Daytime and nighttime aerosol optical depth implementation in CÆLIS

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Abstract

The University of Valladolid (UVa, Spain) has managed a calibration center of the AErosol RObotic NETwork (AERONET) since 2006. The CAELIS software tool, developed by UVa, was created to manage the data generated by AERONET photometers for calibration, quality control and data processing purposes. This paper exploits the potential of this tool in order to obtain products like the aerosol optical depth (AOD) and ngström exponent (AE), which are of high interest for atmospheric and climate studies, as well as to enhance the quality control of the instruments and data managed by CAELIS. The AOD and cloud screening algorithms implemented in CAELIS, both based on AERONET version 3, are described in detail. The obtained products are compared with the AERONET database. In general, the differences in daytime AOD between CAELIS and AERONET are far below the expected uncertainty of the instrument, ranging in mean differences between -1:3*10-4 at 870 nm and 6:2*10-4 at 380 nm. The standard deviations of the differences range from 2:8*10-4 at 675 nm to 8:1*10-4 at 340 nm. The AOD and AE at nighttime calculated by CAELIS from Moon observations are also presented, showing good continuity between day and nighttime for different locations, aerosol loads and Moon phase angles. Regarding cloud screening, around 99.9% of the observations classified as cloud-free by CAELIS are also assumed cloudfree by AERONET; this percentage is similar for the cases considered cloud-contaminated by both databases. The obtained results point out the capability of CAELIS as a processing system. The AOD algorithm provides the opportunity to use this tool with other instrument types and to retrieve other aerosol products in the future.

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APA

González, R., Toledano, C., Román, R., Fuertes, D., Berjón, A., Mateos, D., … De Frutos, Á. M. (2020). Daytime and nighttime aerosol optical depth implementation in CÆLIS. Geoscientific Instrumentation, Methods and Data Systems, 9(2), 417–433. https://doi.org/10.5194/gi-9-417-2020

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