Cluster Angewandte Fernerkundung DLR Oberpfaffenhofen www.caf.dlr.de Figure 2 shows all sun mean reference spectra of GOME from July 1995 to June 2006.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
GOME-2 polarisation data and products L.G. Tilstra (1,2), I. Aben (1), P. Stammes (2) (1) SRON; (2) KNMI GSAG #42, EUMETSAT,
Advertisements

WP 5 : Clouds & Aerosols L.G. Tilstra and P. Stammes Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) SCIAvisie Meeting, KNMI, De Bilt, Absorbing.
1 st post launch SCIAMACHY calibration & Verification Meeting L1b Astrium Friedrichshafen – Germany 24 July 2002 First Level 1b Spectral Calibration analysis.
GOME-2 FM3 (Metop-A) Instrument Review, EUMETSAT, Darmstadt, June 2012 Slide: 1 Rűdiger Lang, Rose Munro, Antoine Lacan, Richard Dyer, Marcel Dobber, Christian.
Time & Frequency Products R. Peřestý, J. Kraus, SWRM 4 th Data Quality Workshop 2-5 December 2014 GFZ Potsdam Recent results on ACC Data Processing 1 SWARM.
1 st post launch SCIAMACHY calibration & Verification Meeting L1b Astrium Friedrichshafen – Germany 24 July 2002 First Level 1b General Product Quality.
Variability of Total Column Ozone During JAN JUN 2011: Consistency Among Four Independent Multi-year Data Records E.W. Chiou ADNET Systems Inc.,
WMAP. The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe was designed to measure the CMB. –Launched in 2001 –Ended 2010 Microwave antenna includes five frequency.
Microwindow Selection for the MIPAS Reduced Resolution Mode INTRODUCTION Microwindows are the small subsets of the complete MIPAS spectrum which are used.
RHESSI/GOES Observations of the Non-flaring Sun from 2002 to J. McTiernan SSL/UCB.
Telescopes (Chapter 6). Based on Chapter 6 This material will be useful for understanding Chapters 7 and 10 on “Our planetary system” and “Jovian planet.
PERFORMANCE OF THE DELPHI REFRACTOMETER IN MONITORING THE RICH RADIATORS A. Filippas 1, E. Fokitis 1, S. Maltezos 1, K. Patrinos 1, and M. Davenport 2.
Identifying and Modeling Coronal Holes Observed by SDO/AIA, STEREO /A and B Using HMI Synchronic Frames X. P. Zhao, J. T. Hoeksema, Y. Liu, P. H. Scherrer.
Light Emission. Today’s Topics Excitation Emission Spectra Incandescence –Absorption Spectra.
Rachel Klima (on behalf of the MASCS team) JHU/APL MASCS/VIRS Data Users’ Workshop LPSC 2014, The Woodlands, TX March 17,2014 MASCS Instrument & VIRS Calibration.
In-orbit calibration (TOTAL channel) V space -V IBB Raw Earth V (counts) Raw IBB V (counts) =
GOME-2 Polarisation Study — Final Presentation L.G. Tilstra (1,2), I. Aben (1), P. Stammes (2) (1) SRON; (2) KNMI EUMETSAT, Darmstadt,
FEATURE EXTRACTION FOR JAVA CHARACTER RECOGNITION Rudy Adipranata, Liliana, Meiliana Indrawijaya, Gregorius Satia Budhi Informatics Department, Petra Christian.
0. To first order, the instrument is working very well ! 1.Evolution of the IR detector with time 2.Stability of the L channel 3.Saturation 4.Linearity.
The Electromagnetic Spectrum
Space Chapter 1 Review.
Creating Light. Light as a Wave Light (or electromagnetic radiation), can be thought of as either a particle or a wave. As a wave, light has a wavelength,
Properties of Light.
Blue: Histogram of normalised deviation from “true” value; Red: Gaussian fit to histogram Presented at ESA Hyperspectral Workshop 2010, March 16-19, Frascati,
LMS Stability, Data Correction and the Radiation Accident within the PrimEx Experiment by LaRay J. Benton M.S. Nuclear Physics May 2006 Graduate North.
Spectroscopy and Astronomy Erin Wood, M.S., M.S. Neil Marks, B.A.
Lecture 12 ASTR 111 – Section 002.
1 st post launch SCIAMACHY calibration & Verification Meeting L1b Astrium Friedrichshafen – Germany 24 July 2002 First level 1b Sun mean reference (SMR)
Validation workshop, Frascati, 13 December 2002Page 1 SCIAMACHY products quality and recommendations Based on presentations and discussions during this.
