Paper
8 December 1999 Improved atmospheric radiance calculations using CO2 P/R-branch line mixing
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Abstract
New high-spectral resolution satellite sounders will use channels located between CO2 lines for temperature retrievals. Transmittances for these channels are dominated by spectral line wings that are strongly influenced by line-mixing and duration-of-collision effects. Previous studies demonstrated the importance of Q-branch line mixing for atmospheric sounding in the 15 micrometer region. This work presents an improved model of P/R-branch line mixing and duration-of- collision effects on CO2 transmittances in the 4.3 micrometer and 15 micrometer regions, based on laboratory and spectroscopy data. Most line-by-line codes model non- Lorentzian behavior by using the Cousin chi-function. This empirical function incorporates both P/R line-mixing and duration-of-collision effects by using many parameters. It is common to use the Cousin model parameters obtained from the 4 micrometer band in the 15 micrometer region, overestimating the amount of line-mixing. Comparisons to radiance data taken with high resolution interferometers that fly on NASA's ER-2 partially validates our model. The biggest improvements are at 4.3 micrometer where the differences are reduced by more than 2K, compared to using the Cousin model.
© (1999) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
S. De Souza-Machado, L. Larrabee Strow, David C. Tobin, and Scott E. Hannon "Improved atmospheric radiance calculations using CO2 P/R-branch line mixing", Proc. SPIE 3867, Satellite Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere IV, (8 December 1999); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.373071
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Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Data modeling

Carbon dioxide

Atmospheric modeling

Absorption

Spectroscopy

Molecules

Solids

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