Abstract

Abstract. We present an improved tropospheric nitrogen dioxide column retrieval algorithm (DOMINO v2.0) for OMI based on better air mass factors (AMFs) and a correction for across-track stripes resulting from calibration errors in the OMI backscattered reflectances. Since October 2004, NO2 retrievals from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), a UV/Vis nadir spectrometer onboard NASA's EOS-Aura satellite, have been used with success in several scientific studies focusing on air quality monitoring, detection of trends, and NOx emission estimates. Dedicated evaluations of previous DOMINO tropospheric NO2 retrievals indicated their good quality, but also suggested that the tropospheric columns were susceptible to high biases (by 0–40%), probably because of errors in the air mass factor calculations. Here we update the DOMINO air mass factor approach. We calculate a new look-up table (LUT) for altitude-dependent AMFs based on more realistic atmospheric profile parameters, and include more surface albedo and surface pressure reference points than before. We improve the sampling of the TM4 model, resulting in a priori NO2 profiles that are better mixed throughout the boundary layer. We evaluate the NO2 profiles simulated with the improved TM4 sampling as used in the AMF calculations and show that they are highly consistent with in situ NO2 measurements from aircraft during the INTEX-A and INTEX-B campaigns in 2004 and 2006. Our air mass factor calculations are further updated by the implementation of a high-resolution terrain height and a high-resolution surface albedo climatology based on OMI measurements. Together with a correction for across-track stripes, the overall impact of the improved terrain height and albedo descriptions is modest (<5%) on average over large polluted areas, but still causes significant changes locally. The main changes in the DOMINO v2.0 algorithm follow from the new LUT and the improved TM4 sampling that results in more NO2 simulated aloft, where sensitivity to NO2 is higher, and amount to reductions in tropospheric NO2 columns of up to 20% in winter, and 10% in summer over extended polluted areas. We investigate the impact of aerosols on the NO2 retrieval, and based on a comparison of concurrent retrievals of clouds from OMI and aerosols from MODIS Aqua, we find empirical evidence that OMI cloud retrievals are sensitive to the presence of scattering aerosols. It follows that an implicit correction for the effects of aerosols occurs through the aerosol-induced cloud parameters in DOMINO, and we show that such an empirical correction amounts to a 20 %AMF reduction in summer and ±10% changes in winter over the eastern United States.

Highlights

  • Nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2) are released into the atmosphere by anthropogenic and natural sources

  • It follows that an implicit correction for the effects of aerosols occurs through the aerosol-induced cloud parameters in Dutch OMI NO2 (DOMINO), and we show that such an empirical correction amounts to a 20 % air mass factors (AMFs) reduction in summer and ±10 % changes in winter over the eastern United States

  • We investigate whether an implicit AMF aerosol correction occurs through Eq (2) with modified cloud parameters, that we have shown that Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) cloud retrievals are obviously sensitive to scattering aerosols

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Summary

Introduction

Global mapping of atmospheric NO2 concentrations can provide important information on NOx emissions, on the formation of secondary pollutants, as well as on the transport and chemistry of tropospheric nitrogen oxides. In combination with mid-morning overpasses from SCIAMACHY and GOME-2 (Callies et al, 2000), the 13:40 h overpasses from OMI provide critical information on the timing of NOx emissions and test our understanding of diurnal NOx-chemistry (Boersma et al, 2008a, 2009a). In spite of these and many other successful applications of NO2 satellite measurements, a number of scientific questions about the accuracy of the retrievals remain. In this study we will describe and implement a simple method to correct for the across-track bias, but our main concern will be the improved calculation of the OMI NO2 AMF

Ozone Monitoring Instrument
Result
DOMINO retrieval algorithm
Altitude-dependent AMFs
Terrain height
Surface albedo
Effect of surface albedo changes on OMI cloud parameters
Effect of surface albedo changes on NO2 retrievals
Jan 2005 1 Jan 2006 1 Jan 2007 1 Jan 2008 1 Jan 2009
Impact of the combined algorithm changes
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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