Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Fourier transform spectrometers, thanks to their intrinsic advantages of
high throughput, high spectral resolution and multiplex acquisition of
spectral channels, offer a powerful tool for the characterization of the
Earth's atmosphere. The use of photon noise limited detectors in FTS
instruments operating in the middle/far infrared spectral region permits
high sensitivity emission spectroscopy measurements, without the
limitations arising from the use of an external radiation source. The wide
operating spectral range of FTS instruments makes possible simultaneous
detection of different atmospheric chemical species that show rotational
and vibrational spectral bands in the middle/far infrared region.
Spatially resolved measurements of the concentration of the interesting
species are of fundamental interest in the study of local phenomena in
atmospheric chemistry and physics, and can be obtained through the use of
various observation and data inversion techniques. Among these, the best
results in terms of vertical resolution are achieved through the limb
sounding observation technique from airborne platform.
As an example of possibilities offered by the above considered technique,
results obtained from the SAFIRE/A (Spectroscopy of the Atmosphere using
Far InfraRed Emission - Airborne) during the Antarctic campaign APE-GAIA
(Airborne Polar Experiment - Geophysica Aircraft In Antarctica, Ushuaia,
Argentina, September-October, 1999) are presented.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Fourier transform spectroscopy; Emission spectroscopy; Earth observation; Stratospheric chemistry
List of contributors:
Cortesi, Ugo; Palchetti, Luca; Bianchini, Giovanni
Published in: