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Featured researches published by D. A. Degenstein.


Canadian Journal of Physics | 2004

The OSIRIS Instrument on the Odin Spacecraft

E. J. Llewellyn; N. D. Lloyd; D. A. Degenstein; Donal P. Murtagh; Samuel Brohede

The optical spectrograph and infrared imager system (OSIRIS) on board the Odin spacecraft is designed to retrieve altitude profiles of terrestrial atmospheric minor species by observing limb-radiance profiles. The grating optical spectrograph (OS) obtains spectra of scattered sunlight over the range 280-800 nm with a spectral resolution of approximately 1 nm. The Odin spacecraft performs a repetitive vertical limb scan to sweep the OS 1 km vertical field of view over selected altitude ranges from approximately 10 to 100 km. The terrestrial absorption features that are superimposed on the scattered solar spectrum are monitored to derive the minor species altitude profiles. The spectrograph also detects the airglow, which can be used to study the mesosphere and lower thermosphere. The other part of OSIRIS is a three-channel infrared imager (IRI) that uses linear array detectors to image the vertical limb radiance over an altitude range of approximately 100 km. The IRI observes both scattered sunlight and the airglow emissions from the oxygen infrared atmospheric band at 1.27 mum and the OH (3-1) Meinel band at 1.53 mum. A tomographic inversion technique is used with a series of these vertical images to derive the two-dimensional distribution of the emissions within the orbit plane.


Science | 2012

Large volcanic aerosol load in the stratosphere linked to Asian monsoon transport.

Alan Robock; William J. Randel; Terry Deshler; Landon A. Rieger; N. D. Lloyd; Edward J. Llewellyn; D. A. Degenstein

Indirect Injection Aerosols in the stratosphere, especially submicron-hydrated sulfuric acid droplets, are an important factor influencing climate variability. Stratospheric sulfate aerosols can form from sulfur dioxide that has been transported from the underlying troposphere. Large volcanic eruptions can inject sulfur dioxide and other material into the stratosphere, but smaller volcanoes have been thought not to be energetic enough to do so. Bourassa et al. (p. 78) used satellite data to show that sulfur dioxide from the 2011 eruption of the Nabro stratovolcano in Eritrea was lofted into the stratosphere by deep convection associated with the Asian summer monsoon. Even moderate volcanic eruptions can inject sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere with the help of the Asian monsoon. The Nabro stratovolcano in Eritrea, northeastern Africa, erupted on 13 June 2011, injecting approximately 1.3 teragrams of sulfur dioxide (SO2) to altitudes of 9 to 14 kilometers in the upper troposphere, which resulted in a large aerosol enhancement in the stratosphere. The SO2 was lofted into the lower stratosphere by deep convection and the circulation associated with the Asian summer monsoon while gradually converting to sulfate aerosol. This demonstrates that to affect climate, volcanic eruptions need not be strong enough to inject sulfur directly to the stratosphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2005

Polar vortex evolution during the 2002 Antarctic major warming as observed by the Odin satellite

P. Ricaud; Franck Lefèvre; Gwenael Berthet; Donal P. Murtagh; E. J. Llewellyn; G. Mégie; E. Kyrölä; G.W. Leppelmeier; H. Auvinen; Cathy Boonne; Samuel Brohede; D. A. Degenstein; J. De La Noë; E. Dupuy; L. El Amraoui; Patrick Eriksson; Wayne F. J. Evans; U. Frisk; R. L. Gattinger; F. X. Girod; C. S. Haley; S. Hassinen; Alain Hauchecorne; C. Jiménez; E. Kyrö; N. Lautie; E. Le Flochmoën; N. D. Lloyd; J. C. McConnell; Ian C. McDade

In September 2002 the Antarctic polar vortex split in two under the influence of a sudden warming. During this event, the Odin satellite was able to measure both ozone (O3) and chlorine monoxide (ClO), a key constituent responsible for the so-called “ozone hole”, together with nitrous oxide (N2O), a dynamical tracer, and nitric acid (HNO3) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), tracers of denitrification. The submillimeter radiometer (SMR) microwave instrument and the Optical Spectrograph and Infrared Imager System (OSIRIS) UV-visible light spectrometer (VIS) and IR instrument on board Odin have sounded the polar vortex during three different periods: before (19–20 September), during (24–25 September), and after (1–2 and 4–5 October) the vortex split. Odin observations coupled with the Reactive Processes Ruling the Ozone Budget in the Stratosphere (REPROBUS) chemical transport model at and above 500 K isentropic surfaces (heights above 18 km) reveal that on 19–20 September the Antarctic vortex was dynamically stable and chemically nominal: denitrified, with a nearly complete chlorine activation, and a 70% O3 loss at 500 K. On 25–26 September the unusual morphology of the vortex is monitored by the N2O observations. The measured ClO decay is consistent with other observations performed in 2002 and in the past. The vortex split episode is followed by a nearly complete deactivation of the ClO radicals on 1–2 October, leading to the end of the chemical O3 loss, while HNO3 and NO2 fields start increasing. This acceleration of the chlorine deactivation results from the warming of the Antarctic vortex in 2002, putting an early end to the polar stratospheric cloud season. The model simulation suggests that the vortex elongation toward regions of strong solar irradiance also favored the rapid reformation of ClONO2. The observed dynamical and chemical evolution of the 2002 polar vortex is qualitatively well reproduced by REPROBUS. Quantitative differences are mainly attributable to the too weak amounts of HNO3 in the model, which do not produce enough NO2 in presence of sunlight to deactivate chlorine as fast as observed by Odin.


