Abstract

Abstract. This study investigates the constraint provided by greenhouse gas measurements from space on surface fluxes. Imperfect knowledge of the light path through the atmosphere, arising from scattering by clouds and aerosols, can create biases in column measurements retrieved from space. To minimize the impact of such biases, ratios of total column retrieved CH4 and CO2 (Xratio) have been used. We apply the ratio inversion method described in Pandey et al. (2015) to retrievals from the Greenhouse Gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT). The ratio inversion method uses the measured Xratio as a weak constraint on CO2 fluxes. In contrast, the more common approach of inverting proxy CH4 retrievals (Frankenberg et al., 2005) prescribes atmospheric CO2 fields and optimizes only CH4 fluxes. The TM5–4DVAR (Tracer Transport Model version 5–variational data assimilation system) inverse modeling system is used to simultaneously optimize the fluxes of CH4 and CO2 for 2009 and 2010. The results are compared to proxy inversions using model-derived CO2 mixing ratios (XCO2model) from CarbonTracker and the Monitoring Atmospheric Composition and Climate (MACC) Reanalysis CO2 product. The performance of the inverse models is evaluated using measurements from three aircraft measurement projects. Xratio and XCO2model are compared with TCCON retrievals to quantify the relative importance of errors in these components of the proxy XCH4 retrieval (XCH4proxy). We find that the retrieval errors in Xratio (mean = 0.61 %) are generally larger than the errors in XCO2model (mean = 0.24 and 0.01 % for CarbonTracker and MACC, respectively). On the annual timescale, the CH4 fluxes from the different satellite inversions are generally in agreement with each other, suggesting that errors in XCO2model do not limit the overall accuracy of the CH4 flux estimates. On the seasonal timescale, however, larger differences are found due to uncertainties in XCO2model, particularly over Australia and in the tropics. The ratio method stays closer to the a priori CH4 flux in these regions, because it is capable of simultaneously adjusting the CO2 fluxes. Over tropical South America, comparison to independent measurements shows that CO2 fields derived from the ratio method are less realistic than those used in the proxy method. However, the CH4 fluxes are more realistic, because the impact of unaccounted systematic uncertainties is more evenly distributed between CO2 and CH4. The ratio inversion estimates an enhanced CO2 release from tropical South America during the dry season of 2010, which is in accordance with the findings of Gatti et al. (2014) and Van der Laan et al. (2015). The performance of the ratio method is encouraging, because despite the added nonlinearity due to the assimilation of Xratio and the significant increase in the degree of freedom by optimizing CO2 fluxes, still consistent results are obtained with respect to other CH4 inversions.

Highlights

  • Detailed knowledge of the global distribution of surface fluxes of potent greenhouse gases (GHGs) such as CH4 and CO2 is needed to investigate the uncertain feedback of the global carbon cycle to human disturbances

  • Gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT)-retrieved total column measurements of Xratio are compared to measured ratios of XCH4 : XCO2 from the Total Carbon Column Observing Network (TCCON) of ground-based sun-tracking Fourier transform spectrometers (FTSs) (Wunch et al, 2011)

  • We suggest that CarbonTracker and Monitoring Atmospheric Composition and Climate (MACC) have a better representation of CO2 than PR-CT, PR-MA, and SURF as they assimilate a larger number of flask measurements sites and few continuous in situ sites

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Summary

Introduction

Detailed knowledge of the global distribution of surface fluxes of potent greenhouse gases (GHGs) such as CH4 and CO2 is needed to investigate the uncertain feedback of the global carbon cycle to human disturbances. Atmospheric measurements of these GHGs can provide information about the atmospheric budget. Many regions with a key role in the global annual budgets of CO2 and CH4 are not adequately covered by the surface measurement network. This is especially true for tropical regions and the Southern Hemisphere

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