Abstract
Carbon dioxide (CO 2) and Methane (CH 4) are the two most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases. CH 4 is furthermore one of the most potent present and future contributors to global warming because of its large global warming potential (GWP). Our knowledge of CH 4 and CO 2 source strengths is based primarily on bottom-up scaling of sparse in-situ local point measurements of emissions and up-scaling of emission factor estimates or top-down modeling incorporating data from surface networks and more recently also by incorporating data from low spatial resolution satellite observations for CH 4. There is a need to measure and retrieve the dry columns of CO 2 and CH4 having high spatial resolution and spatial coverage. In order to fill this gap a new passive airborne 2-channel grating spectrometer instrument for remote sensing of small scale and mesoscale column-averaged CH 4 and CO 2 observations has been developed. This Methane Airborne MAPper (MAMAP) instrument measures reflected and scattered solar radiation in the short wave infrared (SWIR) and near-infrared (NIR) parts of the electro-magnetic spectrum at moderate spectral resolution. The SWIR channel yields measurements of atmospheric absorption bands of CH 4 and CO 2 in the spectral range between 1.59 and 1.69 μm at a spectral resolution of 0.82 nm. The NIR channel around 0.76 μm measures the atmospheric O2-A-band absorption with a resolution of 0.46 nm. MAMAP has been designed for flexible operation aboard a variety of airborne platforms. The instrument design and the performance of the SWIR channel, together with some results from on-ground and in-flight engineering tests are presented. The SWIR channel performance has been analyzed using a retrieval algorithm applied to the nadir measured spectra. Dry air column-averaged mole fractions are obtained from SWIR data only by dividing the retrieved CH 4 columns by the simultaneously retrieved CO 2 columns for dry air column CH 4 (X CH 4) and vice versa for dry air column CO 2 (X CO 2). The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the SWIR channel is approximately 1000 for integration times (t int) in the range of 0.6-0.8 s for scenes with surface spectral reflectances (SSR)/albedo of around 0.18. At these integration times the ground scene size is about 23 × 33 m2 for an aircraft altitude of 1 km and a ground speed of 200 km/h. For these scenes the actual X CH4 or X CO 2 dry air column retrieval precisions are typically about 1% (1). Elevated levels of CH 4 have been retrieved above a CH 4 emitting landfill. Similarly the plume of CO 2 from coal-fired power plants can be well detected and tracked. The measurements by the MAMAP sensor could enable estimates of anthropogenic, biogenic and geological emissions of localized intense CH 4 and CO 2 sources such as anthropogenic fugitive CH 4 emissions from oil and gas industry, coal mining, disposal of organic waste, CO 2 emissions from coal-fired power plants, steel production or geologic CH 4 and CO 2 emissions from seepage and volcanoes. Appropriate analysis of the measurements of MAMAP potentially also yields natural CH 4 emissions from less intense but extensive sources such as wetlands. © Author(s) 2011.
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CITATION STYLE
Gerilowski, K., Tretner, A., Krings, T., Buchwitz, M., Bertagnolio, P. P., Belemezov, F., … Bovensmann, H. (2011). MAMAP - A new spectrometer system for column-averaged methane and carbon dioxide observations from aircraft: Instrument description and performance analysis. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 4(2), 215–243. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-4-215-2011
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