Title: OPERATIONAL ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY MONITORING MISSIONS
1OPERATIONAL ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY MONITORING
MISSIONSCAPACITY ESA contract no.
17237/03/NL/GS
- GEOPHYSICAL
- DATA REQUIREMENTS
- Michiel van Weele, KNMI
- Final presentation June 2, 2005
2Overview Data Requirements
- Objectives and Strategy to Geophysical Data
Requirements - Relations to IGACO and other available
requirements - Sampling and coverage atmospheric domains
- Spatial resolution and revisit time
- Uncertainty
- Measurement Strategy Ozone Layer and UV
- Measurement Strategy Air Quality
- Measurement Strategy Climate
- Geophysical Data Requirements Tables
- Summary
3Objectives
- User Requirements per Theme
- Ozone Layer and Surface UV Radiation
- Air Quality
- Climate
- and per User Type / Application
- Protocol Monitoring
- Near-real time data use
- Assessment
- Objectives
- Compile the user requirements per theme / user
category and interpret in terms of a required set
of observables per atmospheric domain - Define a measurement strategy for the optimal
combination of satellite observations,
ground-based / in-situ observations and use of
models
4Strategy to Data Requirements
- Specify for each parameter the (threshold)
resolution and revisit time requirements per
atmospheric domain and on the basis of the
observed spatial and temporal variability - Define a measurement strategy the different role
of satellite data, ground-based networks and
atmospheric models for each theme/user type
combination - Investigate the role of data assimilation for
uncertainty requirements, also in relation with
the established resolution and revisit time
requirements and sampling/coverage - Define the auxiliary data requirements for the
applications. - Examine and try to understand differences with
tabulated data requirements such as IGACO,
GMES-GATO/BICEPS, ESA studies (ACECHEM, GeoTrope,
Kyoto), Eumetsat paper on Nowcasting, and MTG
requirements
5Relations to IGACO and other Requirements
- IGACO data requirements have not been specified
per theme/user type. Instead, distinction has
been made in a group-1 (existing systems) and
group-2 (next generation systems) set of
observables - IGACO has four themes, CAPACITY only three. The
fourth theme of IGACO is the oxidising capacity,
which in Capacity has been integrated in the
assessment of the three other themes - IGACO requirements are given on a per species and
atmospheric domain basis, but the rationale
behind each of the quantitative requirements has
not been detailed in the IGACO report. - ACECHEM and GeoTrope are compilations of data
requirements for research missions and exceed
operational data requirements - Eumetsat Nowcasting position paper only contains
requirements for lt12 hours ahead - MTG requirements focus on the geostationary,
non-global perspective
6Sampling and Coverage Requirements
- The themes (Ozone Layer, Air Quality and Climate)
are all of a global nature. The target
requirement for satellite observations is to get
as close as possible to global coverage with
near-contiguous sampling. - Ground-based networks should be globally
representative. - For Air Quality additional focus is on the local,
regional to continental scale in Europe.
Threshold coverage for satellite data and surface
networks contributing to Air Quality is Europe,
including Turkey and Europes coastal waters as
well as the closest parts of the North-Atlantic. - The aim of each component to an integrated system
should be to maximize its contribution, the
number of independent observations mainly being
limited by any of the other data requirements on,
e.g., uncertainty, resolution and revisit time. - The integrated system will allow data gaps in
space and time, however only up to a certain
extent. This will depend on the application.
7 Â
Tropics Eq. 30
Mid-latitudes 30 60
Polar region 60 Pole
80 km
USM
USM
USM
35 km
MS
MS
MS
20 km
LS
LS
LS
16 km
TTL
LS
LS
12 km
FTUT
FT,UT
FTUTLS
6 km
FT
FT
FT
2 km
PBL
PBL
PBL
8Uncertainty
- The (assumed) uncertainty mainly determines the
potential impact of observations in assimilation
systems. These requirements are most quantitative
and are leading. - The uncertainty requirement contains a random
component and a systematic component. The latter
component can only be established by long-term
validation with independent measurements. - For ground-based and in-situ observations a
representation error will contribute
significantly to the overall uncertainty.
