1. Contributions of the SSBUV Experiment to Long-Term Ozone Monitoring
- Author
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Hilsenrath, E, Cebula, R. P, Bories, M. C, Cerullo, J. J, DeCamp, P. W, Huang, L.-K, Hui, C. N, Janz, S. J, Kelly, T. J, McCullough, K. R, Mederios J. J, Riley, J. T, Rice, B. K, and Thorpe, C. D
- Subjects
Environment Pollution - Abstract
The SSBUV experiment flew eight Space Shuttle missions from October 1989 to January 1996 in conducted eight missions between October 1989 and support of the US long-term ozone monitoring program. Contributions of the SSBUV experiment are reviewed in this paper. SSBUV data are being used to provide and validate the absolute and long-term calibrations of multiple satellite-based ozone monitoring instruments. SSBUV observed a significant decrease in Northern hemisphere total ozone from the winter of 1992 to the following winter, and SSBUV data were combined with Nimbus-7 data to assess long-term ozone changes during the 1980's. SSBUV solar irradiance measurements are being used to determine the absolute solar spectral irradiance in the middle UV, validate solar data from two UARS instruments, and independently measure long-term solar change at wavelengths important for ozone photochemistry. SSBUV data where also used to study the effects of surface reflectivity and rotational Raman scattering on the ozone retrievals, determine the NO column amount and its altitude distribution, measure the UV lunar albedo, and assist in the optimization of wavelengths for new instruments.
- Published
- 1996