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Dive into the research topics where Françoise Posny is active.

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Featured researches published by Françoise Posny.


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

A trajectory-based estimate of the tropospheric ozone column using the residual method

Mark R. Schoeberl; J. R. Ziemke; B. Bojkov; Nathaniel J. Livesey; B. Duncan; Susan E. Strahan; L. Froidevaux; S. S. Kulawik; Pawan K. Bhartia; S. Chandra; Pieternel F. Levelt; Jacquelyn C. Witte; Anne M. Thompson; E. Cuevas; A. Redondas; David W. Tarasick; J. Davies; G. E. Bodeker; Georg Hansen; Bryan J. Johnson; Samuel J. Oltmans; H. Vömel; M. Allaart; H. Kelder; M. J. Newchurch; Sophie Godin-Beekmann; Gérard Ancellet; H. Claude; S. B. Andersen; E. Kyrö

We estimate the tropospheric column ozone using a forward trajectory model to increase the horizontal resolution of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) derived stratospheric column ozone. Subtracting the MLS stratospheric column from Ozone Monitoring Instrument total column measurements gives the trajectory enhanced tropospheric ozone residual (TTOR). Because of different tropopause definitions, we validate the basic residual technique by computing the 200-hPa-to-surface column and comparing it to the same product from ozonesondes and Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer measurements. Comparisons show good agreement in the tropics and reasonable agreement at middle latitudes, but there is a persistent low bias in the TTOR that may be due to a slight high bias in MLS stratospheric column. With the improved stratospheric column resolution, we note a strong correlation of extratropical tropospheric ozone column anomalies with probable troposphere-stratosphere exchange events or folds. The folds can be identified by their colocation with strong horizontal tropopause gradients. TTOR anomalies due to folds may be mistaken for pollution events since folds often occur in the Atlantic and Pacific pollution corridors. We also compare the 200-hPa-to-surface column with Global Modeling Initiative chemical model estimates of the same quantity. While the tropical comparisons are good, we note that chemical model variations in 200-hPa-to-surface column at middle latitudes are much smaller than seen in the TTOR.


Applied Optics | 1999

Description and evaluation of a tropospheric ozone lidar implemented on an existing lidar in the southern subtropics

Jean-Luc Baray; Jean Leveau; Jacques Porteneuve; Gérard Ancellet; Philippe Keckhut; Françoise Posny; Serge Baldy

Rayleigh-Mie lidar measurements of stratospheric temperature and aerosol profiles have been carried out at Reunion Island (southern tropics) since 1993. Since June 1998, an operational extension of the system is permitting additional measurements of tropospheric ozone to be made by differential absorption lidar. The emission wavelengths (289 and 316 nm) are obtained by stimulated Raman shifting of the fourth harmonic of a Nd:YAG laser in a high-pressure deuterium cell. A mosaic of four parabolic mirrors collects the backscattered signal, and the transmission is processed by the multiple fiber collector method. The altitude range of ozone profiles obtained with this system is 3¿17 km. Technical details of this lidar system working in the southern tropics, comparisons of ozone lidar profiles with radiosondes, and scientific perspectives are presented. The significant lack of tropospheric ozone measurements in the tropical and equatorial regions, the particular scientific interest in these regions, and the altitude range of the ozone measurements to 16¿17 km make this lidar supplement useful and its adaptation technically conceivable at many Rayleigh-Mie lidar stations.


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2006

An instrumented station for the survey of ozone and climate change in the southern tropics

Jean-Luc Baray; J. Leveau; Serge Baldy; J. Jouzel; Philippe Keckhut; G. Bergametti; Gérard Ancellet; Hassan Bencherif; Bertrand Cadet; Michel Carleer; C. David; M. De Mazière; Denis Faduilhe; S. Godin Beekmann; Philippe Goloub; Florence Goutail; Jean-Marc Metzger; B. Morel; J.-P. Pommereau; Jacques Porteneuve; T. Portafaix; Françoise Posny; Laurent Robert; M. Van Roozendael

