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Featured researches published by B. W. Knosp.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2006

The Earth observing system microwave limb sounder (EOS MLS) on the aura Satellite

J. W. Waters; L. Froidevaux; R. S. Harwood; R. F. Jarnot; Herbert M. Pickett; William G. Read; Peter H. Siegel; Richard E. Cofield; Mark J. Filipiak; Dennis A. Flower; James R. Holden; Gary K. Lau; Nathaniel J. Livesey; G. L. Manney; Hugh C. Pumphrey; Michelle L. Santee; Dong L. Wu; David T. Cuddy; Richard R. Lay; Mario S. Loo; V. S. Perun; Michael J. Schwartz; Paul Stek; Robert P. Thurstans; Mark A. Boyles; Kumar M. Chandra; Marco C. Chavez; Gun-Shing Chen; Bharat V. Chudasama; Randy Dodge

The Earth Observing System Microwave Limb Sounder measures several atmospheric chemical species (OH, HO/sub 2/, H/sub 2/O, O/sub 3/, HCl, ClO, HOCl, BrO, HNO/sub 3/, N/sub 2/O, CO, HCN, CH/sub 3/CN, volcanic SO/sub 2/), cloud ice, temperature, and geopotential height to improve our understanding of stratospheric ozone chemistry, the interaction of composition and climate, and pollution in the upper troposphere. All measurements are made simultaneously and continuously, during both day and night. The instrument uses heterodyne radiometers that observe thermal emission from the atmospheric limb in broad spectral regions centered near 118, 190, 240, and 640 GHz, and 2.5 THz. It was launched July 15, 2004 on the National Aeronautics and Space Administrations Aura satellite and started full-up science operations on August 13, 2004. An atmospheric limb scan and radiometric calibration for all bands are performed routinely every 25 s. Vertical profiles are retrieved every 165 km along the suborbital track, covering 82/spl deg/S to 82/spl deg/N latitudes on each orbit. Instrument performance to date has been excellent; data have been made publicly available; and initial science results have been obtained.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Validation of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder middle atmosphere water vapor and nitrous oxide measurements

Alyn Lambert; William G. Read; Nathaniel J. Livesey; Michelle L. Santee; G. L. Manney; L. Froidevaux; Dong L. Wu; Michael J. Schwartz; Hugh C. Pumphrey; Carlos Jiménez; Gerald E. Nedoluha; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; R. Fuller; R. F. Jarnot; B. W. Knosp; Herbert M. Pickett; V. S. Perun; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; R. P. Thurstans; Paul A. Wagner; J. W. Waters; Kenneth W. Jucks; G. C. Toon; R. A. Stachnik; Peter F. Bernath; C. D. Boone

[1] The quality of the version 2.2 (v2.2) middle atmosphere water vapor and nitrous oxide measurements from the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) on the Earth Observing System (EOS) Aura satellite is assessed. The impacts of the various sources of systematic error are estimated by a comprehensive set of retrieval simulations. Comparisons with correlative data sets from ground-based, balloon and satellite platforms operating in the UV/visible, infrared and microwave regions of the spectrum are performed. Precision estimates are also validated, and recommendations are given on the data usage. The v2.2 H2O data have been improved over v1.5 by providing higher vertical resolution in the lower stratosphere and better precision above the stratopause. The single-profile precision is � 0.2–0.3 ppmv (4–9%), and the vertical resolution is � 3–4 km in the stratosphere. The precision and vertical resolution become worse with increasing height above the stratopause. Over the pressure range 0.1–0.01 hPa the precision degrades from 0.4 to 1.1 ppmv (6–34%), and the vertical resolution degrades to � 12–16 km. The accuracy is estimated to be 0.2–0.5 ppmv (4–11%) for the pressure range 68–0.01 hPa. The scientifically useful range of the H2O data is from 316 to 0.002 hPa, although only the 82–0.002 hPa pressure range is validated here. Substantial improvement has been achieved in the v2.2 N2O data over v1.5 by reducing a significant low bias in the stratosphere and eliminating unrealistically high biased mixing ratios in the polar regions. The single-profile precision is � 13–25 ppbv (7–38%), the vertical resolution is � 4–6 km and the accuracy is estimated to be 3–70 ppbv (9–25%) for the pressure range 100–4.6 hPa. The scientifically useful range of the N2O data is from 100 to 1 hPa.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder stratospheric ozone measurements

L. Froidevaux; Yibo Jiang; Alyn Lambert; Nathaniel J. Livesey; William G. Read; J. W. Waters; Edward V. Browell; J. W. Hair; M. Avery; T. J. McGee; Laurence Twigg; G. K. Sumnicht; K. W. Jucks; J. J. Margitan; B. Sen; R. A. Stachnik; G. C. Toon; Peter F. Bernath; C. D. Boone; Kaley A. Walker; Mark J. Filipiak; R. S. Harwood; R. Fuller; G. L. Manney; Michael J. Schwartz; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; R. F. Jarnot

