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ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop - Bern, Switzerland - 20 October 2010

ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

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Page 1: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Comparisons

Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy

MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop - Bern, Switzerland - 20 October 2010

Page 2: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Talk Overview

• Recap of ACE satellite and measurement technique

• ACE occultation measurements during MOHAVE

• Comparisons with:

– MIPAS and MLS

– STROZ and ALVICE

Page 3: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE on SCISAT-1

Launch date: August 12, 2003Orbit: 74° inclination at 650 kmMeasurement mode: solar occultation

ACE-FTS: • FTIR spectrometer, 2-13 microns at

0.02 cm-1 resolution• 2-channel visible/NIR imager, 0.525

and 1.02 micronsMAESTRO:• dual UV / visible / NIR grating

spectrophotometer, 285 to 1030 nm at ~1-2 nm resolution

Pointing: suntracker in ACE-FTS

Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE) Satellite Mission:

Mission to measure atmospheric composition: profiles of trace gas species, cloud and aerosol extinction and temperature/pressure

Page 4: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Technique: Solar Occultation

Advantages: • Radiance of sun gives higher signal-to-noise than emission• Limb view gives longer path length ~500 km (lower

detection limits) than nadir• “Self-calibrating” so excellent long-term accuracy and

precision

Disadvantages: • Modest global coverage• Samples only free troposphere

Page 5: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Occultation sequence

Sunset 2245

12 Jan. 2004 9:50:23 UTC

Lat: 67°S

Lon: 168°W

Page 6: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Latitude Coverage 2005/2006

Orbit allows repeat of measurement locations each year

Page 7: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Beta Angle of Measurement

• Beta is the angle between the orbit plane of the satellite and the Earth-Sun vector

• The larger the beta angle the longer the occultation measurement and thus more frequent altitude sampling

Diagram shows beta angle as viewed from Sun

Low beta

High beta

Page 8: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Measurements for MOHAVE

• Seven ACE occultations were measured near TMF during the MOHAVE-2009 campaign

• All are “Opportunity Science” observations - beta angle > 60°

– With higher beta angle, occultations are longer and cover larger ground tracks

• Plot shows ground-tracks of ACE occultations from 0 to 150 km in altitude (stretch over 10 º lat.!)

• Label location of occultation using 30 km point (geometric)

TMF

Page 9: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Occultations

Occultation Date and Time (UTC) Latitude Longitude Beta angle Distance

ss33239 2009-10-15 00:44:19.07 20.34 -107.79 60.77 1842.0

ss33254 2009-10-16 01:12:01.27 29.72 -116.71 61.93 528.7

ss33269 2009-10-17 01:39:46.81 39.19 -126.22 62.79 926.3

ss33283 2009-10-18 00:29:36.56 47.57 -111.75 63.34 1546.1

sr33350 2009-10-22 13:55:54.92 45.65 -111.14 62.08 1368.8

sr33351 2009-10-22 15:33:46.02 45.02 -135.84 62.02 1942.4

sr33365 2009-10-23 14:23:40.13 36.10 -121.23 60.97 372.1

• ACE Measurement times, locations and distances from TMF– Distance from TMF (34.4 N, 117.7 W) to location of ACE 30 km tangent altitude

(as calculated geometrically) – Have profiles for all occultations from ACE-FTS and for two from MAESTRO

(ss33239 and ss33254)

Page 10: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS data processing

• Raw data to atmospheric transmission spectra (Level 0 to 1) – Interferograms transmitted to Earth are Fourier

transformed and transmission spectra are calculated using exo-atmospheric spectra

• Spectra to atmospheric profiles (Level 1 to 2) – Temperature and pressure profiles are determined from

global (non-linear least-squares) fit of CO2 transitions – relative line intensities give temperature and absolute line intensities give pressure

– Then concentration profiles of atmospheric species are retrieved using microwindow approach

– ACE-MAESTRO retrievals also use ACE-FTS pressure and temperature profiles

Page 11: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Water Vapour

• ACE-FTS profiles (version 2.2 + O3, N2O5 & HDO updates):

– Cloud tops to ~90 km depending on abundance

– ~3-4 km vertical resolution from FTS field of view

– H2O MWs

• v2.2: ~60 from 950-975 cm-1 and 1360-2000 cm-1

• v3.0: ~40 from 935-945 cm-1 and 1195-1945 cm-1

• MAESTRO profiles:

– H2O - research product - not part of current v1.2 distribution

– Cloud tops to tropopause is best region for retrievals

– ~1 km vertical from MAESTRO

– Spectral range: 926 - 969.7 nm

Page 12: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE H2O Validation

M. Carleer et al., ACPD, 8, 4499-4559 (2008), still in revision

• Comparisons with SAGE II, HALOE, POAM III, MIPAS and SMR

– ACE-FTS v2.2 fitting errors generally better than 5% from 7 to 70 km and increasing above

– In all comparisons except for POAM III, ACE-FTS typically biased high on order of 3-10 % from 15 to 70 km

– Approximately constant wet bias of 0.4 ppmv for ACE-FTS versus SMR from 50 to 90 km

– Largest differences for ACE-FTS at lowest altitudes - MAESTRO results seem better in upper troposphere

• Vertical resolution effect?