The assessment of changes induced by human activities on Earth atmospheric composition and thus on global climate requires a long-term and regular survey of the stratospheric and tropospheric atmospheric layers. The objective of this paper is to describe the atmospheric observations performed continuously at Reunion Island (55.5 degrees east, 20.8 degrees south) for 15 years. The various instruments contributing to the systematic observations are described as well as the measured parameters, the accuracy and the database. The LiDAR systems give profiles of temperature, aerosols and ozone in the troposphere and stratosphere, probes give profiles of temperature, ozone and relative humidity, radiometers and spectrometers give stratospheric and tropospheric integrated columns of a variety of atmospheric trace gases. Data are included in international networks, and used for satellite validation. Moreover, some scientific activities for which this station offers exceptional opportunities are highlighted, especially air mass exchanges nearby dynamical barriers: (1) On the vertical scale through the tropical tropopause layer (stratosphere-troposphere exchange). (2) On the quasi-horizontal scale across the southern subtropical barrier separating the tropical stratospheric reservoir from mid- and high latitudes.


Journal of Applied Remote Sensing | 2015

Introduction to the Maïdo Lidar Calibration Campaign dedicated to the validation of upper air meteorological parameters

Philippe Keckhut; Yann Courcoux; Jean-Luc Baray; Jacques Porteneuve; Hélène Vérèmes; Alain Hauchecorne; Davide Dionisi; Françoise Posny; Jean-Pierre Cammas; Guillaume Payen; Franck Gabarrot; Stéphanie Evan; Sergey Khaykin; Rolf Rüfenacht; Brigitte Tschanz; Niklaus Kämpfer; Philippe Ricaud; A. Abchiche; Jimmy Leclair-de-Bellevue; Valentin Duflot

Abstract. The first operations at the new High-altitude Maïdo Observatory at La Réunion began in 2013. The Maïdo Lidar Calibration Campaign (MALICCA) was organized there in April 2013 and has focused on the validation of the thermodynamic parameters (temperature, water vapor, and wind) measured with many instruments including the new very large lidar for water vapor and temperature profiles. The aim of this publication consists of providing an overview of the different instruments deployed during this campaign and their status, some of the targeted scientific questions and associated instrumental issues. Some specific detailed studies for some individual techniques were addressed elsewhere. This study shows that temperature profiles were obtained from the ground to the mesopause (80 km) thanks to the lidar and regular meteorological balloon-borne sondes with an overlap range showing good agreement. Water vapor is also monitored from the ground to the mesopause by using the Raman lidar and microwave techniques. Both techniques need to be pushed to their limit to reduce the missing range in the lower stratosphere. Total columns obtained from global positioning system or spectrometers are valuable for checking the calibration and ensuring vertical continuity. The lidar can also provide the vertical cloud structure that is a valuable complementary piece of information when investigating the water vapor cycle. Finally, wind vertical profiles, which were obtained from sondes, are now also retrieved at Maïdo from the newly implemented microwave technique and the lidar. Stable calibrations as well as a small-scale dynamical structure are required to monitor the thermodynamic state of the middle atmosphere, ensure validation of satellite sensors, study the transport of water vapor in the vicinity of the tropical tropopause and study their link with cirrus clouds and cyclones and the impact of small-scale dynamics (gravity waves) and their link with the mean state of the mesosphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Multiple subtropical stratospheric intrusions over Reunion Island: Observational, Lagrangian, and Eulerian numerical modeling approaches

Hélène Vérèmes; Jean-Pierre Cammas; Jean-Louis Baray; Philippe Keckhut; Christelle Barthe; Françoise Posny; Pierre Tulet; D. Dionisi; Soline Bielli

Signatures of multiple stratospheric intrusions were observed on simultaneous and collocated ozone and water vapor profiles retrieved by lidars and radiosondes at the Maido Observatory, Reunion Island (21°S, 55°E, 2160 m above sea level), during MAido LIdar Calibration CAmpaign in April 2013. A singular structure of the ozone vertical profile with three peaks (in excess of 90 ppbv, at ~8, ~10, and ~13 km altitude) embedded in a thick dry layer of air suggested stratospheric intrusions with multiple origins. The hypothesis is corroborated by a synoptic analysis based on re-analyses. European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts ERA-Interim temporal series associated with 5 days Lagrangian back trajectories initialized on each ozone peak allows to capture their stratospheric origin. The ozone peak at the lowest altitude is associated with an irreversible tropopause folding process along the polar jet stream during an extratropical cutoff low formation. Simultaneous lidar water vapor profiles of this peak show that the anticorrelation with ozone has been removed, due to mixing processes. Back trajectories indicate that the two other ozone peaks observed at higher altitudes are associated with the dynamics of the subtropical jet stream and the lower stratosphere. The observations confirm the recent stratospheric origins. The highest ozone peak is explained by the horizontal distribution of the intrusion. Use of a Lagrangian Reverse Domain Filling model and of the Meso-NH Eulerian mesoscale model with a passive stratospheric tracer allow to further document the stratosphere-troposphere transport processes and to describe the detailed potential vorticity and ozone structures in which are embedded in the observed multiple stratospheric intrusions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

One year ozonesonde measurements at Kerguelen Island (49.2°S, 70.1°E): Influence of stratosphere‐to‐troposphere exchange and long‐range transport of biomass burning plumes

Jean-Luc Baray; Valentin Duflot; Françoise Posny; Jean-Pierre Cammas; Anne M. Thompson; Franck Gabarrot; Jean-Louis Bonne; Guang Zeng

We analyze a 1 year campaign of 17 ozonesondes launched in 2008-2009 at Kerguelen Island (49.2°S, 70.1°E), the first such soundings performed at this location. Tropospheric ozone presents a large variability in austral summer (December to February) and austral winter (June to September). The baseline tropospheric ozone is higher in winter (between 30 and 50 ppbv) than in summer (between 20 and 40 ppbv). We compare these observations to a data set obtained during the same period at Lauder (45.0°S, 169.7°E), which presents a marked seasonal pattern. The analysis of trajectory runs and reanalysis output help identify two significant contributors to the tropospheric ozone level at Kerguelen: the stratosphere-to-troposphere air mass transport and the long-range transport of biomass burning plumes. The stratosphere-to-troposphere transport is exemplified by a case study of a dry and enriched ozone layer over Kerguelen (70 ppbv at an altitude of 6 km on 28 February 2009). Using Lagrangian model simulations, we show that wintertime enhancement of the tropospheric ozone baseline can be partially attributed to the long-range transport of ozone precursors from biomass burning plumes originating in southern America and Africa. However, owing to limited data and to the many factors that can cause this wintertime baseline ozone enhancement, further investigations are needed to fully explain it. Additional measurements are also needed to establish an ozone climatology, to further characterize the ozone annual cycle and wintertime enhancement, and to better compare Kerguelen with other midlatitude sites.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Origins of tropospheric ozone interannual variation over Réunion: A model investigation

Junhua Liu; Jose M. Rodriguez; Anne M. Thompson; Jennifer A. Logan; Anne R. Douglass; Mark A. Olsen; Stephen D. Steenrod; Françoise Posny

Observations from long-term ozonesonde measurements show robust variations and trends in the evolution of ozone in the middle and upper troposphere over Réunion Island (21.1°S, 55.5°E) in June-August. Here we examine possible causes of the observed ozone variation at Réunion Island using hindcast simulations by the stratosphere-troposphere Global Modeling Initiative chemical transport model (GMI-CTM) for 1992-2014, driven by assimilated Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) meteorological fields. Réunion Island is at the edge of the subtropical jet, a region of strong stratospheric-tropospheric exchange (STE). Our analysis implies that the large interannual variation (IAV) of upper tropospheric ozone over Réunion is driven by the large IAV of the stratospheric influence. The IAV of the large-scale, quasi-horizontal wind patterns also contributes to the IAV of ozone in the upper troposphere. Comparison to a simulation with constant emissions indicates that increasing emissions do not lead to the maximum trend in the middle and upper troposphere over Réunion during austral winter implied by the sonde data. The effects of increasing emission over southern Africa are limited to the lower troposphere near the surface in August - September.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

First Reprocessing of Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesondes (SHADOZ) Ozone Profiles (1998–2016): 2. Comparisons With Satellites and Ground‐Based Instruments