Satellite observations suffer less from this
error as long as the resolution is more or less
comparable to the model grid size. - Large numbers of independent observations from
prolonged data sets with stable retrievals and
limited instrumental drift will help to better
characterize random and systematic components
(gt mission lifetime) - Spatio-temporal variations in (current) model
uncertainties have not been taken into account.
Model uncertainties are often related to
intermittent processes and unpredictable events,
which are often difficult to assign to certain
locations and time periods and can not easily be
used to relax requirements.
9Spatial Resolution and Revisit Time
- Typically the resolution and revisit time
requirements are determined by the known
variability of the observable in space and time
in the different atmospheric domains. Ultimate
threshold is to observe some of the
variability. - The horizontal resolution should be typically a
factor 2-3 smaller than the error correlation
length (ECL) used in the assimilation of the
observable. The error correlation length is
typically a function of altitude and determined
by physical processes. The ECL decreases from
several 100 kms in the middle stratosphere to
tens of kilometers in the troposphere and even
smaller in the PBL. - Vertical resolution requirements are related to
the observed vertical gradients in the
atmosphere. Requirements are most stringent in
the UTLS and PBL and much less in the free
troposphere and middle stratosphere and
mesosphere. - In principle, the revisit time requirements can
also be based on required update frequencies from
assimilation studies on anomaly correlations.
These correlations however mainly depend on the
predictability of the meteorology. Revisit time
requirements are most stringent in the PBL.
10Data Requirements per Theme and User
CategoryTheme A Ozone Layer and Surface UV
Radiation A1. Protocol Monitoring A2. Near-real
time data use A3. AssessmentTheme B Air
Quality B1. Protocol Monitoring B2. Near-real
time data use B3. AssessmentTheme C
Climate C1. Protocol Monitoring C2. Near-real
time data use C3. Assessment
11Measurement Strategy A1O3/UV Protocol Monitoring
- Role of Satellite measurements
- Monitoring of the global total ozone spatial
distribution (lt3 uncertainty for individual
measurements) - Contribution to the monitoring of surface UV
radiation by provision of information on total
ozone, solar irradiance, surface albedo, and
aerosol optical depth and absorption - Role of Surface network
- Trends in concentrations of regulated ozone
depleting substances (ODS) - Detection of ODS emissions and their trends
- Trend in Surface UV and the attribution of UV
changes to ozone layer changes - Validation of the satellite data
- Weekly surface/column observations (O3, ODS) by
representative surface networks - Auxiliary data
- Meteorology from NWP centers including surface
data (dynamics, clouds, snow cover)
12Measurement Strategy A2O3/UV Near-real time data
use
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Forecasting of the Ozone layer and surface UV
Feed polar ozone reports - Better representation of stratospheric transport,
chemistry and radiation in NWP to improve (medium
range) weather forecasts and stratospheric
near-real time monitoring, also by improving
retrievals of temperature gt stratospheric
distribution of major greenhouse gases (CO2, H2O,
O3, CH4, N2O) and aerosols - Further tracers (B-D circulation, ST exchange),
PSCs - Role of surface network and in-situ operational
measurements - NRT validation of the satellite measurements
- Ozone/ radiosondes NRT delivery of O3, H2O, p,
T, wind - NRT delivery of (UTLS) aircraft observations of
O3, H2O, CO, HNO3, HCl - Auxilary data
- Meteorological forecast from NWP centers
including surface data (dynamics, clouds,
sunshine duration, snow cover)
13Measurement Strategy A3O3/UV Assessment
- Role of Satellite measurements
- State of ozone layer and its evolution in time
role of dynamics, radiation, and chemistry - Changes in surface UV radiation globally, per
location - Distribution and trends in ODS and reservoir
species - The role of PSCs and of denitrification
- The role of volcanic eruptions (SO2, aerosol,
aerosol type) - Short-lived species can typically be derived from