GOES fluence in Å and Å (1 min data) GOES fluence in Å and Å (1 min data) Areas in black correspond to times with the data missing.
Atoms & Light (Spectroscopy). Blackbody Radiation A. Blackbody = a hot solid, hot liquid, or hot high density gas that emits light over a range of frequencies.
Main Classes of Stars Astrophysics Lesson 10. Homework  None, you have exams next week! Good Luck!
SNAP Calibration Program Steps to Spectrophotometric Calibration The SNAP (Supernova / Acceleration Probe) mission’s primary science.
Validation of SCIAMACHY total ozone: ESA/DLR V5(W) and IUP WFDOAS V2(W) M. Weber, S. Dikty, J. P.Burrows, M. Coldewey-Egbers (1), V. E. Fioletov (2), S.
1 Yu. Guz HCAL status 22/06/ Yu. Guz HCAL 137 Cs calibration The 3 rd run in 2011 was performed at the technical stop, May-09. Two source passages,
OMI ST meeting June 2006 Calibration & 0-1b data processing Marcel Dobber (KNMI)
Atoms & Starlight (Chapter 6).
Norhayati Soin 06 KEEE 4426 WEEK 3/2 20/01/2006 KEEE 4426 VLSI WEEK 4 CHAPTER 1 MOS Capacitors (PART 3) CHAPTER MOS Capacitance.
Analysis of Nonlinearity Correction for CrIS SDR April 25, 2012 Chunming Wang NGAS Comparisons Between V32 and V33 Engineering Packets.
The HESSI Imaging Process. How HESSI Images HESSI will make observations of the X-rays and gamma-rays emitted by solar flares in such a way that pictures.
Recent Solar Irradiance Data From SBUV/2 and OMI Matthew DeLand and Sergey Marchenko Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) SOLID WP-2 Workshop.
Atmospheric phase correction at the Plateau de Bure interferometer IRAM interferometry school 2006 Aris Karastergiou.
BELGISCH INSTITUUT VOOR RUIMTE-AERONOMIE INSTITUT D’AERONOMIE SPATIALE DE BELGIQUE BELGIAN INSTITUTE OF SPACE AERONOMY BELGISCH INSTITUUT VOOR RUIMTE-AERONOMIE.
October 1, 2013Computer Vision Lecture 9: From Edges to Contours 1 Canny Edge Detector However, usually there will still be noise in the array E[i, j],
Green House Effect and Global Warming. Do you believe that the planet is warming? 1.Yes 2.No.
Peterson xBSM Optics, Beam Size Calibration1 xBSM Beam Size Calibration Dan Peterson CesrTA general meeting introduction to the optics.
Center for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR) Review 09 – 11 March 2010 Requirement: Provide information to air quality decision makers and improve.
1 st post launch SCIAMACHY calibration & Verification Meeting L1b Astrium Friedrichshafen – Germany 24 July 2002 First level 1b Leakage current analysis.
Interactions of EMR with the Earth’s Surface
1 Results for OMPS NP OMPS NPP ST Meeting 8/15/2013 L. Flynn (STAR) with contributions from Wei Yu, Jiangou Niu, Zhihua Zhang, Eric Beach, Trevor Beck.
Increased Thermal Background for the post-NCS NICMOS TIPS – June 19, 2003 Megan Sosey NICMOS.
MEx and VEx DATA WORKSHOP - PFS and SOIR experiments - 27 June - 1st July 2011, ESA/ESAC,Spain.
Nine Years of Atmospheric Remote Sensing with SCIAMACHY – Instrument Performance Gottwald, Krieg, Lichtenberg, Slijkhuis – DLR-IMF Noël, Bramstedt, Bovensmann,
CHAPTER 10: THE STARS. S&T P Why do astronomers need to know the apparent brightness and luminosity of stars? The relationship between AB and.
Quiz 3 ANGEL->Lessons->Quizzes.
The Origin and Nature of Light. But, what is light? In the 17th Century, Isaac Newton argued that light was composed of little particles while Christian.
Date of download: 6/22/2016 Copyright © 2016 SPIE. All rights reserved. Glucose sensor architecture. The lamp provides broadband electromagnetic radiation.
1 Validation of Swarm ACC preliminary dataset Swarm 5th Data Quality Workshop, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, France, 7 – 10 September 2015 Aleš.
Group refractive index ● Method ● Additional runs ● Wavelength distribution ● Systematics ● Results.
Date of download: 9/18/2016 Copyright © 2016 SPIE. All rights reserved. Spectral position of FP modes for two different refractive indices. RI differences.
Light velocity at new wavelengths
Absolute calibration of sky radiances, colour indices and O4 DSCDs obtained from MAX-DOAS measurements T. Wagner1, S. Beirle1, S. Dörner1, M. Penning de.
Calibration Status for the GOME Instrument
Chapter 10: The Stars.
Light: Thermal Spectra Emission and Absorption Spectra
FIGURE 2.1 Comparison of Kelvin, Celsius, and Fahrenheit scales.
NanoBPM Status and Multibunch Mark Slater, Cambridge University
Early calibration results of FY-4A/GIIRS during in-orbit testing
Local and Global Contrast Adaptation in Retinal Ganglion Cells
The Sun and Stars.
Presentation transcript:

Cluster Angewandte Fernerkundung DLR Oberpfaffenhofen Figure 2 shows all sun mean reference spectra of GOME from July 1995 to June 2006 for four single wavelengths (290nm - channel 1, 330nm - channel 2, 430nm – channel 3, and 760nm - channel 4). Black curves denote uncorrected data. The low periodic variation is due to the seasonality of the sun-earth distance, which is maximum in July and minimum in January. Large peaks in the time series for all wavelengths at the beginning of 2001 are due to severe problems with the ERS-2 spacecraft. They can be directly assigned to data gaps and GOME anomalies, such as instrument switchoffs, as regularly documented in the GOME yearly anomaly reports (see Besides the large peaks, several small peaks can be identified in the curves, which occur for different wavelengths at different dates. They can be explained with etalon structures. The red curves denote the sun mean reference data which are first corrected for the etalon effect Secondly, all spectra are normalised to 1 A.U. (Astronomical Unit) in order to remove the seasonal dependence. Finally, they are normalised to the intensity of the reference spectrum from 3rd July 1995 to calculate the percentage decrease. The intensity decreased by 80% at 290nm and by 60% at 330nm until June The drecease in channel 3 (430 nm) started in 2001 and reaches now 40%. In channel 4 at 760nm only minor changes are observed. A slight decrease of 10% from 1995 to 2001, and then a short increase of 5% until The corresponding time series for the three PMD signals are depicted in Fig. 3. The degradation of the PMD signals show almost the same behaviour as for the corresponding wavelengths. Wavelength Calibration In the framework of the ESA-project ’Long-Term Monitoring of GOME Calibration Parameters’ several spectral emission lines of the PtCrNe hollow cathode lamp were identified to be improper for an exact wavelength calibration, and therefore have been removed from the analysis. The lines did not meet the well- defined statistical criteria for all available lamp measurements. Figure 5 shows the standard deviation of the wavelengths of all emission lines for all available calibration orbits between June 1995 and May 2003 for the old and the new calibration analysis. Largest changes can be found at the beginning of channel 3, where three lines were excluded, and at the end of channel 4 around 760 nm, where the very unstable last line has been removed. The noise of the new wavelengths is much smaller compared to the old calibration, except in channel 2, where only one line has been excluded. Monitoring of the GOME/ERS-2 Inflight Calibration Parameters from GDP-4 Reprocessing M. Coldewey-Egbers, S. Slijkhuis, B. Aberle, D. Loyola The so-called Q-factors are defined as relative correction factors that transform the measured signal with fractional polarisation to an unpolarised signal (see GOME, 2000). Figure 4 shows the time series of all three Q-factors from June 1995 to June The strong decrease of Q-factor 1 is connected to the different degradation of the PMD 1 signal and the measured signal in channel 2. The PMD decreases faster compared to the channel up to the year 1999 and then from 2001 to 2006 the channel signal decreases faster. Q-factor 2 increases slowly from 1995 to 2006, that means the PMD signal is larger than the corresponding channel, while the channel decreases faster, respectively (see also Figs. 2 and 3). Q-factor 3 is more or less stable (0.15 to 0.2) over the entire period. Measurements carried out during the calibration of the GOME FM have shown that all three PMDs are sensitive to light above 790 nm. Early in-flight solar data showed that straylight appears to be worst in PMD 3 (13%), that explains the initial non-zero Q-factor 3. The irregular large peaks and outliers are due to GOME anomalies such as cooler switch-offs, instrument or satellite switch-offs, on-board anomalies, or special operations. References [1] GOME: Level 0 to 1 Algorithms Descriptions, Techn. Rep., DLR, ER-TN-DLR-GO-0022, Figure 4: GOME Q-Factors for each PMD from June 1995 to June Q-factors: Outliers and peaks due to cooler switch-offs, instrument and satellite switch-offs, and special operations. Decrease and increase due to different degradation of PMD and corresponding channel signal. Figure 1: Ratio of the sun mean