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Intercomparison of NO2, O4, O3 and HCHO slant column measurements by MAX-DOAS and zenith-sky UV-Visible spectrometers during the CINDI-2 campaign

Authors :
Karin Kreher
Michel Van Roozendael
Francois Hendrick
Arnoud Apituley
Ermioni Dimitropoulou
Udo Frieß
Andreas Richter
Thomas Wagner
Nader Abuhassan
Li Ang
Monica Anguas
Alkis Bais
Nuria Benavent
Tim Bösch
Kristof Bognar
Alexander Borovski
Ilya Bruchkouski
Alexander Cede
Ka L. Chan
Sebastian Donner
Theano Drosoglou
Caroline Fayt
Henning Finkenzeller
David Garcia-Nieto
Clio Gielen
Laura Gómez-Martín
Nan Hao
Jay R. Herman
Christian Hermans
Syedul Hoque
Hitoshi Irie
Junli Jin
Paul Johnston
Junaid Khayyam Butt
Fahim Khokhar
Theodore K. Koenig
Jonas Kuhn
Vinod Kumar
Johannes Lampel
Cheng Liu
Jianzhong Ma
Alexis Merlaud
Abhishek K. Mishra
Moritz Müller
Monica Navarro-Comas
Mareike Ostendorf
Andrea Pazmino
Enno Peters
Gaia Pinardi
Manuel Pinharanda
Ankie Piters
Ulrich Platt
Oleg Postylyakov
Cristina Prados-Roman
Olga Puentedura
Richard Querel
Alfonso Saiz-Lopez
Anja Schönhardt
Stefan F. Schreier
Andre Seyler
Vinayak Sinha
Elena Spinei
Kimberly Strong
Frederik Tack
Xin Tian
Martin Tiefengraber
Jan-Lukas Tirpitz
Jeron van Gent
Rainer Volkamer
Mihalis Vrekoussis
Shanshan Wang
Zhuoru Wang
Mark Wenig
Folkard Wittrock
Pinhua H. Xie
Jin Xu
Margarita Yela
Chengxin Zhang
Xiaoyi Zhao
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2019.

Abstract

In September 2016, 36 spectrometers from 24 institutes measured a number of key atmospheric pollutants for a period of 17 days during the Second Cabauw Intercomparison campaign for Nitrogen Dioxide measuring Instruments (CINDI-2) that took place at Cabauw, The Netherlands (51.97° N, 4.93° E). We report on the outcome of the formal semi-blind intercomparison exercise, which was held under the umbrella of the Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) and the European Space Agency (ESA). The three major goals of CINDI-2 were to characterise and better understand the differences between a large number of Multi-AXis Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (MAX-DOAS) and zenith-sky DOAS instruments and analysis methods, to discuss the performance of the various types of instruments and to contribute to a harmonisation of the measurement settings and retrieval methods. This, in turn, creates the capability to produce consistent high-quality ground-based data sets, which are an essential requirement to generate reliable long-term measurement time series suitable for trend analysis and satellite data validation. The data products investigated during the semi-blind intercomparison are slant columns of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), the oxygen dimer (O4) and ozone (O3) measured in the UV and visible wavelength region, formaldehyde (HCHO) in the UV spectral region and NO2 in an additional (smaller) wavelength range in the visible. The campaign design and implementation processes are discussed in detail including the measurement protocol, calibration procedures and slant column retrieval settings. Strong emphasis was put on the careful alignment and synchronisation of the measurement systems, resulting in an unprecedented set of measurements made under highly comparable air mass conditions. The CINDI-2 data sets were investigated using a regression analysis of the slant columns measured by each instrument and for each of the target data products. The slope and intercept of the regression analysis respectively quantify the mean systematic bias and offset of the individual data sets against the reference, and the RMS error provides an estimate of the measurement noise or dispersion. These three criteria are examined and for each of the parameters and each of the data products, performance thresholds are set and applied to all the measurements. The approach presented here has been developed based on heritage from previous intercomparison exercises. It introduces a quantitative assessment of the measurement performance of all the participating instruments for the MAX-DOAS and zenith-sky DOAS techniques.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........95944b9e0860c1a0534887835e0294d5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2019-157