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Dive into the research topics where Cyril Crevoisier is active.

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Featured researches published by Cyril Crevoisier.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012

Hyperspectral Earth Observation from IASI: Five Years of Accomplishments

Fiona Hilton; Raymond Armante; Thomas August; Christopher D. Barnet; Aurélie Bouchard; C. Camy-Peyret; Virginie Capelle; Lieven Clarisse; Cathy Clerbaux; Pierre-François Coheur; Andrew Collard; Cyril Crevoisier; G. Dufour; David P. Edwards; François Faijan; Nadia Fourrié; Antonia Gambacorta; Mitchell D. Goldberg; Vincent Guidard; Daniel Hurtmans; Sam Illingworth; Nicole Jacquinet-Husson; Tobias Kerzenmacher; Dieter Klaes; L. Lavanant; Guido Masiello; Marco Matricardi; A. P. McNally; Stuart M. Newman; Edward Pavelin

The Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) forms the main infrared sounding component of the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellitess (EUMETSATs) Meteorological Operation (MetOp)-A satellite (Klaes et al. 2007), which was launched in October 2006. This article presents the results of the first 4 yr of the operational IASI mission. The performance of the instrument is shown to be exceptional in terms of calibration and stability. The quality of the data has allowed the rapid use of the observations in operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) and the development of new products for atmospheric chemistry and climate studies, some of which were unexpected before launch. The assimilation of IASI observations in NWP models provides a significant forecast impact; in most cases the impact has been shown to be at least as large as for any previous instrument. In atmospheric chemistry, global distributions of gases, such as ozone and carbon monoxide, can be produ...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Regional US carbon sinks from three-dimensional atmospheric CO2 sampling

Cyril Crevoisier; Colm Sweeney; Manuel Gloor; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Pieter P. Tans

Studies diverge substantially on the actual magnitude of the North American carbon budget. This is due to the lack of appropriate data and also stems from the difficulty to properly model all the details of the flux distribution and transport inside the region of interest. To sidestep these difficulties, we use here a simple budgeting approach to estimate land-atmosphere fluxes across North America by balancing the inflow and outflow of CO2 from the troposphere. We base our study on the unique sampling strategy of atmospheric CO2 vertical profiles over North America from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Earth System Research Laboratory aircraft network, from which we infer the three-dimensional CO2 distribution over the continent. We find a moderate sink of 0.5 ± 0.4 PgC y-1 for the period 2004–2006 for the coterminous United States, in good agreement with the forest-inventory-based estimate of the first North American State of the Carbon Cycle Report, and averaged climate conditions. We find that the highest uptake occurs in the Midwest and in the Southeast. This partitioning agrees with independent estimates of crop uptake in the Midwest, which proves to be a significant part of the US atmospheric sink, and of secondary forest regrowth in the Southeast. Provided that vertical profile measurements are continued, our study offers an independent means to link regional carbon uptake to climate drivers.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2008

A wintertime uptake window for anthropogenic CO2 in the North Pacific

Keith B. Rodgers; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Olivier Aumont; Cyril Crevoisier; Clément de Boyer Montégut; Nicolas Metzl

An ocean model has been forced with NCEP reanalysis fluxes over 1948-2003 to evaluate the pathways and timescales associated with the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 over the North Pacific. The model reveals that there are two principal regions of uptake, the first in the region bounded by 35-45°N and 140-180°E, and the second along a band between 10-20°N and between 120°W and 180°E. For both of these regions, the dominant timescale of variability in uptake is seasonal, with maximum uptake occurring during winter and uptake being close to zero or slightly negative during summer when integrated over the basin. A decadal trend toward increased uptake of anthropogenic CO2 consists largely of modulations of the uptake maximum in winter. For detection of anthropogenic changes, this implies that in situ measurements will need to resolve the seasonal cycle in order to capture decadal trends in ΔpCO2. As uptake of anthropogenic CO2 occurs preferentially during winter, observationally based estimates which do not resolve the full seasonal cycle may result in underestimates of the rate of uptake of anthropogenic CO2. There is also a sizable circulation-driven decadal trend in the seasonal cycle of sea surface ΔpCO2 for the North Pacific, with maximum changes found near the boundary separating the subtropical and subpolar gyres in western and central regions of the basin. These changes are due to a trend in the large-scale circulation of the gyres, which itself is driven by a trend in the wind stress over the basin scale. This trend in the three-dimensional circulation is more important than the local trend in mixed layer depth (MLD) in contributing to the decadal trend in ΔpCO2.


