Publication | Open Access
Space‐based remote imaging spectroscopy of the Aliso Canyon CH<sub>4</sub> superemitter
167
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
EngineeringSpace‐based RemoteEarth System SciencePlanetary AtmosphereSpectroscopic PropertyEarth ScienceAtmospheric ScienceSpace SciencesPorter RanchAtmosphere Of EarthImaging SpectroscopyInfrared SpectroscopySpectral ImagingRadiation MeasurementHyperion Instrument PerformanceSpectroscopyFuture Orbital InstrumentsEarth SciencesSpectroscopic Method
Abstract The Aliso Canyon gas storage facility near Porter Ranch, California, produced a large accidental CH 4 release from October 2015 to February 2016. The Hyperion imaging spectrometer on board the EO‐1 satellite successfully detected this event, achieving the first orbital attribution of CH 4 to a single anthropogenic superemitter. Hyperion measured shortwave infrared signatures of CH 4 near 2.3 μm at 0.01 μm spectral resolution and 30 m spatial resolution. It detected the plume on three overpasses, mapping its magnitude and morphology. These orbital observations were consistent with measurements by airborne instruments. We evaluate Hyperion instrument performance, draw implications for future orbital instruments, and extrapolate the potential for a global survey of CH 4 superemitters.
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