Abstract

Abstract. Carbon Monitoring Satellite (CarbonSat) is one of two candidate missions for ESA's Earth Explorer 8 (EE8) satellite to be launched around the end of this decade. The overarching objective of the CarbonSat mission is to improve our understanding of natural and anthropogenic sources and sinks of the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs) carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4). The unique feature of CarbonSat is its "GHG imaging capability", which is achieved via a combination of high spatial resolution (2 km × 2 km) and good spatial coverage (wide swath and gap-free across- and along-track ground sampling). This capability enables global imaging of localized strong emission source, such as cities, power plants, methane seeps, landfills and volcanos, and likely enables better disentangling of natural and anthropogenic GHG sources and sinks. Source–sink information can be derived from the retrieved atmospheric column-averaged mole fractions of CO2 and CH4, i.e. XCO2 and XCH4, by inverse modelling. Using the most recent instrument and mission specification, an error analysis has been performed using the Bremen optimal EStimation DOAS (BESD/C) retrieval algorithm. We assess the retrieval performance for atmospheres containing aerosols and thin cirrus clouds, assuming that the retrieval forward model is able to describe adequately all relevant scattering properties of the atmosphere. To compute the errors for each single CarbonSat observation in a one-year period, we have developed an error parameterization scheme comprising six relevant input parameters: solar zenith angle, surface albedo in two bands, aerosol and cirrus optical depth, and cirrus altitude variations. Other errors, e.g. errors resulting from aerosol type variations, are partially quantified but not yet accounted for in the error parameterization. Using this approach, we have generated and analysed one year of simulated CarbonSat observations. Using this data set we estimate that systematic errors are for the overwhelming majority of cases (≈ 85%) below 0.3 ppm for XCO2 (below 0.5 ppm for 99.5%) and below 2 ppb for XCH4 (below 4 ppb for 99.3%). We also show that the single-measurement precision is typically around 1.2 ppm for XCO2 and 7 ppb for XCH4 (1σ). The number of quality-filtered observations over cloud- and ice-free land surfaces is in the range of 33 to 47 million per month depending on season. Recently it has been shown that terrestrial vegetation chlorophyll fluorescence (VCF) emission needs to be considered for accurate XCO2 retrieval. We therefore retrieve VCF from clear Fraunhofer lines located around 755 nm and show that CarbonSat will provide valuable information on VCF. We estimate that the VCF single-measurement precision is approximately 0.3 mW m−2 nm−1 sr−1 (1σ).

Highlights

  • Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs) contributing to global warming (Solomon et al, 2007)

  • The unique feature of CarbonSat is its “GHG imaging capability”, which is achieved via a combination of high spatial resolution (2 km × 2 km) and good spatial coverage

  • We focus on errors resulting from aerosols and cirrus clouds assuming that scenes contaminated by thick clouds have already been identified and removed (i.e. in a manner similar to that currently used for SCIAMACHY (e.g. Heymann et al, 2012a, b; Reuter et al, 2011) and GOSAT (e.g. Cogan et al, 2012; O’Dell et al, 2012; Crisp et al, 2012; Butz et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHGs) contributing to global warming (Solomon et al, 2007). These data products are generated, or are planned to be generated, from other past, present and future GHG missions such as SCIAMACHY (SCanning Imaging Absorption spectroMeter for Atmospheric CHartographY) (Burrows et al, 1995; Bovensmann et al, 1999; Buchwitz et al, 2005), GOSAT (Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite) (Kuze et al, 2009; Yoshida et al, 2011) and the upcoming OCO-2 (Orbiting Carbon Observatory) mission (XCO2 only) (Crisp et al, 2004; Boesch et al, 2011) Compared to these missions, CarbonSat aims at better disentangling of natural and anthropogenic sources and sinks of CO2 and CH4 by using its GHG imaging capability.

CarbonSat mission and instrument concept
XCO2 and XCH4 error analysis and parameterization
General considerations
Error parameterization
Generation of simulated global CarbonSat observations
Analysis of global data
Limitations and the perspective for future research
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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