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A Refined Calibration Procedure of Two-Channel Sun Photometers to Measure Atmospheric Precipitable Water at Various Antarctic Sites.

Authors :
Tomasi, Claudio
Petkov, Boyan
Benedetti, Elena
Valenziano, Luca
Lupi, Angelo
Vitale, Vito
Bonafé, Ubaldo
Source :
Journal of Atmospheric & Oceanic Technology; Feb2008, Vol. 25 Issue 2, p213-229, 17p, 2 Charts, 11 Graphs
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Two-channel sun photometers can be easily employed at Antarctic sites, where harsh environmental conditions prevail, to carry out measurements of precipitable water W. In the very dry air conditions observed in the Antarctic atmosphere, water vapor does not produce strong absorption features along the sun path. Therefore, these instruments need to be calibrated using analytical forms different from the square root regime, which can be determined by simulating the output voltages measured at Antarctic sites, for the spectral near-IR curves of extraterrestrial solar irradiance, instrumental responsivity parameters, and atmospheric transmittance, relative to various measurement periods. For this purpose, average models of the Antarctic atmosphere from the ground level up to the 30-km altitude were considered for different solar zenith angles and relative humidity conditions. The ratios between the output voltages simulated in the band and window channels were plotted as a function of total water vapor content C<subscript>w</subscript>, for each site and each period, to define the best-fit calibration curves, which were subsequently normalized to the field measurements to take into account the aging effects on the filter transmission characteristics. Each of the five calibration curves was found to present a slope coefficient decreasing gradually with C<subscript>w</subscript> from values higher than 0.8 to about 0.6. Using these curves, measurements of W were obtained, which differ appreciably at both sea level and high-altitude sites from those given by the square root calibration curves, avoiding large overestimation errors of 10%–40% at the high-altitude sites and underestimation errors of 5%–15% at the sea level site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07390572
Volume :
25
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Atmospheric & Oceanic Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31194333
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1175/2007JTECHA952.1