long-lived species given that the chemistry is
sufficiently understood (some exception NO2, ClO
etc) - Role of Surface network
- Validation of the satellite measurements
- Surface UV radiation trend monitoring and
attribution - Concentration monitoring ODS detection of ODS
emissions - Auxiliary data
- meteorology from NWP centers including surface
data (dynamics, clouds, sunshine duration, snow
cover)
14O3 / Surface UV Radiation Satellite Data
- Observable User(s) Domain(s)
- O3 A1, A2, A3 Stratosphere, Troposphere
- UV solar spectrum A1, A2, A3 Top-of-Atmosphere
- UV aerosol optical depth A1, A2, A3 Troposphere
- UV aerosol absorption optical depth A1, A2,
A3 Troposphere - Spectral UV surface albedo A1, A2, A3 Surface
- H2O A2, A3 Stratosphere
- N2O A2, A3 Stratosphere
- CH4 A2, A3 Stratosphere
- CO2 A2, A3 Stratosphere
- HNO3 A2, A3 Stratosphere
- Volcanic aerosol A2, A3 Stratosphere
- CFC-11 A3 Stratosphere
- CFC-12 A3 Stratosphere
- HCFC-22 A3 Stratosphere
- ClO A3 Stratosphere
15Measurement Strategy B1Air Quality Protocol
Monitoring
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Interpolation of surface networks in the PBL
- Boundary conditions for regional AQ models and
tropospheric background (long-range transport) - Application to inverse modeling of surface
emissions (aerosols, NO2, SO2, CO, CH2O).
Formaldehyde is related to VOC emissions - Role of Surface Networks
- EU Framework Directives (surface concentrations)
- National Emission Ceilings (concentration
monitoring to derive emissions) - Gothenburg protocol on ground-level ozone
- Ship emissions (operational ship monitoring
coastal waters) - A representative network for surface
concentrations and emissions in Europe - Satellite and model validation, also by boundary
layer profiling (LIDARS, Towers) - Auxiliary data
- Meteorology from NWP Centers including surface
data (dynamics, clouds, surface characterization) - Emission inventories
16Measurement Strategy B2Air Quality Near-real
time data use
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Interpolation of surface network in PBL
- Plume transport and plume dispersion on local,
regional, continental and global scale - Boundary conditions to regional AQ models and
tropospheric background levels - Early warnings on hazards and unpredictable
events - Role of Surface Networks
- Local Air Quality monitoring of surface levels
- Constraints on satellite-derived aerosol types
and VOC emissions from HCHO - NRT ozone sonde data for ozone and relative
humidity profiles - CH4 trend monitoring
- Auxiliary data
- Forecast meteorology from NWP centers including
NRT surface / vegetation data - Emission inventories
17Measurement Strategy B3Air Quality Assessment
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Global-scale oxidizing capacity components and
their evolution in time (O3, CO, H2O, NOx, CH4,
CH2O, UV, aerosols) - Long-range transport of pollutants tropospheric
background levels - Interpolation of data from surface networks
- input to inverse modeling of surface emissions
(CO, NOx, SO2, CH2O) - Isotopes of CO to distinguish between emission
types - Role of Surface network
- Assessment of surface concentrations and boundary
layer pollution over Europe - Concentration monitoring to derive emissions on
national levels - HNO3, N2O5(at night) and org. nitrates reservoir
species to constrain acid deposition and N budget - Validation of satellite observations (including
sondes, lidars, towers) - Auxilary data
- Meteorology from NWP centers including surface
characterisation - Emission inventories
18Air Quality Satellite Data
- Observable User(s) Domain(s)
- O3 B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- NO2 B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- CO B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- SO2 B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- CH2O B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- Aerosol OD B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- Aerosol Type B1, B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- H2O B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- HNO3 B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- N2O5 B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- PAN / Org. nitrates B2, B3 PBL/Troposphere
