Proposed standardized definitions for vertical resolution and uncertainty in the NDACC lidar ozone and temperature algorithms-Part 2: Ozone DIAL uncertainty budget
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2016
abstract:
A standardized approach for the definition, propagation,
and reporting of uncertainty in the ozone differential
absorption lidar data products contributing to the Network
for the Detection for Atmospheric Composition Change
(NDACC) database is proposed. One essential aspect of the
proposed approach is the propagation in parallel of all independent
uncertainty components through the data processing
chain before they are combined together to form the ozone
combined standard uncertainty.
The independent uncertainty components contributing to
the overall budget include random noise associated with signal
detection, uncertainty due to saturation correction, background
noise extraction, the absorption cross sections of O3,
NO2, SO2, and O2, the molecular extinction cross sections,
and the number densities of the air, NO2, and SO2. The expression
of the individual uncertainty components and their
step-by-step propagation through the ozone differential absorption
lidar (DIAL) processing chain are thoroughly estimated.
All sources of uncertainty except detection noise
imply correlated terms in the vertical dimension, which requires
knowledge of the covariance matrix when the lidar
signal is vertically filtered. In addition, the covariance terms
must be taken into account if the same detection hardware
is shared by the lidar receiver channels at the absorbed and
non-absorbed wavelengths.
The ozone uncertainty budget is presented as much as possible
in a generic form (i.e., as a function of instrument performance
and wavelength) so that all NDACC ozone DIAL
investigators across the network can estimate, for their own
instrument and in a straightforward manner, the expected impact
of each reviewed uncertainty component. In addition,
two actual examples of full uncertainty budget are provided,
using nighttime measurements from the tropospheric ozone
DIAL located at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Table
Mountain Facility, California, and nighttime measurements
from the JPL stratospheric ozone DIAL located at
Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawai'i [object Object]
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
ozone; lidar DIAL; NDACC; error budget
List of contributors:
Liberti, GIAN LUIGI
Published in: