Accounting for the photochemical variation in stratospheric NO2 in the SAGE III/ISS solar occultation retrieval
The Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment (SAGE) III has been operating on the International Space Station (ISS) since mid-2017. Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) number density profiles are routinely retrieved from SAGE III/ISS solar occultation measurements in the middle atmosphere. Although NO2 density v...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric measurement techniques 2021-01, Vol.14 (1), p.557-566 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment
(SAGE) III has been operating on the International Space
Station (ISS) since mid-2017. Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) number
density profiles are routinely retrieved from SAGE
III/ISS solar occultation measurements in the middle atmosphere.
Although NO2 density varies throughout the day due
to photochemistry, the standard SAGE NO2 retrieval algorithm
neglects these variations along the instrument’s line of
sight by assuming that the number density has a constant gradient
within a given vertical layer of the atmosphere. This assumption
will result in a retrieval bias for a species like NO2
that changes rapidly across the terminator. In this work we
account for diurnal variations in retrievals of NO2 from the
SAGE III/ISS measurements, and we determine the impact
of this algorithm improvement on the resulting NO2 number
densities. The first step in applying the diurnal correction is
to use publicly available SAGE III/ISS products to convert
the retrieved number density profiles to optical depth profiles.
The retrieval is then re-performed with a new matrix
that applies photochemical scale factors for each point along
the line of sight according to the changing solar zenith angle.
In general NO2 that is retrieved by accounting for these
diurnal variations is more than 10% lower than the standard
algorithm below 30 km. This effect is greatest in winter at
high latitudes and generally greater for sunrise occultations
than sunset. Comparisons with coincident profiles from the
Optical Spectrograph and InfraRed Imager System (OSIRIS)
show that NO2 from SAGE III/ISS is generally biased high;
however the agreement improves by up to 20% in the mid-stratosphere
when diurnal variations are accounted for in
the retrieval. We conclude that diurnal variations along the
SAGE III/ISS line of sight are an important term to consider
for NO2 analyses at altitudes below 30 km. |
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ISSN: | 1867-1381 1867-8548 |
DOI: | 10.5194/amt-14-557-2021 |