A geostationary thermal infrared sensor to monitor the lowermost troposphere: O₃ and CO retrieval studies

This paper describes the capabilities of a nadir thermal infrared (TIR) sensor proposed for deployment onboard a geostationary platform to monitor ozone (O₃) and carbon monoxide (CO) for air quality (AQ) purposes. To assess the capabilities of this sensor we perform idealized retrieval studies considering typical atmospheric profiles of O₃ and CO over Europe with different instrument configuration (signal to noise ratio, SNR, and spectral sampling interval, SSI) using the KOPRA forward model and the KOPRA-fit retrieval scheme. We then select a configuration, referred to as GEO-TIR, optimized for providing information in the lowermost troposphere (LmT; 0 - 3 km in height). For the GEO-TIR configuration we obtain ~1.5 degrees of freedom for O₃ and ~2 for CO at altitudes between 0 and 15 km. The error budget of GEO-TIR, calculated using the principal contributions to the error (namely, temperature, measurement error, smoothing error) shows that information in the LmT can be achieved by GEO-TIR. We also retrieve analogous profiles from another geostationary infrared instrument with SNR and SSI similar to the Meteosat Third Generation Infrared Sounder (MTG-IRS) which is dedicated to numerical weather prediction, referred to as GEO-TIR2. We quantify the added value of GEO-TIR over GEO-TIR2 for a realistic atmosphere, simulated using the chemistry transport model MOCAGE (MOdèle de Chimie Atmospherique à Grande Echelle). Results show that GEO-TIR is able to capture well the spatial and temporal variability in the LmT for both O₃ and CO. These results also provide evidence of the significant added value in the LmT of GEO-TIR compared to GEO-TIR2 by showing GEO-TIR is closer to MOCAGE than GEO-TIR2 for various statistical parameters (correlation, bias, standard deviation).

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Copyright Authors 2011. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


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Author Claeyman, M.
Attié, J.-L.
Peuch, V.-H.
El Amraoui, L.
Lahoz, W.
Josse, B.
Ricaud, P.
von Clarmann, T.
Höpfner, M.
Orphal, J.
Flaud, J.-M.
Edwards, David
Chance, K.
Liu, X.
Pasternak, F.
Cantié, R.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2011-02-16T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T18:52:09.392804
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:10694
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Claeyman, M., Attié, J.-L., Peuch, V.-H., El Amraoui, L., Lahoz, W., Josse, B., Ricaud, P., von Clarmann, T., Höpfner, M., Orphal, J., Flaud, J.-M., Edwards, David, Chance, K., Liu, X., Pasternak, F., Cantié, R.. (2011). A geostationary thermal infrared sensor to monitor the lowermost troposphere: O₃ and CO retrieval studies. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7w959qb. Accessed 18 May 2025.

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