reference spectra from 9th January 1997 to 2006 to the corresponding reference spectrum of Grey shaded areas mark features caused by the dichroic filter, which separates channels 3 and 4. Intensity decrease: 90% at 240 nm and 50% at 325 nm Blickrichtung Influence of the South Atlantic Anomaly on the Leakage Current The four GOME detectors are random access linear photodiode arrays. One characteristic of these devices is a certain amount of leakage current produced by thermal leakage. The leakage current is monitored by periodically taken dark-side measurements. The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is a region with intense radiation in space near the Earth that causes damage to many spacecrafts in low Earth orbit. The GOME measurements are affected by high-energy protons leading to large data spikes. For this study, all GOME orbits crossing the SAA region during night time have been separated. Figure 7 shows the leakage current in channel 4 for an integration time of 30 seconds for 10 consecutive orbits in The third and fourth orbit from top crossed the SAA. Data are much noisier and contain large spikes. Figure 8 shows the noise of the leakage current measurements for 30s integration time and the year The noise level inside the SAA increases by a factor of two compared to the noise outside the SAA region. The leakage current itself is slightly larger inside the SAA than outside the SAA (without figure), that is due to the expected spikes on individual detector pixels. Calculation of the dark signal using these measurements from inside the SAA may yield to a slight overestimation of the leakage, and therefore to an underestimation of the real signal. The same analysis for the year 2000 and the other time patterns confirms these results. The influence of the SAA on the darkcurrent and its noise level is largest for the long integration times (e.g. 30 and 60 s). It becomes smaller for the shorter ones of 1.5 s. Figure 7: Leakage current in channel 4 for 30s integration time and 10 consecutive orbits from rd and 4th orbit from top cross the SAA region. Wavelength calibration: Wavelengths are more stable now using GDP-4. In channels 3 and 4, wavelengths correlate with the temperature measured at the predisperser prism. Figure 2: Sun mean reference intensity for four different wavelengths (from top to bottom: 290 nm, 325 nm, 502 nm, and 639 nm) from June 1995 to June Red curves are corrected for etalon structures and for 1A.U. Sun mean reference intensity and PMD signals: Large outliers and anomalies in 2001 can be explained with GOME switch-offs. Low periodic variation is due to the seasonality of the sun-earth distance. Introduction In 2006 an update of the GOME Level-0-1 processor (GDP-4) has been developed in order to reprocess the entire data set. The main driver for this updated version was the new sun mean reference spectrum intensity check, and the associated closing of the time gaps between sun mean reference spectrum updates on the Level 1b product. This opportunity has been used to include other algorithm developments such as an extension of the GOME on-fly calibration parameter database, and a slightly modified spectral calibration. For the first time a fully homogeneous dataset is available that is used to monitor the instrument performance and stability over its lifetime from 1995 to Sun Mean Reference Spectra, PMD Signals and Q-factors Instrument degradation as well as the ERS-2 pointing problem since 2002 lead to a strong decrease in the measured intensity of GOME spectral channels 1 and 2. Figure 1 shows the ratio of the sun mean reference spectra from 1997 to 2006 to the corresponding reference spectrum from 9th January The intensity in channel 1 is reduced by more than 90%. In channel 2 the decrease is still 40-50%, and in channel 3 it is 0- 40%. Figure 3: PMD Signals from June 1995 to June Figure 5: Standard deviation of the wavelengths of all emission lines for the old (open circles) and the new (red dots) calibration. Filled black dots denote the lines that were removed from the analysis. One of the key elements in the optical system of GOME is the quartz predisperser prism. The refractive index of quartz depends not only on the wavelength of the light passing through it but also on the temperature of the prism. It is expected, that the temperature increases along an orbit, partly due to warming by the sun and partly because light passes through the instrument. Those temperature changes may affect the lamp measurements and therefore the wavelength calibration. Figure 6 shows a correlation between one single wavelength ( nm) and the temperature. However, this correlation is not existing in channels 1 and 2. It is strongest in channels 3 and at the end of channel 4. Figure 6: One single wavelength ( nm, black curve) and temperature at the predisperser prism (red curve) as a function of time. Leakage Current and South Atlantic Anomaly: Leakage current measurements are noisier and contain large data spikes. Figure 8: Leakage current noise inside (red) and outside (black) the SAA region for the year 1997.