Abstract

Abstract. A novel limb scanning mini-DOAS spectrometer for the detection of UV/vis absorbing radicals (e.g., O3, BrO, IO, HONO) was deployed on the DLR-Falcon (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt) aircraft and tested during the ASTAR 2007 campaign (Arctic Study of Tropospheric Aerosol, Clouds and Radiation) that took place at Svalbard (78° N) in spring 2007. Our main objectives during this campaign were to test the instrument, and to perform spectral and profile retrievals of tropospheric trace gases, with particular interest on investigating the distribution of halogen compounds (e.g., BrO) during the so-called ozone depletion events (ODEs). In the present work, a new method for the retrieval of vertical profiles of tropospheric trace gases from tropospheric DOAS limb observations is presented. Major challenges arise from modeling the radiative transfer in an aerosol and cloud particle loaded atmosphere, and from overcoming the lack of a priori knowledge of the targeted trace gas vertical distribution (e.g., unknown tropospheric BrO vertical distribution). Here, those challenges are tackled by a mathematical inversion of tropospheric trace gas profiles using a regularization approach constrained by a retrieved vertical profile of the aerosols extinction coefficient EM. The validity and limitations of the algorithm are tested with in situ measured EM, and with an absorber of known vertical profile (O4). The method is then used for retrieving vertical profiles of tropospheric BrO. Results indicate that, for aircraft ascent/descent observations, the limit for the BrO detection is roughly 1.5 pptv (pmol mol−1), and the BrO profiles inferred from the boundary layer up to the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere have around 10 degrees of freedom. For the ASTAR 2007 deployments during ODEs, the retrieved BrO vertical profiles consistently indicate high BrO mixing ratios (∼15 pptv) within the boundary layer, low BrO mixing ratios (≤1.5 pptv) in the free troposphere, occasionally enhanced BrO mixing ratios (∼1.5 pptv) in the upper troposphere, and increasing BrO mixing ratios with altitude in the lowermost stratosphere. These findings agree reasonably well with satellite and balloon-borne soundings of total and partial BrO atmospheric column densities.

Highlights

  • The Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS) is a well known and established atmospheric measurement technique (Platt and Stutz, 2008)

  • This is confirmed by forward modeling studies which show that the bromine monoxide (BrO) differential slant column densities (dSCDs) measured in the upper troposphere/lowermost stratosphere (UT/LS) can be explained if that the slightly enhanced BrO found in the upper troposphere could be due to the transport of air masses from the lowermost stratosphere

  • The present study reports on recent developments of aircraftborne DOAS (Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy) limb measurements, the tropospheric profile retrieval of important atmospheric trace gases (e.g., BrO), and its validation

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Summary

Introduction

The Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS) is a well known and established atmospheric measurement technique (Platt and Stutz, 2008). A more detailed understanding of the distribution of bromine monoxide in the troposphere is missing today This lack of tropospheric BrO vertical profile climatology during the polar spring is the motivation for the development of the retrieval method presented . 2, all elements of the retrieval algorithm are introduced and described This includes brief descriptions of (1) the miniDOAS instrument, (2) the measurement technique and the spectral analysis, and (3) the applied inversion methods, i.e., the characterization of scattering events present in the atmosphere via a non-linear inversion of the vertical profile of the EM, and the regularization of the targeted trace gas vertical profile.

Method
Instrument
Measurement technique and spectral analysis
Trace gas inversion: the regularization method
Test of the algorithm of the tropospheric trace gas profile retrieval
Analysis of the forward parameters for the radiative transfer modeling
Study of the vertical profile retrieval of the aerosol extinction coefficient
11 Measured
RetrRiiegvhta
April 2007
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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