Abstract
Abstract. The ozone (O3) variability over south Asia during the 2008 post-monsoon season has been assessed using measurements from the MetOP-A/IASI instrument and O3 profiles retrieved with the SOftware for a Fast Retrieval of IASI Data (SOFRID). The information content study and error analyses carried out in this paper show that IASI Level 1 data can be used to retrieve tropospheric O3 columns (TOC, surface-225 hPa) and UTLS columns (225–70 hPa) with errors smaller than 20%. Validation with global radiosonde O3 profiles obtained during a period of 6 months show the excellent agreement between IASI and radiosonde for the UTLS with correlation coefficient R > 0.91 and good agreement in the troposphere with correlation coefficient R > 0.74. For both the UTLS and the troposphere Relative Standard Deviations (RSD) are lower than 23%. Comparison with in-situ measurements from the MOZAIC program around Hyderabad demonstrates that IASI is able to capture the TOC inter and intra-seasonal variability in central India. Nevertheless, the agreement is mitigated by the fact that the smoothing of the true O3 profiles by the retrieval results in a reduction of the TOC variability detected by IASI relative to the variability observed by in situ instruments. The post-monsoon temporal variability of the vertical profile of O3 around Hyderabad has been investigated with MOZAIC observations. These observations from airborne instruments show that tropospheric O3 is steadily elevated during most of the studied period with the exception of two sharp drops following the crossing of tropical storms over India. Lagrangian simulations with the FLEXPART model indicate that elevated O3 concentrations in the middle troposphere near Hyderabad are associated with the transport of UTLS air-masses that have followed the Subtropical Westerly Jet (SWJ) and subsided over northern India together with boundary layer polluted air-masses transported from the Indo-gangetic plain by the north-easterly trades. Low O3 concentrations result from the uplift and westward transport of pristine air-masses from the marine boundary layer of the Bay of Bengal by tropical storms. In order to extend the analysis of tropospheric O3 variability to the whole of south Asia, we have used IASI-SOFRID O3 data. We show that IASI O3 data around Hyderabad were able to capture the fast variability revealed by MOZAIC. Furthermore, their spatio-temporal coverage demonstrates that the behaviour of tropospheric O3 observed near Hyderabad extended over most of central and south India and part of the Bay of Bengal. This result highlights the ability of the IASI sensor to capture fast changes in chemical composition related to dramatic tropical weather conditions.
Highlights
According to Dentener et al (2006), south Asia may become the most O3 polluted region with an average 52.2 ppbv surface concentration by 2030
This study made use of data from the Metop/IASI sensor to determine the variability of tropospheric O3 over south Asia during the post-monsoon season of 2008
Tropospheric O3 profiles are retrieved from IASI radiances with almost two independent pieces of information (DFS = 1.7), namely the TOC between the surface and 225 hPa, and the Upper Troposphere-Lower Stratosphere (UTLS) column from 225 to 70 hPa
Summary
According to Dentener et al (2006), south Asia may become the most O3 polluted region with an average 52.2 ppbv surface concentration by 2030. Based on shipboard radiosoundings and on Total Tropospheric O3 (TTO) derived from the TOMS satellite sensor, Chatfield et al (2007) proposed some mechanisms to explain the variability of tropospheric O3 during the winter season over the Indian Ocean. They have shown that O3 maxima in the middle troposphere over the northern Indian Ocean originate alternatively from venting of lower tropospheric pollution and from stratospheric intrusion. IASI data are put forward to characterize the post-monsoon O3 variability over the whole south Asian region
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