[1] The Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) aboard the Aura satellite has provided essentially daily global measurements of ozone (O3) profiles from the upper troposphere to the upper mesosphere since August of 2004. This paper focuses on validation of the MLS stratospheric standard ozone product and its uncertainties, as obtained from the 240 GHz radiometer measurements, with a few results concerning mesospheric ozone. We compare average differences and scatter from matched MLS version 2.2 profiles and coincident ozone profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar measurements taken during Aura Validation Experiment (AVE) campaigns. Ozone comparisons are also made between MLS and balloon-borne remote and in situ sensors. We provide a detailed characterization of random and systematic uncertainties for MLS ozone. We typically find better agreement in the comparisons using MLS version 2.2 ozone than the version 1.5 data. The agreement and the MLS uncertainty estimates in the stratosphere are often of the order of 5%, with values closer to 10% (and occasionally 20%) at the lowest stratospheric altitudes, where small positive MLS biases can be found. There is very good agreement in the latitudinal distributions obtained from MLS and from coincident profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar data along the MLS track.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Validation of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder ClO measurements

Michelle L. Santee; Alyn Lambert; William G. Read; Nathaniel J. Livesey; G. L. Manney; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; L. Froidevaux; R. Fuller; R. F. Jarnot; B. W. Knosp; V. S. Perun; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; R. P. Thurstans; Paul A. Wagner; J. W. Waters; Brian J. Connor; Jakub Urban; Donal P. Murtagh; Philippe Ricaud; B. Barret; Armin Kleinböhl; Jayanarayanan Kuttippurath; H. Küllmann; M. von Hobe; G. C. Toon; R. A. Stachnik

We assess the quality of the version 2.2 (v2.2) ClO measurements from the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) on the Earth Observing System Aura satellite. The MLS v2.2 ClO data are scientifically useful over the range 100 to 1 hPa, with a single- profile precision of similar to 0.1 ppbv throughout most of the vertical domain. Vertical resolution is similar to 3-4 km. Comparisons with climatology and correlative measurements from a variety of different platforms indicate that both the amplitude and the altitude of the peak in the ClO profile in the upper stratosphere are well determined by MLS. The latitudinal and seasonal variations in the ClO distribution in the lower stratosphere are also well determined, but a substantial negative bias is present in both daytime and nighttime mixing ratios at retrieval levels below (i. e., pressures larger than) 22 hPa. Outside of the winter polar vortices, this negative bias can be eliminated by subtracting gridded or zonal mean nighttime values from the individual daytime measurements. In studies for which knowledge of lower stratospheric ClO mixing ratios inside the winter polar vortices to better than a few tenths of a ppbv is needed, however, day - night differences are not recommended and the negative bias must be corrected for by subtracting the estimated value of the bias from the individual measurements at each affected retrieval level.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder Ozone by ozonesonde and lidar measurements

Yibo Jiang; L. Froidevaux; Alyn Lambert; Nathaniel J. Livesey; William G. Read; J. W. Waters; Bojan Bojkov; Thierry Leblanc; I. S. McDermid; Sophie Godin-Beekmann; Mark J. Filipiak; R. S. Harwood; R. Fuller; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; R. F. Jarnot; B. W. Knosp; V. S. Perun; Michael J. Schwartz; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; R. P. Thurstans; P. A. Wagner; M. Allaart; S. B. Andersen; G. E. Bodeker; B. Calpini; H. Claude

We present validation studies of MLS version 2.2 upper tropospheric and stratospheric ozone profiles using ozonesonde and lidar data as well as climatological data. Ozone measurements from over 60 ozonesonde stations worldwide and three lidar stations are compared with coincident MLS data. The MLS ozone stratospheric data between 150 and 3 hPa agree well with ozonesonde measurements, within 8% for the global average. MLS values at 215 hPa are biased high compared to ozonesondes by A`20% at middle to high latitude, although there is a lot of variability in this altitude region. Comparisons between MLS and ground-based lidar measurements from Mauna Loa, Hawaii, from the Table Mountain Facility, California, and from the Observatoire de Haute-Provence, France, give very good agreement, within A`5%, for the stratospheric values. The comparisons between MLS and the Table Mountain Facility tropospheric ozone lidar show that MLS data are biased high by A`30% at 215 hPa, consistent with that indicated by the ozonesonde data. We obtain better global average agreement between MLS and ozonesonde partial column values down to 215 hPa, although the average MLS values at low to middle latitudes are higher than the ozonesonde values by up to a few percent. MLS v2.2 ozone data agree better than the MLS v1.5 data with ozonesonde and lidar measurements. MLS tropical data show the wave one longitudinal pattern in the upper troposphere, with similarities to the average distribution from ozonesondes. High upper tropospheric ozone values are also observed by MLS in the tropical Pacific from June to November.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder BrO observations in the stratosphere

