Evaluation of night-time aerosols measurements and lunar irradiance models in the frame of the first multi-instrument nocturnal intercomparison campaign

被引:29
作者
Barreto, A. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Roman, R. [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Cuevas, E. [2 ]
Perez-Ramirez, D. [4 ,5 ]
Berjon, A. J. [2 ,3 ]
Kouremeti, N. [6 ,7 ]
Kazadzis, S. [6 ,7 ]
Grobner, J. [6 ,7 ]
Mazzola, M. [8 ]
Toledano, C. [3 ]
Benavent-Oltra, J. A. [4 ,5 ]
Doppler, L. [9 ]
Jurysek, J. [10 ]
Almansa, A. F. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Victori, S. [1 ]
Maupin, F. [1 ]
Guirado-Fuentes, C. [2 ,3 ]
Gonzalez, R. [3 ]
Vitale, V. [8 ]
Goloub, P. [11 ]
Blarel, L. [11 ]
Alados-Arboledas, L. [4 ,5 ]
Woolliams, E. [12 ]
Taylor, S. [12 ]
Antuna, J. C. [3 ]
Yela, M. [13 ]
机构
[1] Cimel Elect, Paris, France
[2] Meteorol State Agcy Spain AEMET, Izana Atmospher Res Ctr, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ Valladolid, Grp Opt Atmosfer, Valladolid, Spain
[4] Univ Granada, Dept Appl Phys, Granada, Spain
[5] Univ Granada, Andalusian Inst Earth Syst Res, IISTA CEAMA, Granada, Spain
[6] PMOD, Davos, Switzerland
[7] WRC, Davos, Switzerland
[8] Inst Atmospher Sci & Climate CNR ISAC, Natl Res Council, Bologna, Italy
[9] Deutsch Wetterrlienst, MOL RAO, Lindenberg, Germany
[10] Czech Acad Sci, Prague, Czech Republic
[11] Univ Sci & Technol Lille, LOA, Villeneuve Dascq, France
[12] NPL, London, England
[13] Natl Inst Aerosp Technol INTA, Instrumentat & Atmospher Res Dept, Madrid, Spain
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Lunar photometry; Star photometry; AOD; ROLO; OPTICAL DEPTH; STAR-PHOTOMETRY; SPECTRAL IRRADIANCE; LIDAR MEASUREMENTS; MAUNA-LOA; AERONET; INVERSION; RETRIEVAL; CLOUD; AOD;
D O I
10.1016/j.atmosenv.2019.01.006
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The first multi-instrument nocturnal aerosol optical depth (AOD) intercomparison campaign was held at the high-mountain Izafia Observatory (Tenerife, Spain) in June 2017, involving 2-min synchronous measurements from two different types of lunar photometers (Cimel CE318-T and Moon Precision Filter Radiometer, LunarPFR) and one stellar photometer. The Robotic Lunar Observatory (ROLO) model developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) was compared with the open-access ROLO Implementation for Moon photometry Observation (RIMO) model. Results showed rather small differences at Izatia over a 2-month time period covering June and July, 2017 (+/- 0.01 in terms of AOD calculated by means of a day/night/day coherence test analysis and +/- 2% in terms of lunar irradiance). The RIMO model has been used in this field campaign to retrieve AOD from lunar photometric measurements. No evidence of significant differences with the Moon's phase angle was found when comparing raw signals of the six Cimel photometers involved in this field campaign. The raw signal comparison of the participating lunar photometers (Cimel and LunarPFR) performed at coincident wavelengths showed consistent measurements and AOD differences within their combined uncertainties at 870 nm and 675 rim. Slightly larger AOD deviations were observed at 500 nm, pointing to some unexpected instrumental variations during the measurement period. Lunar irradiances retrieved using RIMO for phase angles varying between 0 degrees and 75 degrees (full Moon to near quarter Moon) were compared to the irradiance variations retrieved by Cimel and LunarPFR photometers. Our results showed a relative agreement within +/- 3.5% between the RIMO model and the photometer-based lunar irradiances. The AOD retrieved by performing a Langley-plot calibration each night showed a remarkable agreement (better than 0.01) between the lunar photometers. However, when applying the Lunar-Langley calibration using RIMO, AOD differences of up to 0.015 (0.040 for 500 nm) were found, with differences increasing with the Moon's phase angle. These differences are thought to be partly due to the uncertainties in the irradiance models, as well as instrumental deficiencies yet to be fully understood. High AOD variability in stellar measurements was detected during the campaign. Nevertheless, the observed AOD differences in the Cimel/stellar comparison were within the expected combined uncertainties of these two photometric techniques. Our results indicate that lunar photometry is a more reliable technique, especially for low aerosol loading conditions. The uncertainty analysis performed in this paper shows that the combined standard AOD uncertainty in lunar photometry is dependent on the calibration technique (up to 0.014 for Langley-plot with illumination-based correction, 0.012-0.022 for Lunar-Langley calibration, and up to 0.1 for the Sun-Moon Gain Factor method). This analysis also corroborates that the uncertainty of the lunar irradiance model used for AOD calculation is within the 5-10% expected range. This campaign has allowed us to quantify the important technical difficulties that still exist when routinely monitoring aerosol optical properties at night-time. The small AOD differences observed between the three types of photometers involved in the campaign are only detectable under pristine sky conditions such as those found in this field campaign. Longer campaigns are necessary to understand the observed discrepancies between instruments as well as to provide more conclusive results about the uncertainty involved in the lunar irradiance models.