Anne M. Thompson; Jacquelyn C. Witte; Chance W. Sterling; Allen Jordan; Bryan J. Johnson; Samuel J. Oltmans; Masatomo Fujiwara; Holger Vömel; M. Allaart; Ankie Piters; Gert J. R. Coetzee; Françoise Posny; Ernesto Corrales; Jorge Andres Diaz; Christian Félix; Ninong Komala; Nga Lai; H. T. Ahn Nguyen; Matakite Maata; Francis S. Mani; Zamuna Zainal; Shin-Ya Ogino; Francisco Paredes; Tercio Luiz Bezerra Penha; Francisco R. da Silva; Sukarni Sallons‐Mitro; Henry B. Selkirk; Francis J. Schmidlin; R. Stübi; Kennedy Thiongo

Abstract The Southern Hemisphere ADditional OZonesonde (SHADOZ) network was assembled to validate a new generation of ozone-monitoring satellites and to better characterize the vertical structure of tropical ozone in the troposphere and stratosphere. Beginning with nine stations in 1998, more than 7,000 ozone and P-T-U profiles are available from 14 SHADOZ sites that have operated continuously for at least a decade. We analyze ozone profiles from the recently reprocessed SHADOZ data set that is based on adjustments for inconsistencies caused by varying ozonesonde instruments and operating techniques. First, sonde-derived total ozone column amounts are compared to the overpasses from the Earth Probe/Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer, Ozone Monitoring Instrument, and Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite satellites that cover 1998-2016. Second, characteristics of the stratospheric and tropospheric columns are examined along with ozone structure in the tropical tropopause layer (TTL). We find that (1) relative to our earlier evaluations of SHADOZ data, in 2003, 2007, and 2012, sonde-satellite total ozone column offsets at 12 stations are 2% or less, a significant improvement; (2) as in prior studies, the 10 tropical SHADOZ stations, defined as within ±19° latitude, display statistically uniform stratospheric column ozone, 229 ± 3.9 DU (Dobson units), and a tropospheric zonal wave-one pattern with a 14 DU mean amplitude; (3) the TTL ozone column, which is also zonally uniform, masks complex vertical structure, and this argues against using satellites for lower stratospheric ozone trends; and (4) reprocessing has led to more uniform stratospheric column amounts across sites and reduced bias in stratospheric profiles. As a consequence, the uncertainty in total column ozone now averages 5%.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

First Reprocessing of Southern Hemisphere ADditional OZonesondes Profile Records: 3. Uncertainty in Ozone Profile and Total Column

Jacquelyn C. Witte; Anne M. Thompson; H. G. J. Smit; Holger Vömel; Françoise Posny; R. Stübi

Reprocessed ozonesonde data from eight SHADOZ (Southern Hemisphere ADditional OZonesondes) sites have been used to derive the first analysis of uncertainty estimates for both profile and total column ozone (TCO). The ozone uncertainty is a composite of the uncertainties of the individual terms in the ozone partial pressure (PO3) equation, those being the ozone sensor current, background current, internal pump temperature, pump efficiency factors, conversion efficiency, and flow-rate. Overall, PO3 uncertainties (ΔPO3) are within 15% and peak around the tropopause (15±3km) where ozone is a minimum and ΔPO3 approaches the measured signal. The uncertainty in the background and sensor currents dominate the overall ΔPO3 in the troposphere including the tropopause region, while the uncertainties in the conversion efficiency and flow-rate dominate in the stratosphere. Seasonally, ΔPO3 is generally a maximum in the March-May, with the exception of SHADOZ sites in Asia, for which the highest ΔPO3 occurs in September-February. As a first approach, we calculate sonde TCO uncertainty (ΔTCO) by integrating the profile ΔPO3 and adding the ozone residual uncertainty, derived from the McPeters and Labow [2012] 1-σ ozone mixing ratios. Overall, ΔTCO are within ±15 DU, representing ~5-6% of the TCO. TOMS and OMI satellite overpasses are generally within the sonde ΔTCO. However, there is a discontinuity between TOMS v8.6 (1998-2004/09) and OMI (2004/10-2016) TCO on the order of 10DU that accounts for the significant 16DU overall difference observed between sonde and TOMS. By comparison, the sonde-OMI absolute difference for the eight stations is only ~4DU.

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Anne M. Thompson

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Jean-Luc Baray

University of La Réunion

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Jacquelyn C. Witte

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Valentin Duflot

University of La Réunion

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Samuel J. Oltmans

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Gert J. R. Coetzee

South African Weather Service

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