L. J. Kovalenko; N. L. Livesey; R. J. Salawitch; C. Camy-Peyret; M. P. Chipperfield; R. E. Cofield; M. Dorf; Brian J. Drouin; L. Froidevaux; R. Fuller; Florence Goutail; R. F. Jarnot; Kenneth W. Jucks; B. W. Knosp; Alyn Lambert; Ian A. MacKenzie; K. Pfeilsticker; Jean-Pierre Pommereau; William G. Read; Michelle L. Santee; Michael J. Schwartz; W. V. Snyder; R. A. Stachnik; P. C. Stek; Paul A. Wagner; J. W. Waters

Validation of stratospheric BrO vertical profiles obtained by the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) on the Aura satellite is discussed. MLS BrO measurements are compared with expectations of its latitudinal and seasonal dependence, as well as with more localized balloon-borne measurements of BrO. We describe the expected precision and systematic errors of the version 2.2 retrieval and show that scientific studies using MLS BrO vertical profiles require extensive averaging to increase the signal-to-noise ratio to useful values. A monthly zonal mean over a 10° latitude bin (about 3,000 individual profiles) results in a precision of approximately ±4 ppt (〜25% of a typical daytime signal). Moreover, it is necessary to take day/night differences to remove large biases. The pressure range over which the data are considered useful is 10 to 3.2 hPa. Over this range, the estimated accuracy in the day/night difference is about ±20%. The vertical resolution is 5.5 km for 10 to 3.2 hPa. Day/night differences are a good measure of daytime BrO from 10 to 4.6 hPa; for 3.2 hPa the nonnegligible nighttime BrO needs to be accounted for. We infer total inorganic bromine (Bry) to be 22.1 ± 5.5 ppt on the basis of analysis of MLS measurements of BrO, which implies a contribution of 6.5 ± 5.5 ppt to stratospheric bromine from sources other than long-lived CH3Br and halons


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Validation of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder temperature and geopotential height measurements

Michael J. Schwartz; Alyn Lambert; G. L. Manney; William G. Read; Nathaniel J. Livesey; L. Froidevaux; Chi O. Ao; Peter F. Bernath; C. D. Boone; R. E. Cofield; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; Eric J. Fetzer; R. Fuller; R. F. Jarnot; J. H. Jiang; Yibo Jiang; B. W. Knosp; Kirstin Krüger; Jui-Lin Li; M. G. Mlynczak; Steven Pawson; James M. Russell; Michelle L. Santee; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; R. P. Thurstans; Adrian M. Tompkins; Paul A. Wagner; Kaley A. Walker


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Aura Microwave Limb Sounder upper tropospheric and lower stratospheric H2O and relative humidity with respect to ice validation

William G. Read; Alyn Lambert; Julio T. Bacmeister; R. E. Cofield; Lance E. Christensen; D. T. Cuddy; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; Eric J. Fetzer; L. Froidevaux; R. Fuller; R. L. Herman; R. F. Jarnot; J. H. Jiang; Yibo Jiang; Kimberly Kelly; B. W. Knosp; L. J. Kovalenko; Nathaniel J. Livesey; Han-Shou Liu; G. L. Manney; Herbert M. Pickett; Hugh C. Pumphrey; Karen H. Rosenlof; X. Sabounchi; Michelle L. Santee; Michael J. Schwartz; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; Hui Su


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder O3 and CO observations in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere

Nathaniel J. Livesey; Mark J. Filipiak; L. Froidevaux; William G. Read; Alyn Lambert; Michelle L. Santee; J. H. Jiang; Hugh C. Pumphrey; J. W. Waters; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; R. Fuller; R. F. Jarnot; Yibo Jiang; B. W. Knosp; Qinbin Li; V. S. Perun; Michael J. Schwartz; W. V. Snyder; P. C. Stek; R. P. Thurstans; Paul A. Wagner; M. Avery; Edward V. Browell; Jean-Pierre Cammas; Lance E. Christensen; Glenn S. Diskin; R. S. Gao


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Solar occultation satellite data and derived meteorological products: Sampling issues and comparisons with Aura Microwave Limb Sounder

G. L. Manney; W. H. Daffer; Joseph M. Zawodny; Peter F. Bernath; K. W. Hoppel; Kaley A. Walker; B. W. Knosp; C. D. Boone; Ellis E. Remsberg; Michelle L. Santee; V. Lynn Harvey; Steven Pawson; D. R. Jackson; Lance E. Deaver; C. Thomas McElroy; C. A. McLinden; James R. Drummond; Hugh C. Pumphrey; Alyn Lambert; Michael J. Schwartz; L. Froidevaux; Sean D. McLeod; Lawrence L. Takacs; Max J. Suarez; Charles R. Trepte; David Cuddy; Nathaniel J. Livesey; R. S. Harwood; J. W. Waters

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L. Froidevaux

California Institute of Technology

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Alyn Lambert

California Institute of Technology

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J. W. Waters

California Institute of Technology

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Michael J. Schwartz

California Institute of Technology

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Michelle L. Santee

California Institute of Technology

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R. F. Jarnot

California Institute of Technology

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W. H. Daffer

California Institute of Technology

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William G. Read

California Institute of Technology

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Brian J. Drouin

California Institute of Technology

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Nathaniel J. Livesey

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

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