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Validation of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder OH and HO 2 measurements
Author(s) -
Pickett H. M.,
Drouin B. J.,
Canty T.,
Salawitch R. J.,
Fuller R. A.,
Perun V. S.,
Livesey N. J.,
Waters J. W.,
Stachnik R. A.,
Sander S. P.,
Traub W. A.,
Jucks K. W.,
Minschwaner K.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2007jd008775
Subject(s) - microwave limb sounder , analytical chemistry (journal) , spectrograph , satellite , microwave , stratosphere , physics , atmospheric sciences , chemistry , spectral line , chromatography , astronomy , quantum mechanics
The Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) instrument on the Aura satellite obtains global measurements of both OH and HO 2 radicals. This paper describes the precision and systematic errors of the MLS version v2.2 of the retrieval software. Estimated systematic errors are less than 8% for OH over 32–0.003 hPa and HO 2 over 6.8–0.21 hPa. Comparison of measurements from MLS OH and HO 2 profiles and three balloon‐based instruments show good agreement among themselves and with a photochemical model using standard chemistry (i.e., recommended rate constants). Similarly, good agreement is seen between column OH found by integrating satellite profiles and ground‐based measurements of column OH. The agreement between measured and modeled OH and HO 2 is improved following perturbations to the rate constants O + OH and OH + HO 2 that are within the recommended uncertainties. Measurements of OH obtained a decade ago by the Middle Atmosphere High‐Resolution Spectrograph Investigation (MAHRSI) are smaller than MLS measurements by 20% at 70 km, are similar to MLS data near 50 km, and are 50% larger than MLS observations near 42 km. The MLS and MAHRSI measurements of OH overlap at the limit of their respective 2‐ σ uncertainties. Most importantly, we find the shape of the OH profile measured by MLS is simulated well using standard chemistry.

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