Tellus B | 2006

A direct carbon budgeting approach to infer carbon sources and sinks. Design and synthetic application to complement the NACP observation network

Cyril Crevoisier; Manuel Gloor; Erwan Gloaguen; Larry W. Horowitz; Jorge L. Sarmiento; Colm Sweeney; Pieter P. Tans

In order to exploit the upcoming regular measurements of vertical carbon dioxide (CO2) profiles over North America implemented in the framework of the North American Carbon Program (NACP), we design a direct carbon budgeting approach to infer carbon sources and sinks over the continent using model simulations. Direct budgeting puts a control volume on top of North America, balances air mass in- and outflows into the volume and solves for the surface fluxes. The flows are derived from the observations through a geostatistical interpolation technique called Kriging combined with transport fields from weather analysis. The use of CO2 vertical profiles simulated by the atmospheric transport model MOZART-2 at the planned 19 stations of the NACP network has given an estimation of the error of 0.39 GtC yr-1 within the model world. Reducing this error may be achieved through a better estimation of mass fluxes associated with convective processes affecting North America. Complementary stations in the north-west and the north-east are also needed to resolve the variability of CO2 in these regions. For instance, the addition of a single station near 52◦N; 110◦W is shown to decrease the estimation error to 0.34 GtC yr-1.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Drivers of fire in the boreal forests: Data constrained design of a prognostic model of burned area for use in dynamic global vegetation models

Cyril Crevoisier; Elena Shevliakova; Manuel Gloor; Christian Wirth; Steve Pacala

[1] Boreal regions are an important component of the global carbon cycle because they host large stocks of aboveground and belowground carbon. Since boreal forest evolution is closely related to fire regimes, shifts in climate are likely to induce changes in ecosystems, potentially leading to a large release of carbon and other trace gases to the atmosphere. Prediction of the effect of this potential climate feedback on the Earth system is therefore important and requires the modeling of fire as a climate driven process in dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs). Here, we develop a new data-based prognostic model, for use in DGVMs, to estimate monthly burned area from four climate (precipitation, temperature, soil water content and relative humidity) and one human-related (road density) predictors for boreal forest. The burned area model is a function of current climatic conditions and is thus responsive to climate change. Model parameters are estimated using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo method applied to on ground observations from the Canadian Large Fire Database. The model is validated against independent observations from three boreal regions: Canada, Alaska and Siberia. Provided realistic climate predictors, the model is able to reproduce the seasonality, intensity and interannual variability of burned area, as well as the location of fire events. In particular, the model simulates well the timing of burning events, with two thirds of the events predicted for the correct month and almost all the rest being predicted 1 month before or after the observed event. The predicted annual burned area is in the range of various current estimates. The estimated annual relative error (standard deviation) is twelve percent in a grid cell, which makes the model suitable to study quantitatively the evolution of burned area with climate.


Surveys in Geophysics | 2017

Structure and Dynamical Influence of Water Vapor in the Lower Tropical Troposphere

Bjorn Stevens; Hélène Brogniez; Christoph Kiemle; Jean Lionel Lacour; Cyril Crevoisier; Johannes Kiliani

In situ, airborne and satellite measurements are used to characterize the structure of water vapor in the lower tropical troposphere—below the height,


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions | 2016

AirCore-HR: A high resolution column sampling to enhance the vertical description of CH 4 and CO 2

Olivier Membrive; Cyril Crevoisier; Colm Sweeney; F. Danis; Albert Hertzog; Andreas Engel; Harald Bönisch; Laurence Picon


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions | 2017

A simulated observation database to assess the impact of IASI-NG hyperspectral infrared sounder

Javier Andrey-Andrés; Nadia Fourrié; Vincent Guidard; Raymond Armante; Pascal Brunel; Cyril Crevoisier; Bernard Tournier

z_*,


La Météorologie [ISSN 0026-1181], 2015, Série 8, N° 91 ; p. 2 | 2015

Des ballons pour le climat

Olivier Membrive; Cyril Crevoisier; Albert Hertzog; F. Danis; Daniel Sourgen; Bertrand Barbé; Nadir Amarouche; Jean-Christophe Samaké; Fabien Frérot; Georges Durry; Lilian Joly; Thomas Decarpenterie; Julien Cousin; Andreas Engel; Harald Bönisch; Stéphane Louvel; Jean-Baptiste Renard


La Météorologie [ISSN 0026-1181], 2014, Série 8, N° 86 ; p. 3-5 | 2014

Iasi-NG : un concentré d'innovations technologiques pour l'étude de l'atmosphère terrestre

Cyril Crevoisier; Cathy Clerbaux; Vincent Guidard; Eric Péquignot; Frédérick Pasternak

z∗, of the triple-point isotherm,

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Christian Frankenberg

California Institute of Technology

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Clémence Pierangelo

Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales

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R. Armante

Université Paris-Saclay

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F. Chevallier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Cathy Clerbaux

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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