Cavity ring-down spectroscopy of water vapor in the deep-blue region

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Abstract

Water vapor absorption in the near-ultraviolet region is essential to describe the energy budget of Earth, but little spectroscopic information is available since it is a challenging spectral region for both experimental and theoretical studies. A continuous-wave cavity ring-down spectroscopic experiment was built to record absorption lines of water vapor around 415 nm. With a precision of 4×10-10 cm-1, 40 rovibrational transitions of H216O were observed in this work, and 27 of them were assigned to the (224), (205), (710), (304), (093), (125) and (531) vibrational bands. A comparison of line positions and intensities determined in this work to the most recent HITRAN database is presented. Water vapor absorption cross-sections near 415 nm were calculated based on our measurements, which vary between 1×10-26 and 5×10-26cm2 molec.-1. These data will also significantly impact the spectroscopy detection of trace gas species in the near-UV region.

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Yang, Q. Y., Conway, E. K., Liang, H., Gordon, I. E., Tan, Y., & Hu, S. M. (2022). Cavity ring-down spectroscopy of water vapor in the deep-blue region. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 15(15), 4463–4472. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-15-4463-2022

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