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Greenhouse Gas Measurements Over a 144KM Open Path in the Canary Islands 

Literature Reference
Peer Reviewed Literature
Authors

J.S.A. Brooke, P.F. Bernath, G. Kirchengast, C.B. Thomas, J.G. Wang, K.A. Tereszchuk, G. Abad, Gonzalez, R.J. Hargreaves, C.A. Beale, J.J. Harrison, S. Schweitzer, V. Proschek, P.A. martin, V.L. Kasyutich, C. Gerbig, O. Kolle, A. Loescher

Presented at

Atmospheric Measurement Technique Discussions http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/amtd-5-3303-2012 

Abstract

A new technique for the satellite remote sensing of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere via the absorption of short-wave infrared laser signals transmitted between counter-rotating satellites in low earth orbit has recently been proposed; this would enable the acquisition of a stable, global set of altitude-resolved concentration measurements. We present the first ground-based experimental demonstration of this new technique, in which the atmospheric absorption of CO2 near 2.1 μm was measured over a ~144 km path length between two peaks in the Canary Islands (at an altitude of ~2.4 km). The retrieved CO2 volume mixing ratio of 400.1 ppm (±14.7 ppm) is consistent within experimental uncertainty with simultaneously recorded in situ validation measurements. We conclude that the new method has a sound basis for monitoring CO2 and other greenhouse gases in the free atmosphere.