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Optimal Configuration of a Far‐Infrared Radiometer to Study the Arctic Winter Atmosphere
Author(s) -
Coursol Laurence,
Libois Quentin,
Gauthier Pierre,
Blanchet JeanPierre
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2019jd031773
Subject(s) - radiometer , arctic , environmental science , context (archaeology) , humidity , atmospheric infrared sounder , satellite , water vapor , the arctic , remote sensing , meteorology , atmosphere (unit) , atmospheric sciences , advanced very high resolution radiometer , infrared , physics , geography , geology , optics , oceanography , archaeology , astronomy
Several far‐infrared (FIR) satellite missions are planned for the next decade, with a special interest for the Arctic region. A theoretical study is performed to help with the design of an FIR radiometer, whose configuration in terms of channels number and frequencies is optimized based on information content analysis. The problem is cast in a context of vertical column experiments (1D) to determine the optimal configuration of a FIR radiometer to study the Arctic polar night. If only observations of the FIR radiometer were assimilated, the results show that for humidity, 90% of the total information content is obtained with four bands, whereas for temperature, 10 bands are needed. When the FIR measurements are assimilated on top of those from the advanced infrared sounder (AIRS), the former bring in additional information between the surface and 850 hPa and from 550 to 250 hPa for humidity. Moreover, between 400 and 200 hPa, the FIR radiometer is better than AIRS at reducing the analysis error variance for humidity. This indicates the potential of FIR observations for improving water vapor analysis in the Arctic.

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