. The CO data product is validated against measurements of ground-based Fourier transform infrared spectrometers at 27 stations of the NDACC-IRWG and TCCON network and MOZAIC/IAGOS aircraft measurements at 26 airports worldwide. Overall, we find a good agreement with TCCON measurements with a mean bias <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>b</span> = -1.2 ppb and a station-to-station bias with <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>σ</span> = 7.2 ppb. For the NDACC-IRWG network, we obtain a larger mean station bias of <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>b</span> = -9.2 ppb with <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>σ</span> = 8.1 ppb and for the MOZAIC/IAGOS measurements we find <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>b</span> = -6.4 ppb with <span style=”border-top: 1px solid #000; color: #000;”>σ</span> = 5.6 ppb. The SCIAMACHY data set is subject to a small but significant trend of 1.47 ± 0.25 ppb yr-1. After trend correction, the bias with respect to MOZAIC/IAGOS observation is 2.5 ppb, with respect to TCCON measurements it is -4.6 ppb and with respect to NDACC-IRWG measurements -8.4 ppb. Hence, a discrepancy of 3.8 ppb remains between the global biases with NDACC-IRWG and TCCON, which is confirmed by directly comparing NDACC-IRWG and TCCON measurements. Generally, the scatter of the individual SCIAMACHY CO retrievals is high and dominated by large measurement noise. Hence, for practical usage of the dataset, averaging of individual retrievals is required. As an example, we show that monthly mean SCIAMACHY CO retrievals, averaged separately over Northern and Southern Africa, reflect the spatial and temporal variability of biomass burning events in agreement with the global chemical transport model TM5.

      SRON Leiden

      Leiden

      Niels Bohrweg 4
      2333 CA Leiden
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)88 777 56 00

      SRON Groningen

      Groningen

      Landleven 12
      9747 AD Groningen
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)50 363 40 74

      • Onderzoeksvragen
      • Pijlers
        • Wetenschap
        • Technologie
        • Instrumentatie
        • Onze mensen
        • Impact
      • Missies
      • Over ons
      • Actueel
      • Contact
      SRON on bluesky SRON on Instagram SRON on LinkedIn

      Niels Bohrweg 4
      2333 CA Leiden
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)88 777 56 00

      Landleven 12
      9747 AD Groningen
      The Netherlands
      +31 (0)50 363 40 74

      NWO-I

      SRON is onderdeel van de institutenorganisatie van NWO-I

      • Privacy policy
      Home

      What happens up there, starts down here.