Article (Scientific journals)
Modeled and empirical approaches for retrieving columnar water vapor from solar transmittance measurements in the 0.72, 0.82, and 0.94 μm absorption bands
Ingold, T.; Schmid, B.; Mätzler, C. et al.
2000In Journal of Geophysical Research, 105 (D19), p. 24327–24343
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Ingold 2000 (JGR) - Modeled and empirical approaches for retrieving H2O from solar transmittance measurements in the 0.72, 0.82, and 0.94 um absorption bands.pdf
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Keywords :
water vapor; atmospheric composition; infrared solar transmittance; sun photometer
Abstract :
[en] A Sun photometer (18 channels between 300 and 1024 nm) has been used for measuring the columnar content of atmospheric water vapor (CWV) by solar transmittance measurements in absorption bands with channels centered at 719, 817, and 946 nm. The observable is the band-weighted transmittance function defined by the spectral absorption of water vapor and the spectral features of solar irradiance and system response. The transmittance function is approximated by a three-parameter model. Its parameters are determined from MODTRAN and LBLRTM simulations or empirical approaches using CWV data of a dual-channel microwave radiometer (MWR) or a Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS). Data acquired over a 2-year period during 1996–1998 at two different sites in Switzerland, Bern (560 m above sea level (asl)) and Jungfraujoch (3580 m asl) were compared to MWR, radiosonde (RS), and FTS retrievals. At the low-altitude station with an average CWV amount of 15 mm the LBLRTM approach (based on recently corrected line intensities) leads to negligible biases at 719 and 946 nm if compared to an average of MWR, RS, and GPS retrievals. However, at 817 nm an overestimate of 2.7 to 4.3 mm (18–29%) remains. At the high-altitude station with an average CWV amount of 1.4 mm the LBLRTM approaches overestimate the CWV by 1.0, 1.4, and 0.1 mm (58, 76, and 3%) at 719, 817, and 946 nm, compared to the FTS instrument. At the low-altitude station, CWV estimates, based on empirical approaches, agree with the MWR within 0.4 mm (2.5% of the mean); at the high-altitude site with a factor of 10 less water vapor the agreement of the SPM with the FTS is 0.0 to 0.2 mm (1 to 9% of the mean CWV there). Sensitivity analyses show that for the conditions met at the two stations with CWV ranging from 0.2 to 30 mm, the retrieval errors are smallest if the 946 nm channel is used.
Disciplines :
Earth sciences & physical geography
Author, co-author :
Ingold, T.;  University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland > Institute of Applied Physics (IAP)
Schmid, B.;  Bay Area Environmental Research Institute, San Francisco, California, USA
Mätzler, C.;  University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland > Institute of Applied Physics (IAP)
Demoulin, Philippe ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophys., géophysique et océanographie (AGO) > Groupe infra-rouge de phys. atmosph. et solaire (GIRPAS)
Kämpfer, N.;  University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland > Institute of Applied Physics (IAP)
Language :
English
Title :
Modeled and empirical approaches for retrieving columnar water vapor from solar transmittance measurements in the 0.72, 0.82, and 0.94 μm absorption bands
Publication date :
16 October 2000
Journal title :
Journal of Geophysical Research
ISSN :
0148-0227
eISSN :
2156-2202
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), Washington, United States - District of Columbia
Volume :
105
Issue :
D19
Pages :
24327–24343
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 06 February 2014

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