Page 13: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE Data Used for Comparisons

• Using newest versions of ACE-FTS (v3.0) and MAESTRO (research) profiles (available in MOHAVE database)

• ACE-FTS: now all seven occultations have processed

– Challenges with large number of measurements in each occultation (because of high beta angle)

– For highest beta, analyse every other measurement to deal with large amount of data (sr33350, ss33283, ss33254)

– For slightly lower high beta, every measurement is analysed but small distance between them (< 1.5 km) can cause oscillations to occur (ss33269 and ss33365)

• ACE-MAESTRO: two occultations available (ss33239 and ss33254)

– Limited by number of spectra processed with new L1 code

Page 14: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

MAESTRO versus ACE-FTS

ss33254, 2009-10-16 01:12UTC; (29.72N, 116.71W); beta 61.93; 528.7 km

ACE-FTS gives fitting errors while MAESTRO calculates uncertainty for each altitude

Page 15: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

MAESTRO versus ACE-FTS

ss33239, 2009-10-15 00:44UTC; (20.34N, 107.79W); beta 60.77; 1842.0 km

Large error given for this value!

Page 16: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Comparison Details

• Starting with each ACE occultation, search for coincidences within:– 6 hours and 500 km for MLS (~same resolution)– 6 hours and 700 km for MIPAS (~same resolution)– 6 hours and 500 km for lidars (STROZ, ALVICE)

• Employed smoothing technique to make vertical resolution of measurements comparable

• Created 3 km wide weighting functions at ACE-FTS observation altitudes and convolved these with the individual lidar profiles - used in v2.2 validation!

• Focus only on water vapour for these comparisons...

Page 17: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS vs. MIPAS

sr33365; 2009-10-23 14:23UTC; (36.10N, 121.23W); beta 60.97; 372.1 km

Example of oscillationsin profiles

1 ACE-FTS versus 3 MIPAS profiles

See average comparisons in Gabi’s MIPAS talk!

Non-LTE effects for MIPAS above 50 km

Page 18: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus MLS

sr33351; 2009-10-22 15:33UTC; (45.02 N, 135.84W); beta 62.02; 1942.4 km

Example of minimal oscillationsin profiles

1 ACE-FTS vs. 6 MLS profiles

Consistent with ACE-MLS v2.2 comparisons±5% with no bias

Page 19: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus STROZ

ss33254, 2009-10-16 01:12UTC; (29.72N, 116.71W); beta 61.93; 528.7 km

Using 1 hour integ. STROZ

Within (just) 6 hours!

Smoothing generally makes profiles more comparable.

Page 20: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus STROZ

ss33254, 2009-10-16 01:12UTC; (29.72N, 116.71W); beta 61.93; 528.7 km

Using 1 hour integ. STROZ

Focusing on UTLS part of profile

Challenge of comparing limb and vertical profiles!

Page 21: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus STROZ

ss33254, 2009-10-16 01:12UTC; (29.72N, 116.71W); beta 61.93; 528.7 km

Using 1 hour integ. STROZ

Now within ~3 hours

UTLS more comparable when closer in time.

Page 22: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus ALVICE

ss33254, 2009-10-16 01:12UTC; (29.72N, 116.71W); beta 61.93; 528.7 km

Using 1 hour integ. ALVICE within ~3 hours

See larger differences than with STROZ

Would be useful to look at T, O3

Page 23: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

Summary

• Seven occultations were measured within 2000 km of TMF

– ACE-FTS v3.0 and new MAESTRO profiles available from archive

• All “Opportunity Science” Observations

– Challenging to process because of high beta angle

• Limited opportunities for statistical comparisons (unlike MIPAS, MLS)

– So, how do we best to use ACE in MOHAVE comparisons?

Funding for ACE provided by:

• Canadian Space Agency (CSA)

• Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

• Environment Canada

Page 24: ACE Comparisons Kaley Walker, Ashley Jones, Chris Boone, Chris Sioris, Felicia Kolonjari, Sean McLeod, Peter Bernath and Tom McElroy MOHAVE-2009 #2 Workshop

ACE-FTS versus HALOE v19

• 36 coincidences within 2 hours and 500 km; most northern polar summer occultations

• Hygropause at same altitude but more rapid increase in H2O at lower altitudes for POAM III

C. Randall (in ACE H2O validation paper)