Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published February 20, 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

Profiles of CH_4, HDO, H_2O, and N_2O with improved lower tropospheric vertical resolution from Aura TES radiances

Abstract

Thermal infrared (IR) radiances measured near 8 microns contain information about the vertical distribution of water vapor (H_2O), the water isotopologue HDO, and methane (CH_4), key gases in the water and carbon cycles. Previous versions (Version 4 or less) of the TES profile retrieval algorithm used a "spectral-window" approach to minimize uncertainty from interfering species at the expense of reduced vertical resolution and sensitivity. In this manuscript we document changes to the vertical resolution and uncertainties of the TES version 5 retrieval algorithm. In this version (Version 5), joint estimates of H_2O, HDO, CH_4 and nitrous oxide (N_2O) are made using radiances from almost the entire spectral region between 1100 cm^(−1) and 1330 cm^(−1). The TES retrieval constraints are also modified in order to better use this information. The new H_2O estimates show improved vertical resolution in the lower troposphere and boundary layer, while the new HDO/H_2O estimates can now profile the HDO/H_2O ratio between 925 hPa and 450 hPa in the tropics and during summertime at high latitudes. The new retrievals are now sensitive to methane in the free troposphere between 800 and 150 mb with peak sensitivity near 500 hPa; whereas in previous versions the sensitivity peaked at 200 hPa. However, the upper troposphere methane concentrations are biased high relative to the lower troposphere by approximately 4% on average. This bias is likely related to temperature, calibration, and/or methane spectroscopy errors. This bias can be mitigated by normalizing the CH_4 estimate by the ratio of the N_2O estimate relative to the N_2O prior, under the assumption that the same systematic error affects both the N_2O and CH_4 estimates. We demonstrate that applying this ratio theoretically reduces the CH4 estimate for non-retrieved parameters that jointly affect both the N_2O and CH_4 estimates. The relative upper troposphere to lower troposphere bias is approximately 2.8% after this bias correction. Quality flags based upon the vertical variability of the methane and N_2O estimates can be used to reduce this bias further. While these new CH_4, HDO/H_2O, and H_2O estimates are consistent with previous TES retrievals in the altitude regions where the sensitivities overlap, future comparisons with independent profile measurement will be required to characterize the biases of these new retrievals and determine if the calculated uncertainties using the new constraints are consistent with actual uncertainties.

Additional Information

© 2012 Author(s). This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Received: 21 August 2011 – Published in Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss.: 3 November 2011; Revised: 6 February 2012 – Accepted: 7 February 2012 – Published: 20 February 2012. Part of this research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The NASA ROSES Aura Science Team NNH07ZDA001N-AST 07-AST07-0069 contributed to the support of the analysis.

Attached Files

Published - amt-5-397-2012.pdf

Files

amt-5-397-2012.pdf
Files (6.4 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:e84ffc468266b65f743589f951bfd596
6.4 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023