Improving algorithms and uncertainty estimates for satellite NO2
retrievals: Results from the Quality Assurance for Essential
Climate Variables (QA4ECV) project
Boersma, K.F., Eskes, H.J., Richter, A.,
De Smedt, I., Lorente, A., Beirle, S., van Geffen, J.H.G.M.,
Zara, M., Peters, E., Van Roozendael, M., Wagner, T.,
Maasakkers, J. D., van der A, R.J., Nightingale, J., De Rudder, A.,
Irie, H., Pinardi, G., Lambert, J.-C. and Compernolle, S.: 2018,
Atmos. Meas. Techn. 11, 6651-6678.
Abstract
Global observations of tropospheric nitrogen dioxide (NO2) columns have been
shown to be feasible from space, but consistent multi-sensor records do not
yet exist, nor are they covered by planned activities at the international
level. Harmonised, multi-decadal records of NO2 columns and their associated
uncertainties can provide crucial information on how the emissions and
concentrations of nitrogen oxides evolve over time. Here we describe the
development of a new, community best-practice NO2 retrieval algorithm based
on a synthesis of existing approaches. Detailed comparisons of these
approaches led us to implement an enhanced spectral fitting method for NO2,
a 1°x1° TM5-MP data assimilation scheme to estimate the stratospheric
background and improve air mass factor calculations. Guided by the needs
expressed by data users, producers, and WMO GCOS guidelines, we incorporated
detailed per-pixel uncertainty information in the data product, along with
easily traceable information on the relevant quality aspects of the
retrieval. We applied the improved QA4ECV NO2 algorithm to the most current
level-1 data sets to produce a complete 22-year data record that includes
GOME (1995-2003), SCIAMACHY (2002-2012), GOME-2(A) (2007 onwards) and OMI
(2004 onwards). The QA4ECV NO2 spectral fitting recommendations and TM5-MP
stratospheric column and air mass factor approach are currently also applied
to S5P-TROPOMI. The uncertainties in the QA4ECV tropospheric NO2 columns
amount to typically 40% over polluted scenes. The first validation results
of the QA4ECV OMI NO2 columns and their uncertainties over Tai'an, China, in
June 2006 suggest a small bias (-2%) and better precision than suggested by
uncertainty propagation. We conclude that our improved QA4ECV NO2 long-term
data record is providing valuable information to quantitatively constrain
emissions, deposition, and trends in nitrogen oxides on a global scale.
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. User needs and expert recommendations
3. Quality of level-1 data
4. Algorithm design and traceability
5. Intercomparison of retrieval sub-steps and algorithm selection
6. QA4ECV NO2 uncertainty estimates
7. Validation of QA4ECV NO2 columns and uncertainties
8. Summary
Acknowledgements
References
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created: 17 December 2018
last modified: 19 August 2020