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Elsevier, Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer, 14(112), p. 2347-2354

DOI: 10.1016/j.jqsrt.2011.06.003

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Spectroscopic requirements for ACCURATE, a microwave and infrared-laser occultation satellite mission

Journal article published in 2011 by Jeremy J. Harrison ORCID, Peter F. Bernath, Gottfried Kirchengast
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

The proposed satellite mission ACCURATE consists of a small constellation of satellites in low Earth orbit, combining microwave occultation for thermodynamic state profiling with infrared-laser occultation for greenhouse gas and line-of-sight wind profiling. The mission aims to detect six greenhouse gas molecules with four additional isotopologues (H2O, CO2, CH4, N2O, O3, CO, 13CO2, OC18O, HDO, and H218O) in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere in the 4000–5000cm−1 spectral region. Greenhouse gas profiles will be retrieved to within 1–2% accuracy using a ‘differential’ method, requiring two spectral points for each species – one to sample the spectral line and the other nearby to sample the baseline.An estimation of retrieval errors for the ACCURATE mission reveals that errors in spectroscopic line parameters dominate all other error sources. Poor knowledge of the spectroscopy introduces systematic errors into the retrieved greenhouse gas profiles. Using a simple approach, it was shown that the best line parameters currently available are too large to allow retrievals of greenhouse gases to within the stated ACCURATE mission goals of 1% accuracy for CO2 and 2% for all other species. Therefore, spectroscopic line parameters for targeted lines need to be improved before the ACCURATE mission can be launched. Requirements have been formulated in this direction, and laboratory experiments outlined that could meet these requirements.