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MARSCHALS: a new airborne millimetre-wave limb-sounder for the UTLS COST UTLS Workshop ESTEC, 11-13 March 2004. Victoria Jay, Brian Kerridge, Jolyon Reburn, Richard Siddans, Brian Moyna, Matthew Oldfield, Dave Matheson Earth Observation and Atmospheric Science Division, SSTD
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MARSCHALS: a new airborne millimetre-wave limb-sounder for the UTLSCOST UTLS WorkshopESTEC, 11-13 March 2004 Victoria Jay, Brian Kerridge, Jolyon Reburn, Richard Siddans, Brian Moyna, Matthew Oldfield, Dave Matheson Earth Observation and Atmospheric Science Division, SSTD Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Introduction • MARSCHALS • Millimetre-wave Airborne Receiver for Spectroscopic CHaracterisation of Atmospheric Limb-Sounding • a new airborne mm-wave limb sounder for the UTLS • built under ESA contract by a consortium led by Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK • Contents • Background, scientific rationale • Instrument description • Current status • Future Plans
Marschals Objectives • Demonstrate the capability of the mm-wave limb-sounding technique, to be employed by MASTER, to sound H2O, O3 and CO in the UT/LS region • MASTER: proposed spaceborne limb sounder to measure thermal emission spectra at mm and sub-mm wavelengths • mm-wave region: where extinction by aerosol and polar stratospheric clouds is negligible and extinction by cirrus clouds is low • Participate in field campaigns in its own right (strat-trop exchange, radiative forcing, UT&LS chemistry)
The Marschals Instrument • To simulate UTLS capabilities of MASTER as closely as possible, deployment on: • Geophysica near 20 km (primary carrier) • Potential to retrieve horizontal and vertical structure in UTLS H2O, O3 and CO fields • High-altitude balloon (secondary carrier) near 35 km • Capability for profile retrieval up to the mid-stratosphere
Instrument Details • MARSCHALS: • High efficiency antenna (22 cm) to make precise elevation scans though the atmosphere • Heterodyne receiver concept • SSB receivers • 200 MHz spectral resolution (cf 50 MHz for MASTER) • Sideways viewing (cf rearwards for MASTER)
Instrument Details • Bands: • B: 294 - 305 GHz O3, pointing • C: 316.5 – 325.5 GHz H2O • D: 342.8 – 348.8 GHz CO • Modular design: more bands can be added • Baseline scan sequence: • -2 to 21 km in 1 km steps
OCM • Optical Cloud Monitor: • CCD array coupled to standard lens and broad-band filter (835-875nm) • Records near-IR sunlight scattered in limb direction • to identify cloud-free measurements for initial data analysis • to indicate cloud conditions of each mm-wave measurement for analysis and interpretation, e.g. • confirm mm-wave insensitivity to cloud • relate mm-wave retrieved trace gas abundances to cloud
MASTER MARSCHALS (balloon) MARSCHALS (aircraft) Retrieval simulations - Precision Band B O3 Band C H2O Alt / km Alt / km Band D CO % Error % Error Alt / km % Error
Current Status • Instrument ~ 95% complete • Two RAL receivers, bands C and D, each with 12 GHz of instantaneous bandwidth (@ 200MHz resolution) • Need to pass EMC test before flight • Characterisation of the full instrument is underway • L1 software ready
Deployment plans • Funding for initial test flight and campaigns from EU APE-INFRA and ESA MALSAC • Geophysica test flight March cancelled • Alternatives being investigated • Rescheduled Geophysica flight (May/June earliest) • Jungfraujoch ? • Scientific flights in future Geophysica campaigns • Alongside MIPAS-STR and SAFIRE-A
Summary • MARSCHALS • New mm-wave airborne limb sounder • O3, H2O, CO and other trace gases in the UTLS • First flight soon • See poster: Tomographic limb-sounding of the Upper Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere • 2-D retrieval simulations for MASTER
MARSCHALS L1 ATB ReviewBaseline Scan Sequence • Scan -2km to 21km tangent height, integrating for 0.25s at each observation state. • At each tangent height • 7 observations, 2 RF switches: 50ms each • Total time per tangent height: 2.2s • Total time for sequence: 52.8s (antenna motion during a cal.load view). • In addition, limb scan • Starts hot/cold observation • Ends with cycle through all bands at max. elevation (above horizontal).