Abstract

Abstract. The Geostationary Interferometric Infrared Sounder (GIIRS) on board FengYun-4 series satellites is the world's first geostationary hyperspectral infrared sounder. With hyperspectral measurement collected from a geostationary orbit covering the carbon monoxide (CO) absorption window around 2150 cm−1, GIIRS provides a unique opportunity for monitoring the diurnal variabilities of atmospheric CO over eastern Asia. In this study, we develop the FengYun Geostationary satellite Atmospheric Infrared Retrieval (FY-GeoAIR) algorithm to retrieve the CO profiles using observations from GIIRS on board FY-4B, which was launched in June 2021, and provide CO maps at a spatial resolution of 12 km and a temporal resolution of 2 h. The performance of the algorithm is first evaluated by conducting retrieval experiments using simulated synthetic spectra. The result shows that the GIIRS data provide significant information for constraining CO profiles. The degree of freedom for signal (DOFS) and retrieval error are both highly correlated with thermal contrast (TC), the temperature difference between the surface and the lower atmosphere. Retrieval results from 1 month of GIIRS spectra in July 2022 show that the DOFS for the majority is between 0.8 and 1.5 for the CO total column and between 0 and 0.8 for the bottom three layers ranging from the surface to 3 km a.s.l. Consistent with CO retrievals from low-Earth-orbit (LEO) infrared sounders, the largest observation sensitivity, as quantified by the averaging kernel (AK), is in the free troposphere at around 3–6 km. The diurnal changes in DOFS and vertical sensitivity of observation are primarily driven by the diurnal TC variabilities. Finally, we compare the CO total columns between GIIRS and Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) and find that the two datasets show good consistency in capturing the spatial and temporal variabilities. This study demonstrates that the GIIRS retrievals are able to reproduce the temporal variability of CO total columns over eastern Asia in the daytime in July. Nevertheless, the retrievals have low detectivity in the nighttime due to their weak sensitivity to the ground level CO changes limited by low information content. Model assimilation that takes into account the retrieved diurnal CO profiles and the associated vertical sensitivity will have potential in improving local and global air quality and climate research over eastern Asia.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call