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Intercomparison of slant column measurements of NO[subscript 2] and O[subscript 4] by MAX-DOAS and zenith-sky UV and visible spectrometers

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posted on 2012-10-24, 09:06 authored by H.K. Roscoe, Van Roozendael M., C. Fayt, du Piesanie A., N. Abuhassan, C. Adams, M. Akrami, A. Cede, J. Chong, K. Clemer, U. Friess, M.G. Ojeda, F. Goutail, R. Graves, A. Griesfeller, K. Grossmann, G. Hemerijckx, F. Hendrick, J. Herman, C. Hermans, H. Irie, P.V. Johnston, Y. Kanaya, K. Kreher, R. Leigh, A. Merlaud, G.H. Mount, M. Navarro, H. Oetjen, A. Pazmino, M. Perez-Camacho, E. Peters, G. Pinardi, O. Puentedura, A. Richter, A. Schoenhardt, R. Shaiganfar, E. Spinei, K. Strong, H. Takashima, T. Vlemmix, M. Vrekoussis, T. Wagner, F. Wittrock, M. Yela, S. Yilmaz, F. Boersma, J. Hains, M. Kroon, A. Piters, Y.J. Kim
In June 2009, 22 spectrometers from 14 institutes measured tropospheric and stratospheric NO[subscript 2] from the ground for more than 11 days during the Cabauw Intercomparison Campaign of Nitrogen Dioxide measuring Instruments (CINDI), at Cabauw, NL (51.97° N, 4.93° E). All visible instruments used a common wavelength range and set of cross sections for the spectral analysis. Most of the instruments were of the multi-axis design with analysis by differential spectroscopy software (MAX-DOAS), whose non-zenith slant columns were compared by examining slopes of their least-squares straight line fits to mean values of a selection of instruments, after taking 30-min averages. Zenith slant columns near twilight were compared by fits to interpolated values of a reference instrument, then normalised by the mean of the slopes of the best instruments. For visible MAX-DOAS instruments, the means of the fitted slopes for NO[subscript 2] and O[subscript 4] of all except one instrument were within 10% of unity at almost all non-zenith elevations, and most were within 5%. Values for UV MAX-DOAS instruments were almost as good, being 12% and 7%, respectively. For visible instruments at zenith near twilight, the means of the fitted slopes of all instruments were within 5% of unity. This level of agreement is as good as that of previous intercomparisons, despite the site not being ideal for zenith twilight measurements. It bodes well for the future of measurements of tropospheric NO[subscript 2], as previous intercomparisons were only for zenith instruments focussing on stratospheric NO[subscript 2], with their longer heritage.

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Citation

ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2010, 3 (6), pp. 1629-1646

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES

Publisher

European Geosciences Union (EGU) and COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH

issn

1867-1381

eissn

1867-8548

Copyright date

2010

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://www.atmos-meas-tech.net/3/1629/2010/amt-3-1629-2010.html

Language

English

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