Abstract
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are the two
most important anthropogenic greenhouse gases. SCIAMACHY on ENVISAT is
the first satellite instrument whose measurements are sensitive to
concentration changes of the two gases at all altitude levels down to
the Earth's surface where the source/sink signals are largest. We have
processed three years (2003-2005) of SCIAMACHY near-infrared nadir
measurements to simultaneously retrieve vertical columns of
CO2 (from the 1.58 μm absorption band), CH4
(1.66 μm) and oxygen (O2 A-band at 0.76 μm) using the
scientific retrieval algorithm WFM-DOAS. We show that the latest version
of WFM-DOAS, version 1.0, which is used for this study, has been
significantly improved with respect to its accuracy compared to the
previous versions while essentially maintaining its high processing
speed (~1 min per orbit, corresponding to ~6000 single measurements, and
per gas on a standard PC). The greenhouse gas columns are converted to
dry air column-averaged mole fractions, denoted XCO2 (in ppm)
and XCH4 (in ppb), by dividing the greenhouse gas columns by
simultaneously retrieved dry air columns. For XCO2 dry air
columns are obtained from the retrieved O2 columns. For
XCH4 dry air columns are obtained from the retrieved
CO2 columns because of better cancellation of light path
related errors compared to using O2 columns retrieved from
the spectrally distant O2 A-band. Here we focus on a
discussion of the XCH4 data set. The XCO2 data set
is discussed in a separate paper (Part 1). For 2003 we present detailed
comparisons with the TM5 model which has been optimally matched to
highly accurate but sparse methane surface observations. After
accounting for a systematic low bias of ~2% agreement with TM5 is
typically within 1-2%. We investigated to what extent the SCIAMACHY
XCH4 is influenced by the variability of atmospheric
CO2 using global CO2 fields from NOAA's
CO2 assimilation system CarbonTracker. We show that the
CO2 corrected and uncorrected XCH4 spatio-temporal
pattern are very similar but that agreement with TM5 is better for the
CarbonTracker CO2 corrected XCH4. In line with
previous studies (e.g., Frankenberg et al., 2005b) we find higher
methane over the tropics compared to the model. We show that tropical
methane is also higher when normalizing the CH4 columns with
retrieved O2 columns instead of CO2. In
consistency with recent results of Frankenberg et al. (2008b) it is
shown that the magnitude of the retrieved tropical methane is sensitive
to the choice of the spectroscopic line parameters of water vapour.
Concerning inter-annual variability we find similar methane
spatio-temporal pattern for 2003 and 2004. For 2005 the retrieved
methane shows significantly higher variability compared to the two
previous years, most likely due to somewhat larger noise of the spectral
measurements.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 443-465 |
Number of pages | 23 |
Journal | Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1-Jan-2009 |
Keywords
- MOLECULAR SPECTROSCOPIC DATABASE
- ZOOM MODEL TM5
- ATMOSPHERIC METHANE
- CARBON-DIOXIDE
- TERRESTRIAL PLANTS
- CO2 RETRIEVAL
- WFM-DOAS
- SCIAMACHY
- CH4
- EMISSIONS