Publication | Closed Access
Calibration of Sun Radiometer–Based Atmospheric Water Vapor Retrievals Using GPS Meteorology
30
Citations
36
References
2007
Year
Earth ObservationEnvironmental MonitoringEngineeringAtmospheric SoundingAerosol Robotic NetworkEarth ScienceCalibrationAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyMeteorological MeasurementAerosol CanadaAtmospheric SensingMeteorologyCalibration ProcessGeographyRadiation MeasurementRadiometryAtmospheric ConditionAtmospheric RadiationRemote SensingSatellite MeteorologyLand Surface Reflectance
A study of the validation and calibration process for integrated water vapor (IWV) measurements derived from sun radiometry at the 940-nm solar absorption channel employed in the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) Aerosol Canada (AEROCAN) is presented. The sun radiometer data are compared with GPS meteorology records used as a reference. Three Canadian sites from different climatic regimes covering the period 2000–04 are considered. The observations from five different sun radiometers (IWV-SUN) were processed using the initial AERONET IWV retrieval procedure (V1) whereas GPS-derived IWV (IWV-GPS) was retrieved using “GPSpace” software developed by the Geodetic Survey division of Natural Resources Canada. A sensitivity study is carried out to highlight the influence of both central wavelength and signal amplitude on the 940-nm filter characteristics, which are instrument dependent and can drift due to aging. The comparison between IWV-SUN (V1) and IWV-GPS shows an average rmse of 0.23 ± 0.11 g cm −2 (22%) and a mean bias of −0.09 ± 0.16 g cm −2 (9%). Furthermore, it is shown that the use of GPS for determining the 940-nm channel calibration constants for the solar radiometers improves IWV retrievals (rmse reduced by about 35% and bias by a factor of 3–10) without any knowledge of the 940-nm filter characteristics. These results are discussed within the context of the new AERONET IWV processing procedure (V2), which accounts for solar 940-nm region filter characteristics. The GPS receiver technique appears to be a powerful calibration tool because of its continuous observation capability, its robustness, and its operational simplicity.
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