Mid-upper tropospheric methane retrieval from IASI and its validation

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Abstract

Mid-upper tropospheric methane (CH4), as an operational product at NOAA's (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Comprehensive Large Array-data Stewardship System (CLASS), has been retrieved from the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) since 2008. This paper provides a description of the retrieval method and the validation using 596 CH4 vertical profiles from aircraft measurements by the HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observations (HIPPO) program over the Pacific Ocean. The number of degrees of freedom for the CH4 retrieval is mostly less than 1.5, and it decreases under cloudy conditions. The retrievals show greatest sensitivity between 100-600 hPa in the tropics and 200-750 hPa in the mid-to high latitude. Validation is accomplished using aircraft measurements (convolved by applying the monthly mean averaging kernels) collocated with all the retrieved profiles within 200 km and on the same day, and the results show that, on average, a larger error of CH4 occurs at 300-500 hPa. The bias in the trapezoid of 374-477 hPa is-1.74% with a residual standard deviation of 1.20%, and at layer 596-753 hPa the bias is-0.69% with a residual standard deviation of 1.07%. The retrieval error is relatively larger in the high northern latitude regions and/or under cloudy conditions. The main reasons for this negative bias include the uncertainty in the spectroscopy near the methane branch and/or the empirical bias correction, plus residual cloud contamination in the cloud-cleared radiances. It is expected for NOAA to generate the CH4 product for 20 + years using a similar algorithm from three similar thermal infrared sensors: Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), IASI and the Cross-track Infrared Sounder (CrIS). Such a unique product will provide a supplementary to the current ground-based observation network, particularly in the Arctic, for monitoring the CH4 cycle, its transport and trend associated with climate change. © 2013 Author(s).

Figures

  • Fig. 1. Change of brightness temperatures (del BT) in the IASI CH4 band corresponding to a change of surface temperature (Tsurf, 1.5 K) , water vapor (WV, 10 %) and CH4 (5 %) in the tropics using data on 8 November 2009. Red triangles are the channels used in the retrieval.
  • Fig. 3. Example of the first guess profiles in latitudes of 60◦ S, 30◦ S, 0, 30◦ N and 60◦ N.
  • Fig. 2. The 11 trapezoidal perturbation functions for the IASI CH4 retrieval.
  • Fig. 4. The averaging kernels in the high Northern Hemisphere and the tropics over the Pacific Ocean in September 2009. Different colors correspond to 11 different trapezoid functions (see Table 1). In order to plot the area of the averaging kernels in the same range of x axis, the red dash line is the area of the averaging kernels divided by 4.
  • Fig. 5. Zonal mean of the area of averaging kernels. The x axis is the latitude. The color bar represents the value of the area of the averaging kernels (no unit).
  • Fig. 6. Locations and numbers of aircraft measurement profiles selected for validation from HIPPO-1 (red, N = 121), HIPPO2 (green, N = 121), HIPPO-3 (blue, N = 88), HIPPO-4 (yellow, N = 121) and HIPPO-5 (cyan, N = 145).
  • Fig. 7. A CH4 profile on 3 April 2010 by HIPPO-3 aircraft measurement (red dots) vs. all IASI retrievals in a collocation window with a distance of 200 km and on the same day. The right panel is the mean profile of IASI retrievals with the bars showing the standard deviation, the aircraft measurements smoothed with the averaging kernels (AK) (pink, triangles), and the first guess profile (green dash line).
  • Fig. 8. IASI-retrieved CH4 mixing ratios plotted against aircraft profiles from HIPPO-1, -2, -3, -4 and -5 in four trapezoid layers of 300–374, 374–477, 477–596 and 596–753 hPa. The x axis is the convolved aircraft measurements, and the y axis is the mean of IASI-retrieved profiles within 200 km and on the same day of the measurement time and site location. Different colors are from different campaigns of HIPPO. R is the correlation coefficient, and the numbers below are the bias and residual standard deviation, respectively, in percent.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Xiong, X., Barnet, C., Maddy, E. S., Gambacorta, A., King, T. S., & Wofsy, S. C. (2013). Mid-upper tropospheric methane retrieval from IASI and its validation. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 6(9), 2255–2265. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-6-2255-2013

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