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Featured researches published by Laurence Twigg.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder stratospheric ozone measurements

L. Froidevaux; Yibo Jiang; Alyn Lambert; Nathaniel J. Livesey; William G. Read; J. W. Waters; Edward V. Browell; J. W. Hair; M. Avery; T. J. McGee; Laurence Twigg; G. K. Sumnicht; K. W. Jucks; J. J. Margitan; B. Sen; R. A. Stachnik; G. C. Toon; Peter F. Bernath; C. D. Boone; Kaley A. Walker; Mark J. Filipiak; R. S. Harwood; R. Fuller; G. L. Manney; Michael J. Schwartz; W. H. Daffer; Brian J. Drouin; R. E. Cofield; D. T. Cuddy; R. F. Jarnot

[1] The Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) aboard the Aura satellite has provided essentially daily global measurements of ozone (O3) profiles from the upper troposphere to the upper mesosphere since August of 2004. This paper focuses on validation of the MLS stratospheric standard ozone product and its uncertainties, as obtained from the 240 GHz radiometer measurements, with a few results concerning mesospheric ozone. We compare average differences and scatter from matched MLS version 2.2 profiles and coincident ozone profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar measurements taken during Aura Validation Experiment (AVE) campaigns. Ozone comparisons are also made between MLS and balloon-borne remote and in situ sensors. We provide a detailed characterization of random and systematic uncertainties for MLS ozone. We typically find better agreement in the comparisons using MLS version 2.2 ozone than the version 1.5 data. The agreement and the MLS uncertainty estimates in the stratosphere are often of the order of 5%, with values closer to 10% (and occasionally 20%) at the lowest stratospheric altitudes, where small positive MLS biases can be found. There is very good agreement in the latitudinal distributions obtained from MLS and from coincident profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar data along the MLS track.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Initial validation of ozone measurements from the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder

B. Nardi; John C. Gille; John J. Barnett; Cora E. Randall; V. Lynn Harvey; Alison Waterfall; W. Jolyon Reburn; Thierry Leblanc; Thomas J. McGee; Laurence Twigg; Anne M. Thompson; Sophie Godin-Beekmann; Peter F. Bernath; Bojan Bojkov; C. D. Boone; Charles Cavanaugh; M. T. Coffey; James Craft; Cheryl Craig; V. C. Dean; Thomas Eden; Gene Francis; L. Froidevaux; Chris Halvorson; James W. Hannigan; Christopher L. Hepplewhite; Douglas E. Kinnison; Rashid Khosravi; Charlie Krinsky; Alyn Lambert

Comparisons of the latest High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS) ozone retrievals (v2.04.09) are made with ozonesondes, ground-based lidars, airborne lidar measurements made during the Intercontinental Chemical Transport Experiment–B, and satellite observations. A large visual obstruction blocking over 80% of the HIRDLS field of view presents significant challenges to the data analysis methods and implementation, to the extent that the radiative properties of the obstruction must be accurately characterized in order to adequately correct measured radiances. The radiance correction algorithms updated as of August 2007 are used in the HIRDLS v2.04.09 data presented here. Comparisons indicate that HIRDLS ozone is recoverable between 1 and 100 hPa at middle and high latitudes and between 1 and 50 hPa at low latitudes. Accuracy of better than 10% is indicated between 1 and 30 hPa (HIRDLS generally low) by the majority of the comparisons with coincident measurements, and 5% is indicated between 2 and 10 hPa when compared with some lidars. Between 50 and 100 hPa, at middle and high latitudes, accuracy is 10–20%. The ozone precision is estimated to be generally 5–10% between 1 and 50 hPa. Comparisons with ozonesondes and lidars give strong indication that HIRDLS is capable of resolving fine vertical ozone features (1–2 km) in the region between 1 and 50 hPa. Development is continuing on the radiance correction and the cloud detection and filtering algorithms, and it is hoped that it will be possible to achieve a further reduction in the systematic bias and an increase in the measurement range downward to lower heights (at pressures greater than 50–100 hPa).


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2015

Results from the NASA GSFC and LaRC Ozone Lidar Intercomparison: New Mobile Tools for Atmospheric Research

John T. Sullivan; Thomas J. McGee; Russell J. DeYoung; Laurence Twigg; Grant Sumnicht; Denis Pliutau; Travis Knepp; William Carrion

AbstractDuring a 2-week period in May 2014, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Space Flight Center Tropospheric Ozone Differential Absorption Lidar (GSFC TROPOZ DIAL) was situated near the NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC) Mobile Ozone Lidar (LMOL) and made simultaneous measurements for a continuous 15-h observation period in which six separate ozonesondes were launched to provide reference ozone profiles. Although each of these campaign-ready lidars has very different transmitter and receiver components, they produced very similar ozone profiles, which were mostly within 10% of each other and the ozonesondes. The observed column averages as compared to the ozonesondes also agree well and are within 8% of each other. A robust uncertainty analysis was performed, and the results indicate that there is no statistically significant systematic bias between the TROPOZ and LMOL instruments. With the extended measurements and ozonesonde launches, this intercomparison has yielded an...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Quantifying the contribution of thermally driven recirculation to a high-ozone event along the Colorado Front Range using lidar

John T. Sullivan; Thomas J. McGee; A. O. Langford; Raul J. Alvarez; Christoph J. Senff; Patrick J. Reddy; Anne M. Thompson; Laurence Twigg; Grant Sumnicht; Pius Lee; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Christoph Knote; Russell W. Long; Raymond M. Hoff