引用
收藏
页码:190 / 211
页数:22
相关论文
共 71 条
[1]   Ancillary data services of NASA's Navigation and Ancillary Information Facility [J].
Acton, CH .
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 1996, 44 (01) :65-70
[2]   A look towards the future in the handling of space science mission geometry [J].
Acton, Charles ;
Bachman, Nathaniel ;
Semenov, Boris ;
Wright, Edward .
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 2018, 150 :9-12
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2005, 162 WMOGAW
[4]   Synchronous polar winter starphotometry and lidar measurements at a High Arctic station [J].
Baibakov, K. ;
O'Neill, N. T. ;
Ivanescu, L. ;
Duck, T. J. ;
Perro, C. ;
Herber, A. ;
Schulz, K. -H. ;
Schrems, O. .
ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2015, 8 (09) :3789-3809
[5]   A new method for nocturnal aerosol measurements with a lunar photometer prototype [J].
Barreto, A. ;
Cuevas, E. ;
Damiri, B. ;
Guirado, C. ;
Berkoff, T. ;
Berjon, A. J. ;
Hernandez, Y. ;
Almansa, F. ;
Gil, M. .
ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2013, 6 (03) :585-598
[6]   Assessment of nocturnal aerosol optical depth from lunar photometry at the Izana high mountain observatory [J].
Barreto, Africa ;
Roman, Roberto ;
Cuevas, Emilio ;
Berjon, Alberto J. ;
Fernando Almansa, A. ;
Toledano, Carlos ;
Gonzalez, Ramiro ;
Hernandez, Yballa ;
Blarel, Luc ;
Goloub, Philippe ;
Guirado, Carmen ;
Yela, Margarita .
ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2017, 10 (08) :3007-3019
[7]   The new sun-sky-lunar Cimel CE318-T multiband photometer - a comprehensive performance evaluation [J].
Barreto, Africa ;
Cuevas, Emilio ;
Granados-Munoz, Maraia-Jose ;
Alados-Arboledas, Lucas ;
Romero, Pedro M. ;
Groebner, Julian ;
Kouremeti, Natalia ;
Almansa, Antonio F. ;
Stone, Tom ;
Toledano, Carlos ;
Roman, Roberto ;
Sorokin, Mikhail ;
Holben, Brent ;
Canini, Marius ;
Yela, Margarita .
ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2016, 9 (02) :631-654
[8]   Comparative assessment of GRASP algorithm for a dust event over Granada (Spain) during ChArMEx-ADRIMED 2013 campaign [J].
Benavent-Oltra, Jose A. ;
Roman, Roberto ;
Granados-Munoz, Maria J. ;
Perez-Ramirez, Daniel ;
Ortiz-Amezcua, Pablo ;
Denjean, Cyrielle ;
Lopatin, Anton ;
Lyamani, Hassan ;
Torres, Benjamin ;
Guerrero-Rascado, Juan L. ;
Fuertes, David ;
Dubovik, Oleg ;
Chaikovsky, Anatoli ;
Olmo, Francisco J. ;
Mallet, Marc ;
Alados-Arboledas, Lucas .
ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2017, 10 (11) :4439-4457
[9]   Nocturnal Aerosol Optical Depth Measurements with a Small-Aperture Automated Photometer Using the Moon as a Light Source [J].
Berkoff, Timothy A. ;
Sorokin, Mikail ;
Stone, Tom ;
Eck, Thomas F. ;
Hoff, Raymond ;
Welton, Ellsworth ;
Holben, Brent .
JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC TECHNOLOGY, 2011, 28 (10) :1297-1306
[10]  
Campbell JR, 2002, J ATMOS OCEAN TECH, V19, P431, DOI 10.1175/1520-0426(2002)019<0431:FTESCA>2.0.CO