Eleven years of tropospheric NO2 measured by GOME, SCIAMACHY and OMI

  • Eskes H
  • Boersma F
  • Dirksen R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Based on measurements of GOME on ESA ERS-2, SCIAMACHY on ESA-ENVISAT, and Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on the NASA EOS-Aura satellite there is now a unique 11-year dataset of global tropospheric nitrogen dioxide measurements from space. The retrieval approach consists of two steps. The first step is an application of the DOAS (Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy) approach which delivers the total absorption optical thickness along the light path (the slant column). For GOME and SCIAMACHY this is based on the DOAS implementation developed by BIRA/IASB. For OMI the DOAS implementation was developed in a collaboration between KNMI and NASA. The second retrieval step, developed at KNMI, estimates the tropospheric vertical column of NO2 based on the slant column, cloud fraction and cloud top height retrieval, stratospheric column estimates derived from a data assimilation approach and vertical profile estimates from space-time collocated profiles from the TM chemistry-transport model. The second step was applied with only minor modifications to all three instruments to generate a uniform 11-year data set. In our talk we will address the following topics: - A short summary of the retrieval approach and results - Comparisons with other retrievals - Comparisons with global and regional-scale models - OMI-SCIAMACHY and SCIAMACHY-GOME comparisons - Validation with independent measurements - Trend studies of NO2 for the past 11 years

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APA

Eskes, H., Boersma, F., Dirksen, R., van der A, R., Veefkind, P., Levelt, P., … Gleason, J. (2006). Eleven years of tropospheric NO2 measured by GOME, SCIAMACHY and OMI. AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts, 41, 2. Retrieved from http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2006AGUFM.A41F..02E

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