Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data

Over clear ocean waters, photons scattered within the water body contribute significantly to the upwelling flux. In addition to elastic scattering, inelastic Vibrational Raman Scattering (VRS) by liquid water is also playing a role and can have a strong impact on the spectral distribution of the o...

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Main Authors: M. Vountas, A. Richter, F. Wittrock, J. P. Burrows
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2003-01-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/3/1365/2003/acp-3-1365-2003.pdf
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spelling doaj-42d92f8571334ede8cdaf821d83717692020-11-24T22:50:39ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242003-01-013513651375Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite dataM. VountasA. RichterF. WittrockJ. P. BurrowsOver clear ocean waters, photons scattered within the water body contribute significantly to the upwelling flux. In addition to elastic scattering, inelastic Vibrational Raman Scattering (VRS) by liquid water is also playing a role and can have a strong impact on the spectral distribution of the outgoing radiance. Under clear-sky conditions, VRS has an influence on trace gas retrievals from space-borne measurements of the backscattered radiance such as from e.g. GOME (Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment). The effect is particularly important for geo-locations with small solar zenith angles and over waters with low chlorophyll concentration.<br> <br> In this study, a simple ocean reflectance model (Sathyendranath and Platt, 1998) accounting for VRS has been incorporated into a radiative transfer model. The model has been validated by comparison with measurements from a swimming-pool experiment dedicated to detect the effect of scattering within water on the outgoing radiation and also with selected data sets from GOME. The comparisons show good agreement between experimental and model data and highlight the important role of VRS.<br> <br> To evaluate the impact of VRS on trace gas retrieval, a sensitivity study was performed on synthetic data. If VRS is neglected in the data analysis, errors of more than 30% are introduced for the slant column (<i>SC</i>) of BrO over clear ocean scenarios. Exemplarily DOAS retrievals of BrO from real GOME measurements including and excluding a VRS compensation led to comparable results as in the sensitivity study, but with somewhat smaller differences between the two analyses.<br> <br> The results of this work suggest, that DOAS retrievals of atmospheric trace species from measurements of nadir viewing space-borne instruments have to take VRS scattering into account over waters with low chlorophyll concentrations, and that a simple correction term is enough to reduce the errors to an acceptable level.http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/3/1365/2003/acp-3-1365-2003.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Vountas
A. Richter
F. Wittrock
J. P. Burrows
spellingShingle M. Vountas
A. Richter
F. Wittrock
J. P. Burrows
Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet M. Vountas
A. Richter
F. Wittrock
J. P. Burrows
author_sort M. Vountas
title Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
title_short Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
title_full Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
title_fullStr Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
title_full_unstemmed Inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
title_sort inelastic scattering in ocean water and its impact on trace gas retrievals from satellite data
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2003-01-01
description Over clear ocean waters, photons scattered within the water body contribute significantly to the upwelling flux. In addition to elastic scattering, inelastic Vibrational Raman Scattering (VRS) by liquid water is also playing a role and can have a strong impact on the spectral distribution of the outgoing radiance. Under clear-sky conditions, VRS has an influence on trace gas retrievals from space-borne measurements of the backscattered radiance such as from e.g. GOME (Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment). The effect is particularly important for geo-locations with small solar zenith angles and over waters with low chlorophyll concentration.<br> <br> In this study, a simple ocean reflectance model (Sathyendranath and Platt, 1998) accounting for VRS has been incorporated into a radiative transfer model. The model has been validated by comparison with measurements from a swimming-pool experiment dedicated to detect the effect of scattering within water on the outgoing radiation and also with selected data sets from GOME. The comparisons show good agreement between experimental and model data and highlight the important role of VRS.<br> <br> To evaluate the impact of VRS on trace gas retrieval, a sensitivity study was performed on synthetic data. If VRS is neglected in the data analysis, errors of more than 30% are introduced for the slant column (<i>SC</i>) of BrO over clear ocean scenarios. Exemplarily DOAS retrievals of BrO from real GOME measurements including and excluding a VRS compensation led to comparable results as in the sensitivity study, but with somewhat smaller differences between the two analyses.<br> <br> The results of this work suggest, that DOAS retrievals of atmospheric trace species from measurements of nadir viewing space-borne instruments have to take VRS scattering into account over waters with low chlorophyll concentrations, and that a simple correction term is enough to reduce the errors to an acceptable level.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/3/1365/2003/acp-3-1365-2003.pdf
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