- Surface UV albedo B2, B3 Surface
19Measurement Strategy C1Climate Protocol
Monitoring
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Concentration monitoring for inverse modeling of
emissions of CH4, CO2, CO and NO2 - Global concentration distributions of the
mentioned gases, O3 and aerosols - Role of Surface network
- Greenhouse gases trend monitoring (CO2, CH4, N2O,
SF6, CF4, HFCs - Weekly surface concentrations and total columns
from a representative network. - Validation of satellite measurements
- Concentration monitoring for inverse modeling of
surface emissions of CH4, CO2, CO and NO2 - Tropospheric O3 sondes, lidar and surface data
- Tropospheric aerosol optical depth and aerosol
absorption optical depth - Trend monitoring for ozone depleting substances
ODS with climate forcing (H)CFCs. - Auxiliary data
- Meteorology from NWP centers including surface
data - Emission inventories and estimates on sinks
20Measurement Strategy C2Climate Near-real time
data use
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- For use in assimilation at NWP centers to improve
on stratospheric elements - H2O, O3, stratospheric tracers, and information
on aerosols and cirrus - Climate monitoring (delivery time weeks
months) - Validation of climate and NWP models (present-day
climate reconstructions) - Role of Surface network
- NRT validation of satellite observations
- Evolution of long-lived greenhouse gases
- In-situ observations in the PBL of CO2
- NRT delivery of ozone sonde / Lidar data O3,
H2O - Auxiliary data
- Forecast meteorology from NWP centers including
surface data
21Measurement Strategy C3Climate Assessment
- Role of Satellite Measurements
- Assessment radiative forcing and its changes over
time, including volcanic eruptions and solar
cycle GHGs, aerosol OD, aerosol absorption, SO2,
cirrus) - Assessment of stratospheric H2O budget and H2O
trend monitoring - The role of the ozone layer evolution on climate
change CFCs, Cly, ClO, HNO3 - The role of the oxidizing capacity of the
troposphere for climate change (CH4, CO, O3, H2O,
NOx, UV) - The role of a changing B-D circulation on climate
change tracers - Concentration monitoring for inverse modeling of
GHG precursor emissions - Role of Surface network
- Validation of satellite observations
- Ozone sonde/LIDAR network for trends in strat.
profiles of long-lived gases - Radiosonde/GPS network for H2O and T
- Aerosol network
- UTLS operational aircraft observations of O3,
H2O, CO, NOx - Auxiliary data
22Climate Satellite Data
- Observable User(s) Domain(s)
- CH4 C1 PBL, Troposphere
- CO2 C1 PBL, Troposphere
- CO C1 PBL, Troposphere
- NO2 C1 PBL, Troposphere
- O3 C1 PBL, Troposphere
- Aerosol OD C1 PBL, Troposphere
- Aerosol absorption OD C1 PBL, Troposphere
- H2O C2, C3 Troposphere, Stratosphere
- O3 C2, C3 Troposphere, Stratosphere
- CH4 C2, C3 Stratosphere
- CO2 C2, C3 Stratosphere
- N2O C2, C3 Stratosphere
- Aerosol optical properties C2, C3 Stratosphere
- Cirrus optical properties C2, C3 Troposphere
- HNO3 C3 Troposphere, Stratosphere
- NO2 C3 Stratosphere
23Data Requirements Table Format
- A1S
- Ozone Layer Protocol Monitoring Satellite data
- Data product Driver
- Height Range(s)
- Hor. Resolution (target/threshold)
- Vert. Resolution (target/threshold)
- Revisit time (target /threshold)
- Uncertainty (threshold)
Similar Tables for A1-G, A2-S, A2-G, .C3-S,
C3-G (18 Tables in total)
24Summary
- This work has drawn from several earlier
requirement studies, but it has never been done
before in such a comprehensive way with focus on
atmospheric composition and for operational
applications - Geophysical Data Requirements have been tabulated
per theme and within each theme per user type - Per data product and product type (column,
profile) resolution, revisit time and uncertainty
have been tabulated, for each atmospheric domain - Based on the definition of drivers per
application a measurement strategy has been
proposed for satellites, ground-based/in-situ
data and auxiliary data, including models - The tables, traceable to the user requirements,
served as input for the analysis of
existing/planned missions and networks, and for
the definition of instrument requirements for new
mission concepts