Abstract

Abstract. An improved nitrogen dioxide (NO2) slant column density retrieval for the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) in the 405–465 nm spectral region is presented. Since the launch of OMI on board NASA's EOS-Aura satellite in 2004, differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) retrievals of NO2 slant column densities have been the starting point for the KNMI DOMINO and NASA SP NO2 vertical column data as well as the OMI NO2 data of some other institutes. However, recent intercomparisons between NO2 retrievals from OMI and other UV/Vis and limb spectrometers, as well as ground-based measurements, suggest that OMI stratospheric NO2 is biased high. This study revises and, for the first time, fully documents the OMI NO2 retrieval in detail. The representation of the OMI slit function to convolve high-resolution reference spectra onto the relevant spectral grid is improved. The window used for the wavelength calibration is optimised, leading to much-reduced fitting errors. Ozone and water vapour spectra used in the fit are updated, reflecting the recently improved knowledge of their absorption cross section in the literature. The improved spectral fit also accounts for absorption by the O2–O2 collision complex and by liquid water over clear-water areas. The main changes in the improved spectral fitting result from the updates related to the wavelength calibration: the RMS error of the fit is reduced by 23% and the NO2 slant column by 0.85 × 1015 molec cm−2, independent of latitude, solar zenith angle and NO2 value. Including O2–O2 and liquid water absorption and updating the O3 and water vapour cross-section spectra further reduces NO2 slant columns on average by 0.35 × 1015 molec cm−2, accompanied by a further 9% reduction in the RMS error of the fit. The improved OMI NO2 slant columns are consistent with independent NO2 retrievals from other instruments to within a range that can be explained by photochemically driven diurnal increases in stratospheric NO2 and by small differences in fitting window and approach. The revisions indicate that current OMI NO2 slant columns suffered mostly from an additive positive offset, which is removed by the improved wavelength calibration and representation of the OMI slit function. It is therefore anticipated that the improved NO2 slant columns are most important to retrievals of spatially homogeneous stratospheric NO2 rather than to heterogeneous tropospheric NO2.

Highlights

  • Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitrogen oxide (NO) – together usually referred to as nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2) – are important trace gases in the Earth’s atmosphere

  • The revision of the OMNO2A settings and input is further motivated by a number of issues regarding the absorption reference spectra (Sect. 4.1): (a) the need to update the spectra of ozone and water vapour; (b) the need to account for the wavelength and row dependency of the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) slit function in the convolution of the spectra; (c) the need to investigate whether including absorption by O2–O2

  • The improvements for the OMNO2A NO2 slant column density (SCD) retrieval discussed above comprise four steps: 1. the update of the high-resolution solar reference spectrum and the Ring spectrum used for the wavelength calibration; 2. the change of the wavelength calibration window from wcB to wcN; 3. the update of the reference spectra of NO2, O3 and H2Ovap; 4. the inclusion of absorption by the O2–O2 collision complex and by liquid water

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitrogen oxide (NO) – together usually referred to as nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2) – are important trace gases in the Earth’s atmosphere. This paper describes a revision of NO2 slant column retrieval from level-1b spectra measured by OMI since 2004, performed by a processor named OMNO2A. 4.1): (a) the need to update the spectra of ozone and water vapour; (b) the need to account for the wavelength and row dependency of the OMI slit function in the convolution of the spectra; (c) the need to investigate whether including absorption by O2–O2 (so far omitted from OMNO2A; cf Bucsela et al, 2006) and liquid water (cf Richter et al, 2011; Lerot et al, 2010) improves the NO2 retrieval results. It was recognised that it is important for users of the OMI NO2 data to document the essential elements, both the current and the updated, of the slant column retrieval in one referable paper

Observations of NO2 column densities
DOAS retrieval of NO2 slant column densities
Intercomparisons of stratospheric NO2 columns
Reference spectra
Other absorption features
Wavelength calibration
Uncertainty in NO2 SCD related to calibration
Results of the OMI NO2 retrieval improvements
About including O2–O2 and liquid water 29
Comparison between OMNO2A and QDOAS
Reprocessed OMI NO2 data of 2005
Concluding remarks
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