DocumentCode
918577
Title
Tropospheric emission spectrometer: retrieval method and error analysis
Author
Bowman, Kevin W. ; Rodgers, Clive D. ; Kulawik, Susan Sund ; Worden, John ; Sarkissian, Edwin ; Osterman, Greg ; Steck, Tilman ; Lou, Ming ; Eldering, Annmarie ; Shephard, Mark ; Worden, Helen ; Lampel, Michael ; Clough, Shepard ; Brown, Pat ; Rinsland, C
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Lab. Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume
44
Issue
5
fYear
2006
fDate
5/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1297
Lastpage
1307
Abstract
We describe the approach for the estimation of the atmospheric state, e.g., temperature, water, ozone, from calibrated, spectral radiances measured from the Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) onboard the Aura spacecraft. The methodology is based on the maximum a posteriori estimate, which mathematically requires the minimization of the difference between observed spectral radiances and a nonlinear model of radiative transfer of the atmospheric state subject to the constraint that the estimated state must be consistent with an a priori probability distribution for that state. The minimization techniques employed here are based on the trust-region Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm. An analysis of the errors for this estimate include smoothing, random, spectroscopic, "cross-state", representation, and systematic errors. In addition, several metrics and diagnostics are introduced that assess the resolution, quality, and statistical significance of the retrievals. We illustrate this methodology for the retrieval of atmospheric and surface temperature, water vapor, and ozone over the Gulf of Mexico on November 3, 2004.
Keywords
aerospace instrumentation; artificial satellites; atmospheric composition; atmospheric humidity; atmospheric measuring apparatus; atmospheric temperature; radiative transfer; AD 2004 11 03; Aura spacecraft; Gulf of Mexico; Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer; atmospheric temperature; atmospheric water vapor; error analysis; inverse methods; minimization technique; ozone; radiative transfer; remote sounding; spectral radiance; trust-region Leven-berg-Marquardt algorithm; Atmospheric measurements; Atmospheric modeling; Error analysis; Mathematical model; Maximum a posteriori estimation; Minimization methods; Space vehicles; Spectroscopy; State estimation; Temperature; Atmospheres; constituents; inverse methods; remote sounding; temperature;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2006.871234
Filename
1624609
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