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Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions | 2018

Comparison of ground-based and satellite measurements of water vapour vertical profiles over Ellesmere Island, Nunavut

Dan Weaver; Kimberly Strong; Kaley A. Walker; Chris Sioris; Matthias Schneider; C. Thomas McElroy; H. Vömel; Michael Sommer; K. Weigel; A. Rozanov; J. P. Burrows; William G. Read; Evan Fishbein; Gabriele P. Stiller

Improving measurements of water vapour in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) is a priority for the atmospheric science community. In this work, UTLS water vapour profiles derived from Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE) satellite measurements are assessed with coincident ground-based measurements taken at a high Arctic observatory at Eureka, Nunavut, Canada. Additional comparisons to satellite measurements taken by the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS), Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS), Scanning Imaging Absorption Spectrometer for Atmospheric CHartography (SCIAMACHY), and Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) are included to put the ACE Fourier transform spectrometer (ACE-FTS) and ACE Measurement of Aerosol Extinction in the Stratosphere and Troposphere Retrieved by Occultation (ACE-MAESTRO) results in context. Measurements of water vapour profiles at Eureka are made using a Bruker 125HR solar absorption Fourier transform infrared spectrometer at the Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory (PEARL) and radiosondes launched from the Eureka Weather Station. Radiosonde measurements used in this study were processed with software developed by the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS) Reference Upper-Air Network (GRUAN) to account for known biases and calculate uncertainties in a well-documented and consistent manner. ACE-FTS measurements were within 11 ppmv (parts per million by volume; 13 %) of 125HR measurements between 6 and 14 km. Between 8 and 14 km ACE-FTS profiles showed a small wet bias of approximately 8 % relative to the 125HR. ACE-FTS water vapour profiles had mean differences of 13 ppmv (32 %) or better when compared to coincident radiosonde profiles at altitudes between 6 and 14 km; mean differences were within 6 ppmv (12 %) between 7 and 11 km. ACE-MAESTRO profiles showed a small dry bias relative to the 125HR of approximately 7 % between 6 and 9 km and 10 % between 10 and 14 km. ACE-MAESTRO profiles agreed within 30 ppmv (36 %) of the radiosondes between 7 and 14 km. ACE-FTS and ACE-MAESTRO comparison results show closer agreement with the radiosondes and PEARL 125HR overall than other satellite datasets – except Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 4040 D. Weaver et al.: Comparison of ground-based and satellite measurements of water vapour for AIRS. Close agreement was observed between AIRS and the 125HR and radiosonde measurements, with mean differences within 5 % and correlation coefficients above 0.83 in the troposphere between 1 and 7 km. Comparisons to MLS at altitudes around 10 km showed a dry bias, e.g. mean differences between MLS and radiosondes were − 25.6 %. SCIAMACHY comparisons were very limited due to minimal overlap between the vertical extent of the measurements. TES had no temporal overlap with the radiosonde dataset used in this study. Comparisons between TES and the 125HR showed a wet bias of approximately 25 % in the UTLS and mean differences within 14 % below 5 km.


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions | 2016

Multi-year comparisons of ground-based and space-borne Fourier Transform Spectrometers in the high Arctic between 2006 and 2013

Debora Griffin; Kaley A. Walker; Stephanie Conway; Felicia Kolonjari; Kimberly Strong; R. L. Batchelor; C. D. Boone; Lin Dan; James R. Drummond; P. F. Fogal; Dejian Fu; Rodica Lindenmaier; G. L. Manney; Dan Weaver

This paper presents 8 years (2006–2013) of measurements obtained from Fourier transform spectrometers (FTSs) in the high Arctic at the Polar Environment Atmospheric Research Laboratory (PEARL; 80.05 N, 86.42W). These measurements were taken as part of the Canadian Arctic ACE (Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment) validation campaigns that have been carried out since 2004 during the polar sunrise period (from mid-February to mid-April). Each spring, two ground-based FTSs were used to measure total and partial columns of HF, O3, and trace gases that impact O3 depletion, namely, HCl and HNO3. Additionally, some tropospheric greenhouse gases and pollutant species were measured, namely CH4, N2O, CO, and C2H6. During the same time period, the satellite-based ACE-FTS made measurements near Eureka and provided profiles of the same trace gases. Comparisons have been carried out between the measurements from the Portable Atmospheric Research Interferometric Spectrometer for the InfraRed (PARIS-IR) and the co-located high-resolution Bruker 125HR FTS, as well as with the latest version of the ACE-FTS retrievals (v3.5). The total column comparison between the two colocated ground-based FTSs, PARIS-IR and Bruker 125HR, found very good agreement for most of these species (except HF), with differences well below the estimated uncertainties (≤ 6%) and with high correlations (R ≥ 0.8). Partial columns have been used for the ground-based to space-borne comparison, with coincident measurements selected based on time, distance, and scaled potential vorticity (sPV). The comparisons of the ground-based measurements with ACEFTS show good agreement in the partial columns for most species within 6 % (except for C2H6 and PARIS-IR HF), which is consistent with the total retrieval uncertainty of the ground-based instruments. The correlation coefficients (R) of the partial column comparisons for all eight species range from approximately 0.75 to 0.95. The comparisons show no notable increases of the mean differences over these 8 years, indicating the consistency of these datasets and suggesting that the space-borne ACE-FTS measurements have been stable over this period. In addition, changes in the amounts of these trace gases during springtime between 2006 and 2013 are presented and discussed. Increased O3 (0.9%yr−1), HCl (1.7%yr−1), HF (3.8%yr−1), CH4 (0.5 % yr−1), and C2H6 (2.3%yr−1, 2009–2013) have been found with the PARIS-IR dataset, the longer of the two ground-based records. Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 3274 D. Griffin et al.: Ground-based and space-borne FTS comparisons in the high Arctic (2006–2013)


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2012

Ground-based remote sensing of tropospheric water vapour isotopologues within the project MUSICA

Matthias Schneider; Sabine Barthlott; Frank Hase; Y. González; Kei Yoshimura; O. E. García; Eliezer Sepúlveda; Angel J. Gomez-Pelaez; M. Gisi; R. Kohlhepp; S. Dohe; Thomas Blumenstock; Andreas Wiegele; Emanuel Christner; Kimberly Strong; Dan Weaver; Mathias Palm; Nicholas M Deutscher; Thorsten Warneke; Justus Notholt; Bernard Lejeune; Philippe Demoulin; Nicholas Jones; David W. T. Griffith; Dan Smale; John Robinson


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Quantifying the impact of BOReal forest fires on Tropospheric oxidants over the Atlantic using Aircraft and Satellites (BORTAS) experiment: design, execution and science overview

Paul I. Palmer; Mark Parrington; James Lee; Alastair C. Lewis; Andrew R. Rickard; Peter F. Bernath; Thomas J. Duck; D. L. Waugh; David W. Tarasick; Stephen J. Andrews; Eleonora Aruffo; L. J. Bailey; E. Barrett; S. J.-B. Bauguitte; K. R. Curry; P. Di Carlo; L. Chisholm; L. Dan; G. Forster; J. E. Franklin; Mark Gibson; Debora Griffin; Detlev Helmig; J. R. Hopkins; J. T. Hopper; Michael E. Jenkin; D. Kindred; J. Kliever; M. Le Breton; Stephan Matthiesen


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2014

Tropospheric CH 4 signals as observed by NDACC FTIR at globally distributed sites and comparison to GAW surface in situ measurements

E. Sepúlveda; Matthias Schneider; F. Hase; Sabine Barthlott; Darko Dubravica; O. E. García; Angel J. Gomez-Pelaez; Y. González; J C Guerra; M. Gisi; R. Kohlhepp; S. Dohe; Thomas Blumenstock; Kimberly Strong; Dan Weaver; Mathias Palm; Alireza Sadeghi; Nicholas M Deutscher; Thorsten Warneke; Justus Notholt; Nicholas Jones; David W. T. Griffith; Dan Smale; Gordon Brailsford; John Robinson; F. Meinhardt; M. Steinbacher; T Aalto; Douglas E. J. Worthy


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2012

Validation of ACE and OSIRIS ozone and NO 2 measurements using ground-based instruments at 80 N

C. Adams; K. Strong; R. L. Batchelor; Peter F. Bernath; Samuel Brohede; C. D. Boone; D. A. Degenstein; W. H. Daffer; James R. Drummond; P. F. Fogal; E. Farahani; C. Fayt; A. Fraser; Florence Goutail; F. Hendrick; Felicia Kolonjari; Rodica Lindenmaier; G. Manney; C. T. McElroy; C. A. McLinden; J. Mendonca; J.-H. Park; B. Pavlovic; Andrea Pazmino; Chris Roth; V. Savastiouk; Kaley A. Walker; Dan Weaver; X. Zhao


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2014

Using XCO2 retrievals for assessing the long-term consistency of NDACC/FTIR data sets

Sabine Barthlott; Matthias Schneider; Frank Hase; Andreas Wiegele; Emanuel Christner; Y. González; Thomas Blumenstock; S. Dohe; Omaira García; Eliezer Sepúlveda; Kimberly Strong; J. Mendonca; Dan Weaver; Mathias Palm; Nicholas M Deutscher; Thorsten Warneke; Justus Notholt; Bernard Lejeune; Emmanuel Mahieu; Nicholas Jones; David W. T. Griffith; V. Velazco; Dan Smale; John Robinson; Rigel Kivi; Pauli Heikkinen; Uwe Raffalski


Earth System Science Data | 2016

Tropospheric water vapour isotopologue data (H 2 16 O, H 2 18 O, and HD 16 O) as obtained from NDACC/FTIR solar absorption spectra

Sabine Barthlott; Matthias Schneider; F. Hase; Thomas Blumenstock; Matthaus Kiel; Darko Dubravica; Omaira García; Eliezer Sepúlveda; Gizaw Mengistu Tsidu; Samuel Takele Kenea; Michel Grutter; Eddy F. Plaza-Medina; Wolfgang Stremme; Kimberly Strong; Dan Weaver; Mathias Palm; Thorsten Warneke; Justus Notholt; Emmanuel Mahieu; Christian Servais; Nicholas Jones; David W. T. Griffith; Dan Smale; John Robinson


Archive | 2014

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON) Site: Eureka

Kimberly Strong; J. Mendonca; Dan Weaver; P. F. Fogal; James R. Drummond; R. L. Batchelor; Rodica Lindenmaier


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2017

Intercomparison of atmospheric water vapour measurements at a Canadian High Arctic site

Dan Weaver; Kimberly Strong; Matthias Schneider; Penny M. Rowe; Chris Sioris; Kaley A. Walker; Zen Mariani; Taneil Uttal; C. Thomas McElroy; Holger Vömel; Alessio Spassiani; James R. Drummond

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Matthias Schneider

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Sabine Barthlott

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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