Abstract

Abstract. The Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) satellite instrument provides the longest continuous dataset of carbon monoxide (CO) from space. We perform the first validation of MOPITT version 6 retrievals using total column CO measurements from ground-based remote-sensing Fourier transform infrared spectrometers (FTSs). Validation uses data recorded at 14 stations, that span a wide range of latitudes (80° N to 78° S), in the Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC). MOPITT measurements are spatially co-located with each station, and different vertical sensitivities between instruments are accounted for by using MOPITT averaging kernels (AKs). All three MOPITT retrieval types are analyzed: thermal infrared (TIR-only), joint thermal and near infrared (TIR–NIR), and near infrared (NIR-only). Generally, MOPITT measurements overestimate CO relative to FTS measurements, but the bias is typically less than 10 %. Mean bias is 2.4 % for TIR-only, 5.1 % for TIR–NIR, and 6.5 % for NIR-only. The TIR–NIR and NIR-only products consistently produce a larger bias and lower correlation than the TIR-only. Validation performance of MOPITT for TIR-only and TIR–NIR retrievals over land or water scenes is equivalent. The four MOPITT detector element pixels are validated separately to account for their different uncertainty characteristics. Pixel 1 produces the highest standard deviation and lowest correlation for all three MOPITT products. However, for TIR-only and TIR–NIR, the error-weighted average that includes all four pixels often provides the best correlation, indicating compensating pixel biases and well-captured error characteristics. We find that MOPITT bias does not depend on latitude but rather is influenced by the proximity to rapidly changing atmospheric CO. MOPITT bias drift has been bound geographically to within ±0.5 % yr−1 or lower at almost all locations.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric carbon monoxide (CO) is useful for studying both transported and local sources of pollution

  • We find that degrees of freedom for signal (DFS) vary strongly with latitude for the thermal infrared (TIR)-only and TIR– near infrared (NIR) products, the Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) bias does not depend upon latitude

  • MOPITT retrieves with equivalent skill over land or water, and the highest amount of information is present in the joint TIR–NIR product as indicated by the largest DFS

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric carbon monoxide (CO) is useful for studying both transported and local sources of pollution. CO is directly emitted from incomplete combustion, such as from biomass burning and fossil fuel use. CO is chemically produced from the oxidation of methane and volatile organic compounds. The approximate global lifetime of 2 months makes CO an ideal atmospheric constituent to track atmo-. Buchholz: Validation of MOPITT carbon monoxide spheric physical and chemical processes over a range of spatial scales (Edwards et al, 2006; Duncan et al, 2007)

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