Title :
Surface ultraviolet irradiance from OMI
Author :
Tanskanen, Aapo ; Krotkov, Nickolay A. ; Herman, Jay R. ; Arola, Antti
Author_Institution :
Finnish Meteorol. Inst., Helsinki, Finland
fDate :
5/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) onboard the NASA Earth Observing System (EOS) Aura spacecraft is a nadir-viewing spectrometer that measures solar reflected and backscattered light in a selected range of the ultraviolet and visible spectrum. The instrument has a 2600-km-wide viewing swath, and it is capable of daily, global contiguous mapping. We developed and implemented a surface ultraviolet (UV) irradiance algorithm for OMI that produces noontime surface spectral UV irradiance estimates at four wavelengths (305, 310, 324, and 380 nm). Additionally, noontime erythemal dose rate and the erythemal daily dose are estimated. The OMI surface UV algorithm inherits from the surface UV algorithm developed by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center for the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS). The OMI surface UV irradiance products are produced and archived in HDF5-EOS format by Finnish Meteorological Institute. The accuracy of the surface UV estimates depend on UV wavelength and atmospheric and other geolocation specific conditions ranging from 7% to 30%. A postprocessing aerosol correction can be applied at sites with additional ground-based measurements of the aerosol absorption optical thickness. The current OMI surface UV product validation plan is presented.
Keywords :
aerosols; aerospace instrumentation; artificial satellites; atmospheric measuring apparatus; atmospheric optics; atmospheric radiation; atmospheric spectra; ozone; solar radiation; ultraviolet spectra; ultraviolet spectroscopy; 305 nm; 310 nm; 324 nm; 380 nm; Aura spacecraft; Finnish Meteorological Institute; HDF5-EOS; NASA Earth Observing System; NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Ozone Monitoring Instrument; Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer; aerosol absorption optical thickness; erythemal daily dose; nadir-viewing spectrometer; noontime erythemal dose rate; postprocessing aerosol correction; software validation; software verification; solar backscattered light; solar reflected light; surface ultraviolet irradiance; ultraviolet radiation effects; ultraviolet spectrum; visible spectrum; Aerosols; Earth Observing System; Instruments; Meteorology; Monitoring; NASA; Optical surface waves; Space vehicles; Spectroscopy; Surface waves; Algorithms; software verification and validation; solar radiation; ultraviolet radiation effects;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2005.862203