The influence of snow cover on Ozone Monitor Instrument formaldehyde
observations
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Published:2022-08-02
Issue:
Volume:
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ISSN:0187-6236
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Container-title:ATMÓSFERA
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language:
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Short-container-title:ATM
Author:
Howlett CareyAnne,González Abad Gonzalo,Chan Miller Christopher,Nowlan Caroline Rebecca,Ayazpour Zolal,Zhu Lei Zhu
Abstract
Formaldehyde (HCHO) is measured from space using backscattered ultraviolet
sun-light. Because of HCHO’s short lifetime, space-based observations of HCHO can serve
as a proxy for volatile organic compounds, helping to characterize their global
emissions and distributions. HCHO satellite observations rely on Air Mass Factor (AMF)
calculations to transform fitted slant columns into vertical column densities. Most HCHO
satellite products do not explicitly consider the presence of snow on the ground during
the calculation of AMFs. In this study, we leverage information from the MODIS
bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF), MODIS snow cover information,
and the Interactive Multisensor Snow and Ice Mapping System to evaluate the impact of
ground snow on Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) HCHO retrievals. We focus our analysis
on the year 2005. We compare AMFs computed using daily MODIS BRDF to AMFs computed using
OMI’s surface reflectance climatology, the baseline for NASA’s OMHCHO product. Over
snow-covered regions, both sets of AMFs show significant differences. We observe two
different behaviors. Regions with permanent snow cover (Greenland and Antarctica) show
smaller AMFs calculated with MODIS BRDF than with the OMI climatology resulting in a 6%
median annual increase of HCHO VCDs. Over regions with seasonal snow cover, the
situation is more complex with more variability in the differences during the year. For
example, a February 2005 case study over Europe shows that the NASA OMHCHO VCDs
(calculated using the OMI Lambertian climatology) are on average 16% larger than HCHO
columns retrieved using daily MODIS BRDF information.
Publisher
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
Subject
Atmospheric Science