1 / 9

Comparison of Column Ozone from OMI with Ground-based Measurements at Three USA Sites

Comparison of Column Ozone from OMI with Ground-based Measurements at Three USA Sites. Bigyani Das and Phil Durbin Adnet Systems Inc./GSFC. Overview. Question: How do OMI ozone column data compare with ground-based instruments? Answer: OMI data does compare well

elan
Télécharger la présentation

Comparison of Column Ozone from OMI with Ground-based Measurements at Three USA Sites

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comparison of Column Ozone from OMI with Ground-based Measurements at Three USA Sites Bigyani Das and Phil Durbin Adnet Systems Inc./GSFC OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  2. Overview • Question:How do OMI ozone column data compare with ground-based instruments? • Answer: OMI data does compare well • Method: 3 USA Sites – Houston, Bondville, Raleigh Ground-based Instruments • USDA (UV network) • NOAA-EPA (NewBrew) • Results: Daily Column Ozone, Monthly Averages, Bias – All Sky Conditions, Year 2007 (All), 2005-2007 (Bondville & Raleigh versus USDA) Average Bias (%) Table for 2007 [ Bias =1/n ∑(OMI-GB)/GB * 100 ] OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  3. Ground Based Instruments • USDA UV-B Monitoring and Research Program (UV-MFRSR) – Ultraviolet Multifilter Rotating Shadow-band Radiometer • NewBrew - NOAA-EPA Brewer UV and Ozone network (Brewer MkIV Spectrophotometer) Measurement Sites • Houston, TX (Lat: 29.718 N, Lon: 95.341 W) • Bondville, IL (Lat: 40.053 N, Lon: 88.372 W) • Raleigh, NC (Lat: 35.728 N, Lon: 78.68 W) OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  4. Houston – Lat: 29.718(N), Lon: 95.341(W) OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  5. Bondville, IL – Lat: 40.053 (N), Lon: 88.372(W) OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  6. Raleigh, NC - Lat: 35.728(N), Lon: 78.68(W) OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  7. Bias Comparison OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  8. Bias Comparison: 2005-2007 OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

  9. Summary • Daily Column Ozone values show good agreement with ground-based measurements • The bias values are site dependent • Maximum bias and average bias have different characteristics. • Maximum bias is less with NewBrew data than USDA data at all 3 sites. • Maximum bias is more at Bondville and Houston than Raleigh when compared with USDA– Reason ? OMI Science Team Meeting, Helsinki, June 24-27, 2008

More Related