Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesondes (SHADOZ) 1998–2000 tropical ozone climatology 1. Comparison with Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) and ground-based measurements

A network of 10 southern hemisphere tropical and subtropical stations, designated the Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesondes (SHADOZ) project and established from operational sites, provided over 1000 ozone profiles during the period 1998–2000. Balloon‐borne electrochemical concentration cell (E...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres Vol. 108; no. D2; pp. 8238 - n/a
Main Authors: Thompson, Anne M., Witte, Jacquelyn C., McPeters, Richard D., Oltmans, Samuel J., Schmidlin, Francis J., Logan, Jennifer A., Fujiwara, Masatomo, Kirchhoff, Volker W. J. H., Posny, Françoise, Coetzee, Gert J. R., Hoegger, Bruno, Kawakami, Shuji, Ogawa, Toshihiro, Johnson, Bryan J., Vömel, Holger, Labow, Gordon
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union 27-01-2003
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:A network of 10 southern hemisphere tropical and subtropical stations, designated the Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesondes (SHADOZ) project and established from operational sites, provided over 1000 ozone profiles during the period 1998–2000. Balloon‐borne electrochemical concentration cell (ECC) ozonesondes, combined with standard radiosondes for pressure, temperature, and relative humidity measurements, collected profiles in the troposphere and lower to midstratosphere at: Ascension Island; Nairobi, Kenya; Irene, South Africa; Réunion Island; Watukosek, Java; Fiji; Tahiti; American Samoa; San Cristóbal, Galapagos; and Natal, Brazil. The archived data are available at: 〈http://croc.gsfc.nasa.gov/shadoz〉.1 In this paper, uncertainties and accuracies within the SHADOZ ozone data set are evaluated by analyzing: (1) imprecisions in profiles and in methods of extrapolating ozone above balloon burst; (2) comparisons of column‐integrated total ozone from sondes with total ozone from the Earth‐Probe/Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) satellite and ground‐based instruments; and (3) possible biases from station to station due to variations in ozonesonde characteristics. The key results are the following: (1) Ozonesonde precision is 5%. (2) Integrated total ozone column amounts from the sondes are usually to within 5% of independent measurements from ground‐based instruments at five SHADOZ sites and overpass measurements from the TOMS satellite (version 7 data). (3) Systematic variations in TOMS‐sonde offsets and in ground‐based‐sonde offsets from station to station reflect biases in sonde technique as well as in satellite retrieval. Discrepancies are present in both stratospheric and tropospheric ozone. (4) There is evidence for a zonal wave‐one pattern in total and tropospheric ozone, but not in stratospheric ozone.
Bibliography:ArticleID:2001JD000967
istex:17ABFAE563C85EDBD23A54C3EE1F285CDE8D6834
ark:/67375/WNG-4R665LBC-F
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:0148-0227
2156-2202
DOI:10.1029/2001JD000967