A high-ozone (O3) pollution episode was observed on 22 July 2014 during the concurrent “Deriving Information on Surface Conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality” (DISCOVER-AQ) and “Front Range Air Pollution and Photochemistry Experiment” (FRAPPE) campaigns in northern Colorado. Surface O3 monitors at three regulatory sites exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 2008 National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) daily maximum 8-hr average (MDA8) of 75 ppbv. To further characterize the polluted air mass and assess transport throughout the event, measurements are presented from O3 and wind profilers, O3-sondes, aircraft, and surface monitoring sites. Observations indicate thermally-driven upslope flow was established throughout the Colorado Front Range during the pollution episode. As the thermally-driven flow persisted throughout the day, O3 concentrations increased and affected high-elevation Rocky Mountain sites. These observations, coupled with modeling analyses, demonstrate a westerly return flow of polluted air aloft, indicating the mountain-plains solenoid circulation was established and impacted surface conditions within the Front Range.


Fourth International Asia-Pacific Environmental Remote Sensing Symposium 2004: Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere, Ocean, Environment, and Space | 2005

AROTAL: results from two arctic campaigns

Thomas J. McGee; Laurence Twigg; W. R. Hoegy; John F. Burris; William S. Heaps; Grant Sumnicht; Chris A. Hostetler

The NASA Langley Research Center and the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, have collaborated to design, build and fly a combination backscatter and Differential Absorption Lidar (DIAL) instrument for the measurement of aerosols, temperature and ozone from the NASA DC-8. The AROTAL (Airborne Raman Ozone Temperature and Aerosol Lidar) instrument was flown on two separate Arctic missions to look at ozone loss processes during the late winter-early spring, and to validate measurements made by the SAGE III satellite instrument. Results from this instrument have demonstrated that the SAGE III instrument is in agreement with the lidar retrievals to better than ten per cent.


Lidar Remote Sensing for Environmental Monitoring XVI | 2018

Lidar validation measurements at the NOAA Mauna Loa Observatory NDACC Station

Thomas J. McGee; John T. Sullivan; Laurence Twigg; Grant Sumnicht; John E. Barnes; Thierry Leblanc; Stuart McDermid

NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) transported two lidar instruments to the NOAA facility at the Mauna Loa Observatory (MLO) on the Big Island of Hawaii, to participate in an official, extended validation campaign. This site is situated 11,141 ft. above sea level on the side of the mountain. The observatory has been making atmospheric measurements regularly since the 1950’s, and has hosted the GSFC Stratospheric Ozone (STROZ) Lidar and the GSFC Aerosol and Temperature (AT) Lidar on several occasions, most recently between November, 2012 and November, 2015. The purpose of this extended deployment was to participate in Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) Validation campaigns with the JPL Stratospheric Ozone Lidar and the NOAA Temperature, Aerosol and Water Vapor instruments as part of the routine NDACC Validation Protocol.


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2011

Validation of MIPAS IMK-IAA Temperature, Water Vapor, and Ozone Profiles with MOHAVE-2009 Campaign Measurements

G. P. Stiller; M. Kiefer; E. Eckert; T. von Clarmann; S. Kellmann; M. García-Comas; B. Funke; Thierry Leblanc; E. Fetzer; L. Froidevaux; M. Gomez; E. Hall; D. F. Hurst; A. Jordan; Niklaus Kämpfer; Alyn Lambert; I. S. McDermid; Thomas J. McGee; L. Miloshevich; Gerald E. Nedoluha; William G. Read; Matthias Schneider; M. Schwartz; Corinne Straub; Geoffrey C. Toon; Laurence Twigg; Kaley A. Walker; David N. Whiteman


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2002

Comparison of POAM III ozone measurements with correlative aircraft and balloon data during SOLVE

Jerry Lumpe; M. Fromm; K. W. Hoppel; Richard M. Bevilacqua; Cora E. Randall; Edward V. Browell; William B. Grant; Thomas J. McGee; John F. Burris; Laurence Twigg; Erik Charles Richard; Geoffrey C. Toon; J. J. Margitan; B. Sen; K. Pfeilsticker; Hartmut Boesch; R. Fitzenberger; Florence Goutail; Jean-Pierre Pommereau


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2011

Measurements of Humidity in the Atmosphere and Validation Experiments (MOHAVE)-2009: overview of campaign operations and results

Thierry Leblanc; T. D. Walsh; I. S. McDermid; G. C. Toon; J.-F. Blavier; B. Haines; William G. Read; B. Herman; Eric J. Fetzer; Stanley P. Sander; T. Pongetti; David N. Whiteman; T. G. Mcgee; Laurence Twigg; Grant Sumnicht; Demetrius Venable; M. Calhoun; Afusat Dirisu; D. F. Hurst; Allen Jordan; Emrys G. Hall; L. Miloshevich; H. Vömel; Corinne Straub; Niklaus Kämpfer; Gerald E. Nedoluha; R.M. Gomez; K. Holub; S. Gutman; John J. Braun


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions | 2014

A new differential absorption lidar to measure sub-hourly fluctuation of tropospheric ozone profiles in the Baltimore–Washington DC region

John T. Sullivan; T. J. McGee; Grant Sumnicht; Laurence Twigg; Raymond M. Hoff

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Thomas J. McGee

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Grant Sumnicht

Goddard Space Flight Center

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John T. Sullivan

Goddard Space Flight Center

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John F. Burris

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Thierry Leblanc

California Institute of Technology

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William S. Heaps

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Roland Neuber

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Anne M. Thompson

Goddard Space Flight Center

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