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MAX-DOAS formaldehyde slant column measurements during CINDI: intercomparison and analysis improvement

Authors :
G. Pinardi
M. Van Roozendael
N. Abuhassan
C. Adams
A. Cede
K. Clémer
C. Fayt
U. Frieß
M. Gil
J. Herman
C. Hermans
F. Hendrick
H. Irie
A. Merlaud
M. Navarro Comas
E. Peters
A. J. M. Piters
O. Puentedura
A. Richter
A. Schönhardt
R. Shaiganfar
E. Spinei
K. Strong
H. Takashima
M. Vrekoussis
T. Wagner
F. Wittrock
S. Yilmaz
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 167-185 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2013.

Abstract

We present intercomparison results for formaldehyde (HCHO) slant column measurements performed during the Cabauw Intercomparison campaign of Nitrogen Dioxide measuring Instruments (CINDI) that took place in Cabauw, the Netherlands, in summer 2009. During two months, nine atmospheric research groups simultaneously operated MAX-DOAS (MultiAXis Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy) instruments of various designs to record UV-visible spectra of scattered sunlight at different elevation angles that were analysed using common retrieval settings. The resulting HCHO data set was found to be highly consistent, the mean difference between instruments generally not exceeding 15% or 7.5 × 1015 molec cm−2, for all viewing elevation angles. Furthermore, a sensitivity analysis was performed to investigate the uncertainties in the HCHO slant column retrieval when varying key input parameters such as the molecular absorption cross sections, correction terms for the Ring effect or the width and position of the fitting interval. This study led to the identification of potentially important sources of errors associated with cross-correlation effects involving the Ring effect, O4, HCHO and BrO cross sections and the DOAS closure polynomial. As a result, a set of updated recommendations was formulated for HCHO slant column retrieval in the 336.5–359 nm wavelength range. To conclude, an error budget is proposed which distinguishes between systematic and random uncertainties. The total systematic error is estimated to be of the order of 20% and is dominated by uncertainties in absorption cross sections and related spectral cross-correlation effects. For a typical integration time of one minute, random uncertainties range between 5 and 30%, depending on the noise level of individual instruments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18671381 and 18678548
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0222c460fb564d01996260519e52af72
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-6-167-2013