Abstract

We present the application of a photon path length probability density function (PPDF) formalism to atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO 2) retrievals from reflected sunlight measured by the Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT) over the ocean. GOSAT short-wave infrared (SWIR) radiance spectra detected over the ocean surface were shown to be strongly affected by atmospheric light-scattering. In particular, retrievals of column-averaged CO 2 dry-volume mixing ratios (XCO 2) were characterised by steady negative bias and significant scatter when optical path modification due to high variability of clouds and aerosols was neglected. Considering that the ocean surface in SWIR is dark in all directions except that of sun-glint observation, PPDF radiative transfer modelling was simplified by neglecting the contribution of photons that interacted with both aerosols/cloud particles and the ocean surface. This permitted implementation of an atmospheric correction technique based on simultaneous retrievals of CO 2 concentrations and two PPDF parameters: effective altitude of the aerosol layer and relative layer reflectivity. Using this correction, both bias and scatter of carbon dioxide retrievals were significantly reduced. The retrieval results of XCO 2 statistically agreed (both spatially and temporally) with those predicted by the atmospheric transport model.

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