Anthropogenic CO2 monitoring satellite mission: the need for multi-angle polarimetric observations

crossref(2020)

Cited 0|Views5
No score
Abstract
<p>Scattering due to aerosols and cirrus has long been identified as one of main sources of uncertainties in retrieving XCO<sub>2</sub> from solar backscattered radiation. In this work, we investigate the added value of multi-angle polarimeter (MAP) measurements in the context of Copernicus candidate mission for anthropogenic CO<sub>2</sub> monitoring (CO2M). To this end, we compare aerosol-induced XCO<sub>2</sub> errors from standard retrievals using spectrometer only (without MAP) with those from retrievals using both MAP and spectrometer. MAP measures radiance and degree of linear polarization (DLP) simultaneously at multiple wavelengths and at multiple viewing angles; these observations are expected to provide information about aerosols that is useful for improving XCO<sub>2</sub> accuracy. Using an ensemble of 500 synthetic scenes over land, we show that the standard XCO<sub>2</sub> retrieval approach that makes no use of MAP observations returns XCO<sub>2</sub> errors with an overall bias of 1.04 ppm, and a spread (equivalent to standard deviation for a normal distribution) of 2.07 ppm. The latter is far higher than the required XCO<sub>2</sub> accuracy (0.5 ppm) and precision (0.7 ppm) of the CO2M mission. Moreover, these XCO<sub>2</sub> errors exhibit a significantly larger bias and scatter at high aerosol optical depth, high aerosol altitude, and low solar zenith angle, which suggest a worse performance in retrieving XCO<sub>2</sub> from polluted areas where CO<sub>2</sub> and aerosols are co-emitted. Given the CO2M mission requirements, we proceed to derive MAP instrument specifications in terms of measurement uncertainties, number of viewing angles, and the wavelength range. Two different MAP instrument concepts are considered in this requirement analysis. We find that for either concept, MAP measurement uncertainties on radiance and degree of linear polarization should be no more than 3% and 0.003, respectively. Adopting the derived MAP requirements, a retrieval exercise on the 500 synthetic scenes using both MAP and spectrometer measurements delivers XCO<sub>2</sub> errors with an overall bias of -0.09 ppm and a spread of 0.57 ppm, indicating compliance with the CO2M mission requirements. For the test ensemble, we find effectively no dependence of the XCO<sub>2</sub> errors on aerosol optical depth, altitude of the aerosol layer, and solar zenith angle. These results represent a significant improvement in the retrieved XCO<sub>2</sub> accuracy compared to the standard retrieval approach, which may lead to a higher data yield, better global coverage, and a more comprehensive determination of CO<sub>2</sub> sinks and sources. As such, this outcome underscores the contribution of, and therefore the need for, a MAP instrument onboard the CO2M mission.</p>
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined