Abstract

Abstract. The Gimballed Limb Observer for Radiance Imaging of the Atmosphere (GLORIA) was operated on board the German High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO) during the PGS (POLSTRACC/GW-LCYCLE/SALSA) aircraft campaigns in the Arctic winter 2015/2016. Research flights were conducted from 17 December 2015 until 18 March 2016 within 25–87∘ N, 80∘ W–30∘ E. From the GLORIA infrared limb-emission measurements, two-dimensional cross sections of temperature, HNO3, O3, ClONO2, H2O and CFC-12 are retrieved. During 15 scientific flights of the PGS campaigns the GLORIA instrument measured more than 15 000 atmospheric profiles at high spectral resolution. Dependent on flight altitude and tropospheric cloud cover, the profiles retrieved from the measurements typically range between 5 and 14 km, and vertical resolutions between 400 and 1000 m are achieved. The estimated total (random and systematic) 1σ errors are in the range of 1 to 2 K for temperature and 10 % to 20 % relative error for the discussed trace gases. Comparisons to in situ instruments deployed on board HALO have been performed. Over all flights of this campaign the median differences and median absolute deviations between in situ and GLORIA observations are -0.75K±0.88 K for temperature, -0.03ppbv±0.85 ppbv for HNO3, -3.5ppbv±116.8 ppbv for O3, -15.4pptv±102.8 pptv for ClONO2, -0.13ppmv±0.63 ppmv for H2O and -19.8pptv±46.9 pptv for CFC-12. Seventy-three percent of these differences are within twice the combined estimated errors of the cross-compared instruments. Events with larger deviations are explained by atmospheric variability and different sampling characteristics of the instruments. Additionally, comparisons of GLORIA HNO3 and O3 with measurements of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) instrument show highly consistent structures in trace gas distributions and illustrate the potential of the high-spectral-resolution limb-imaging GLORIA observations for resolving narrow mesoscale structures in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS).

Highlights

  • The upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) is a key region for climate on Earth (Gettelman et al, 2011)

  • The meteorological and chemical background situation of this flight day and region is discussed on the basis of Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) measurements at a level corresponding with a typical flight altitude for this specific flight

  • In order to provide a survey of all GLORIA measurements and their quality during the whole PGS campaign, comparisons to in situ and MLS measurements are presented as an overview

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Summary

Introduction

The upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) is a key region for climate on Earth (Gettelman et al, 2011). Woiwode et al (2015) described the first GLORIA high-spectral-resolution observations captured in 2011 during the ESA Sounder Campaign (ESSenCe) They compared temperature, HNO3, O3, H2O, CFC-11 and CFC-12 profiles with in situ profiles and MIPAS-STR co-located profiles, and they found that GLORIA, at this stage of development, showed an agreement with MIPAS-STR and in situ instruments, within the profile-toprofile variations of GLORIA. A much higher number of profiles were measured; the instrument has been technically improved; ClONO2 is presented as an additional trace gas; and the results at flight altitude are compared to in situ observations from the same platform, HALO (High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft). This paper shall provide the baseline and reference for scientific studies using GLORIA measurements

GLORIA
In situ instruments
ECMWF meteorological analysis
Retrieval
Error analysis
Vertical resolution and degrees of freedom
Results
Meteorological situation for flight PGS19 on 13 March 2016
Characterization of example profiles
Line of sight
Temperature
Nitric acid
Chlorine nitrate
Water vapor
Chlorofluorocarbon 12
Overview of in situ comparisons for the PGS campaign
Conclusions
Full Text
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