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A quality-assured dataset of nine radiation components observed at the Shangdianzi regional GAW station in China (2013–2022).

Authors :
Quan, Weijun
Wang, Zhenfa
Qiao, Lin
Zheng, Xiangdong
Jin, Junli
Li, Yinruo
Yin, Xiaomei
Ma, Zhiqiang
Wild, Martin
Source :
Earth System Science Data. 2024, Vol. 16 Issue 2, p961-983. 23p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The New Baseline Surface Radiation (NBSR) system was established at the Shangdianzi (SDZ) regional Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) station in 2013 to observe nine broadband radiation components, i.e. the global, direct, diffuse, and upwelling shortwave irradiance (GSWI, DSWI, DifSWI, and UpSWI); the photosynthetically active radiation (PAR); the ultraviolet irradiance (UVAI and UVBI); and the down- and upwelling longwave irradiance (DnLWI and UpLWI). To test the 1 min raw radiometric data, a Hybrid Algorithm for Radiation Data Quality Control (HARDQC) is presented in this study based on well-established methods, together with the solar irradiance dataset and the spectral features of the instrument bands. Subsequently, a NBSR dataset, which consists of radiation data at multiple timescales (i.e. 1 min, hourly, daily, monthly, monthly average hourly, and monthly average daily) over 2013–2022, is established and evaluated. Results show that more than 98.7 % of all radiation components passed the physical possibility test. The percentages of those that passed the extremely rare test are greater than 98.6 % for all radiation components except for the DnLWI (97.1 %). The percentages of those that passed the comparison test are greater than 83.3 % (GSWI), 78.3 % (DSWI), 81.7 % (DifSWI), 93.1 % (UpSWI), 88.9 % (PAR), 95.6 % (UVAI), 96.3 % (UVBI), 99.8 % (DnLWI), and 99.7 % (UpLWI), respectively. Due to data logger faults, removal of the instruments for calibration, and lightning strikes, some apparent data gaps in the upwelling radiation components (January 2015–August 2017) and all radiation components (December 2018; July to September 2021) were detected. Despite the existence of a few imperfections in the NBSR dataset, it is still reliable to apply it in many fields such as the validation of satellite products and numerical models, the investigation of relationships between radiation and atmospheric composition, and the detection of changes in the surface fluxes. The dataset described in this paper is available at 10.1594/PANGAEA.963330 (Quan et al., 2023b). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18663508
Volume :
16
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth System Science Data
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176075081
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-16-961-2024