Applied Optics | 2003

Volume emission rate tomography from a satellite platform.

D. A. Degenstein; Edward J. Llewellyn; N. D. Lloyd

The possibility of retrieving horizontal atmospheric structure from a series of limb images taken aboard a satellite is discussed and a maximum likelihood expectation maximization algorithm is developed. Examples of the retrieval of horizontal structure with this algorithm, for different S/N (signal-to-noise) ratios and different structures, are presented. It is shown that with this algorithm and even in the presence of substantial observational noise, a S/N equal to 10 for a single observation, it is possible to retrieve both horizontal and vertical atmospheric structure.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

SPARC Data Initiative: A comparison of ozone climatologies from international satellite limb sounders

Susann Tegtmeier; M. I. Hegglin; J. Anderson; Samuel Brohede; D. A. Degenstein; L. Froidevaux; R. Fuller; B. Funke; John C. Gille; Alan G. Jones; Yasuko Kasai; Kirstin Krüger; E. Kyrölä; Gretchen Lingenfelser; Jerry Lumpe; B. Nardi; Jessica L. Neu; D. Pendlebury; Ellis E. Remsberg; A. Rozanov; Lesley Smith; Matthew Toohey; Joachim Urban; T. von Clarmann; Kaley A. Walker; R. H. J. Wang

A comprehensive quality assessment of the ozone products from 18 limb-viewing satellite instruments is provided by means of a detailed intercomparison. The ozone climatologies in form of monthly zonal mean time series covering the upper troposphere to lower mesosphere are obtained from LIMS, SAGE I/II/III, UARS-MLS, HALOE, POAM II/III, SMR, OSIRIS, MIPAS, GOMOS, SCIAMACHY, ACE-FTS, ACE-MAESTRO, Aura-MLS, HIRDLS, and SMILES within 1978–2010. The intercomparisons focus on mean biases of annual zonal mean fields, interannual variability, and seasonal cycles. Additionally, the physical consistency of the data is tested through diagnostics of the quasi-biennial oscillation and Antarctic ozone hole. The comprehensive evaluations reveal that the uncertainty in our knowledge of the atmospheric ozone mean state is smallest in the tropical and midlatitude middle stratosphere with a 1σ multi-instrument spread of less than ±5%. While the overall agreement among the climatological data sets is very good for large parts of the stratosphere, individual discrepancies have been identified, including unrealistic month-to-month fluctuations, large biases in particular atmospheric regions, or inconsistencies in the seasonal cycle. Notable differences between the data sets exist in the tropical lower stratosphere (with a spread of ±30%) and at high latitudes (±15%). In particular, large relative differences are identified in the Antarctic during the time of the ozone hole, with a spread between the monthly zonal mean fields of ±50%. The evaluations provide guidance on what data sets are the most reliable for applications such as studies of ozone variability, model-measurement comparisons, detection of long-term trends, and data-merging activities.


Science | 2013

Response to comments on "Large volcanic aerosol load in the stratosphere linked to Asian monsoon transport".

Alan Robock; William J. Randel; Terry Deshler; Landon A. Rieger; N. D. Lloyd; Edward J. Llewellyn; D. A. Degenstein

Fromm et al. and Vernier et al. suggest that their analyses of satellite measurements indicate that the main part of the Nabro volcanic plume from the eruption on 13 June 2011 was directly injected into the stratosphere. We address these analyses and, in addition, show that both wind trajectories and height-resolved profiles of sulfur dioxide indicate that although the eruption column may have extended higher than the Smithsonian report we highlighted, it was overwhelmingly tropospheric. Additionally, the height-resolved sulfur dioxide profiles provide further convincing evidence for convective transport of volcanic gas to the stratosphere from deep convection associated with the Asian monsoon.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2004

Comparison of the Odin/OSIRIS stratospheric ozone profiles with coincident POAM III and ozonesonde measurements

Svetlana V. Petelina; E. J. Llewellyn; D. A. Degenstein; N. D. Lloyd; R. L. Gattinger; C. S. Haley; C. von Savigny; Erik Griffioen; Ian C. McDade; Wayne F. J. Evans; Donal P. Murtagh; J. De La Noë

We present first statistical comparison results for stratospheric ozone density profiles retrieved from Odin/OSIRIS limb scattered radiance with 1220 coincident POAM III and 205 coincident ozonesonde measurements. Profiles are compared on a monthly basis from November 2001 to October 2002. Most of the time, differences between OSIRIS mean profiles and those measured by POAM III and ozonesondes were 5-7% between 15 km and 32 km, and within 15% above 32 km. In April-July 2002, OSIRIS mean profiles appear shifted downward by ∼1 km, introducing a difference of about 10% with POAM III and about 25% with ozonesonde profiles between 15 km and 32 km. This study demonstrates that outside the April-July 2002 period, the OSIRIS ozone profiles agree well with coincident ozonesonde and POAM III ozone profiles and make a valuable addition to the international ozone database available for research into global ozone change.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Odin/OSIRIS observations of stratospheric BrO: Retrieval methodology, climatology, and inferred Bry

C. A. McLinden; C. S. Haley; N. D. Lloyd; F. Hendrick; A. Rozanov; B.-M. Sinnhuber; Florence Goutail; D. A. Degenstein; E. J. Llewellyn; Christopher E. Sioris; M. Van Roozendael; Jean-Pierre Pommereau; W. Lotz; J. P. Burrows

A 7+ year (2001–2008) data set of stratospheric BrO profiles measured by the Optical Spectrograph and Infra-Red Imager System (OSIRIS) instrument, a UV-visible spectrometer measuring limb-scattered sunlight from the Odin satellite, is presented. Zonal mean radiance spectra are computed for each day and inverted to yield effective daily zonal mean BrO profiles from 16 to 36 km. A detailed description of the retrieval methodology and error analysis is presented. Single-profile precision and effective resolution are found to be about 30% and 3–5 km, respectively, throughout much of the retrieval range. Individual profile and monthly mean comparisons with ground-based, balloon, and satellite instruments are found to agree to about 30%. A BrO climatology is presented, and its morphology and correlation with NO2 is consistent with our current understanding of bromine chemistry. Monthly mean Bry maps are derived. Two methods of calculating total Bry in the stratosphere are used and suggest (21.0 ± 5.0) pptv with a contribution from very short lived substances of (5.0 ± 5.0) pptv, consistent with other recent estimates.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012

OSIRIS A Decade of Scattered Light

Christopher Anthony McLinden; Samuel Brohede; D. A. Degenstein; W. J. F. Evans; R. L. Gattinger; C. S. Haley; E. J. Llewellyn; N. D. Lloyd; P. Loewen; Randall V. Martin; J. C. McConnell; Ian C. McDade; Donal P. Murtagh; L. Rieger; C. von Savigny; Patrick E. Sheese; Christopher E. Sioris; Brian H. Solheim; Kimberly Strong

Into year 11 of a 2-yr mission, OSIRIS is redefining how limb-scattered sunlight can be used to probe the atmosphere, even into the upper troposphere.


Archive | 1997

Osiris — An Application of Tomography for Absorbed Emissions in Remote Sensing

E. J. Llewellyn; D. A. Degenstein; Ian C. McDade; R. L. Gattinger; R. King; R. Buckingham; E.H. Richardson; D.P. Murtagh; Wayne F. J. Evans; Brian H. Solheim; K. Strong; J. C. McConnell

The Odin satellite, which is presently scheduled for launch in March 1998, is a Swedish led joint astronomy/aeronomy mission that includes participation from Canada, Finland and France. The satellite which has a planned lifetime of two years carries only two scientific instruments. One is a mm/sub-mm radiometer (SMR) that will be supplied by Sweden and Finland and will be used to make both aeronomic observations of emissions from the Earth’s limb, in order to study important middle atmosphere processes, and astronomical observations that will provide new information on the physics and chemistry of the interstellar medium. The second instrument is a combined UV/visible optical spectrograph and infrared imager (OSIRIS) that will be provided by Canada. The OSIRIS instrument will make observations that relate to both polar ozone depletion and other important processes in the middle atmosphere. In order to meet these quite diverse scientific objectives the selected Odin orbit is sun synchronous circular, height 600 km, with the ascending node at 1800 LT. The spacecraft is 3-axis stabilized and may be pointed in any direction up to 32 degrees away from the orbit plane, although the exact upper limit depends upon the season. Essentially the orbit plane is along, or near, the terminator.

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E. J. Llewellyn

University of Saskatchewan

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N. D. Lloyd

University of Saskatchewan

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R. L. Gattinger

University of Saskatchewan

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L. Froidevaux

California Institute of Technology

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E. Kyrölä

Finnish Meteorological Institute

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Chris Roth

University of Saskatchewan

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T. von Clarmann

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Donal P. Murtagh

Chalmers University of Technology

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