Johannes Lampel
Heidelberg University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Johannes Lampel.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014
Anoop S. Mahajan; Cristina Prados-Roman; Timothy D. Hay; Johannes Lampel; Denis Pöhler; Katja Groβmann; J. Tschritter; U. Frieß; U. Platt; P. V. Johnston; K. Kreher; F. Wittrock; J. P. Burrows; John M. C. Plane; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez
Glyoxal is an important intermediate species formed by the oxidation of common biogenic and anthropogenic volatile organic compounds such as isoprene, toluene, and acetylene. Although glyoxal has been shown to play an important role in urban and forested environments, its role in the open ocean environment is still not well understood, with only a few observations showing evidence for its presence in the open ocean marine boundary layer (MBL). In this study, we report observations of glyoxal from 10 field campaigns in different parts of the worlds oceans. These observations together represent the largest database of glyoxal in the MBL. The measurements are made with similar instruments that have been used in the past, although the open ocean values reported here, average of about 25 parts per trillion by volume (pptv) with an upper limit of 40 pptv, are much lower than previously reported observations that were consistently higher than 40 pptv and had an upper limit of 140 pptv, highlighting the uncertainties in the differential optical absorption spectroscopy method for the retrieval of glyoxal. Despite retrieval uncertainties, the results reported in this work support previous suggestions that the currently known sources of glyoxal are insufficient to explain the average MBL concentrations. This suggests that there is an additional missing source, more than a magnitude larger than currently known sources, which is necessary to account for the observed atmospheric levels of glyoxal. Therefore, it could play a more important role in the MBL than previously considered.
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016
Holger Sihler; Peter Lübcke; R. Lang; Steffen Beirle; Martin de Graaf; Christoph Hörmann; Johannes Lampel; Marloes Penning de Vries; Julia Remmers; Ed Trollope; Yang Wang; Thomas Wagner
Knowledge of the field of view (FOV) of a remote sensing instrument is particularly important when interpreting their data and merging them with other spatially referenced data. Especially for instruments in space, information on the actual FOV, which may change during operation, may be difficult to obtain. Also, the FOV of ground-based devices may change during transportation to the field site, where appropriate equipment for the FOV determination may be unavailable. This paper presents an independent, simple and robust method to retrieve the FOV of an instrument during operation, i.e. the two-dimensional sensitivity distribution, sampled on a discrete grid. The method relies on correlated measurements featuring a significantly higher spatial resolution, e.g. by an imaging instrument accompanying a spectrometer. The method was applied to two satellite instruments, GOME-2 and OMI, and a ground-based differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) instrument integrated in an SO2 camera. For GOME-2, quadrangular FOVs could be retrieved, which almost perfectly match the provided FOV edges after applying a correction for spatial aliasing inherent to GOME-type instruments. More complex sensitivity distributions were found at certain scanner angles, which are probably caused by degradation of the moving parts within the instrument. For OMI, which does not feature any moving parts, retrieved sensitivity distributions were much smoother compared to GOME-2. A 2-D super-Gaussian with six parameters was found to be an appropriate model to describe the retrieved OMI FOV. The comparison with operationally provided FOV dimensions revealed small differences, which could be mostly explained by the limitations of our IFR implementation. For the ground-based DOAS instrument, the FOV retrieved using SO2-camera data was slightly smaller than the flat-disc distribution, which is assumed by the stateof-the-art correlation technique. Differences between both methods may be attributed to spatial inhomogeneities. In general, our results confirm the already deduced FOV distributions of OMI, GOME-2, and the ground-based DOAS. It is certainly applicable for degradation monitoring and verification exercises. For satellite instruments, the gained information is expected to increase the accuracy of combined products, where measurements of different instruments are integrated, e.g. mapping of high-resolution cloud information, incorporation of surface climatologies. For the SO2-camera community, the method presents a new and efficient tool to monitor the DOAS FOV in the field. Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 882 H. Sihler et al.: In-operation field-of-view retrieval (IFR)
Geophysical Research Letters | 2018
William R. Simpson; U. Frieß; Jennie L. Thomas; Johannes Lampel; U. Platt
By examining the origin of air masses that arrive at Utqiaġvik (formerly Barrow) Alaska soon after polar sunrise (late January/early February), we identified periods when air arriving at Utqiaġvik had previously resided primarily at higher latitudes in near total darkness. Upon illumination, these air masses produced high concentrations of reactive bromine, which was detected by differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) as bromine monoxide (BrO). These observations are consistent with nighttime production of a photolabile reactive bromine precursor (e.g. Br2 or BrCl). A large polar‐night source of photolabile reactive bromine precursors would contribute seed reactive bromine to daytime reactive bromine events and could export reactive halogens to lower latitudes and the free troposphere.
Light, Energy and the Environment 2015 (2015), paper EM4A.3 | 2015
Thomas Wagner; Steffen Beirle; Johannes Lampel; Marloes Penning de Vries
We retrieve aerosol information from of satellite Ring effect observations from the OMI instrument. Aerosols influence the Ring effect because aerosols shield possible Raman scattering events on air molecules.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012
K. Großmann; U. Frieß; Enno Peters; F. Wittrock; Johannes Lampel; S. Yilmaz; J. Tschritter; Roberto Sommariva; R. von Glasow; Birgit Quack; Kirstin Krüger; K. Pfeilsticker; U. Platt
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2013
L. Vogel; Holger Sihler; Johannes Lampel; Thomas Wagner; U. Platt
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016
Steffen Beirle; Johannes Lampel; Christophe Lerot; Holger Sihler; Thomas Wagner
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2015
Johannes Lampel; U. Frieß; U. Platt
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Yang Wang; Johannes Lampel; Pinhua Xie; Steffen Beirle; Ang Li; D. Wu; Thomas Wagner
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Johannes Lampel; Denis Pöhler; Oleg L. Polyansky; Aleksandra A. Kyuberis; Nikolai F. Zobov; Jonathan Tennyson; Lorenzo Lodi; U. Frieß; Yang Wang; Steffen Beirle; U. Platt; Thomas Wagner