19 research outputs found
Influence des facteurs agro-écologiques et des herbicides sur le rendement et les caractéristiques technologiques des grains et farines de blés tendres (Triticum aestivum L.) et durs (Triticum durum Desf.)
LâĂ©tude met en Ă©vidence les effets combinĂ©s des conditions Ă©cologiques, de la variĂ©tĂ© et des herbicides 2,4+Lontrel et Quartz super sur les rendements, les caractĂ©ristiques technologiques des grains et les propriĂ©tĂ©s boulangĂšres des farines de blĂ©s dâorigines Ă©cologiques diffĂ©rentes dans la rĂ©gion de Moscou. Pour ce faire, les rendements grains, leurs caractĂ©ristiques technologiques et la qualitĂ© boulangĂšre des farines mesurĂ©s ont montrĂ©s que ces blĂ©s originaires de la Syrie et du YĂ©men peuvent avec succĂšs sâadapter Ă la rĂ©gion de Moscou avec des rendements grains de 3,21-3,43 t/ha (Scham-2), 2,78-3,18 t/ha (Bykhys-1) et 2,64-2,95 t/ha (Homari). LâamĂ©lioration de lâĂ©tat phytosanitaire des semis grĂące aux herbicides a permis des gains de production grains en moyenne des blĂ©s tendres et durs Lyba, Scham-2, Bykhys-1 et Homari respectivement de 12,2-15,5%, 5,6- 6,8%, 9,0-11,1% et 9,8-11,7%. IndĂ©pendamment des herbicides appliquĂ©s, les diffĂ©rences observĂ©es dans la teneur des blĂ©s en protĂ©ine, gluten et amidon sont dues Ă la particularitĂ© de chaque variĂ©tĂ©. Aussi, les blĂ©s tendres Lyba et Scham-2 avec respectivement 13,4 et 13,8% (protĂ©ine) et 29,6 et 30,2% (gluten) sont panifiables tandis que les blĂ©s durs Bykhys-1 et Homari avec respectivement 15,7 et 15,5% (protĂ©ines) et 35,4% (gluten) sont pastifiables.Mots clĂ©s: DĂ©sherbants, protĂ©ine, gluten, qualitĂ© boulangĂšre, panifiable
Monitoring of UV spectral irradiance at Thessaloniki (1990?2005): data re-evaluation and quality control
International audienceWe present a re-evaluation and quality control of spectral ultraviolet irradiance measurements from two Brewer spectroradiometers operating regularly at Thessaloniki, Greece. The calibration history of the two instruments was re-examined and data flaws were identified by comparing quasi synchronous measurements. Analysis of the sensitivity of both instruments to variations of their internal temperature revealed that they have temperature coefficients of different sign. These coefficients exhibit small variability during the 15-year period. Using averaged temperature coefficients, we corrected both datasets. Corrections were applied for the angular response error using two different approaches depending on the availability of required ancillary data. The uncertainties associated with the measurements have been estimated and presented. Finally, the two datasets are compared using ratios of irradiance integrals at various bands in the UV, in order to assess any dependencies on the internal instrument temperature, solar zenith angle and wavelength
TROPOMI/S5P Total Column Water Vapor validation against AERONET ground-based measurements
Water vapor plays an important role in the greenhouse effect, rendering it an atmospheric constituent that requires continuous and global monitoring by different types of remote sensing instruments. The TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument Sentinel-5 Precursor (TROPOMI/S5P) Total Column Water Vapor (TCWV) is a new product retrieved from the visible blue spectral range (435â455ânm), using an algorithm that was originally developed for the GOME-2/MetOp sensors. For the purposes of this work, 2.5 years of continuous satellite observations at high spatial resolution are validated against co-located (in space and in time) precipitable water Level 2.0 (quality-assured) ground-based measurements from the NASA AERONET (AErosol RObotic NETwork). The network uses Cimel Sun photometers located at approximately 1300 stations globally to monitor precipitable water among other products. Based on data availability, 369 of the stations were used in this study. The two datasets, satellite- and ground-based, were co-located, and the relative differences of the comparisons were calculated and statistically analyzed. The Pearson correlation coefficient of the two products is found to be 0.91, and the mean bias of the overall relative percentage differences is of the order of â2.7â%. For the Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes (30â60ââN), where the density of the ground-based stations is high, the mean relative bias was found to be â1.8â%, while in the tropics (±15â) the TROPOMI TCWV product has a relative dry bias of up to â10â%. The effect of various algorithm and geophysical parameters, such as air mass factor, solar zenith angle, clouds and albedo, is also presented and discussed. It was found that the cloud properties affect the validation results, leading the TCWV to a dry bias of â20â% for low cloud heights (cloud top pressure (CTP) >800âhPa). Moreover, cloud albedo introduces a wet bias of 15â% when it is below 0.3 and a dry bias up to â25â% when the clouds are more reflective. Overall, the TROPOMI/S5P TCWV product, on a global scale and for moderate albedo and cloudiness, agrees well at -2.7±4.9â% with the AERONET observations but probably within about â8â% to â13â% with respect to the âtruthâ.</p
Temperature dependence of the Brewer global UV measurements
Spectral measurements of global UV irradiance recorded by Brewer spectrophotometers can be significantly affected by instrument-specific optical and mechanical features. Thus, proper corrections are needed in order to reduce the associated uncertainties to within acceptable levels. The present study aims to contribute to the reduction of uncertainties originating from changes in the Brewer internal temperature, which affect the performance of the optical and electronic parts, and subsequently the response of the instrument. Until now, measurements of the irradiance from various types of lamps at different temperatures have been used to characterize the instruments' temperature dependence. The use of 50âŻW lamps was found to induce errors in the characterization due to changes in the transmissivity of the Teflon diffuser as it warms up by the heat of the lamp. In contrast, the use of 200 or 1000âŻW lamps is considered more appropriate because they are positioned at longer distances from the diffuser so that warming is negligible. Temperature gradients inside the instrument can cause mechanical stresses which can affect the instrument's optical characteristics. Therefore, during the temperature-dependence characterization procedure warming or cooling must be slow enough to minimize these effects. In this study, results of the temperature characterization of eight different Brewer spectrophotometers operating in Greece, Finland, Germany and Spain are presented. It was found that the instruments' response changes differently in different temperature regions due to different responses of the diffusers' transmittance. The temperature correction factors derived for the Brewer spectrophotometers operating at Thessaloniki, Greece, and SodankylĂ€, Finland, were evaluated and were found to remove the temperature dependence of the instruments' sensitivity.This article is based upon work from COST Action ES1207 âA European Brewer Network (EUBREWNET)â, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) and from the ENV59-ATMOZ (âTraceability for atmospheric total column ozoneâ) Joint Research Programme (JRP)
Solar UV irradiance in a changing climate: Trends in europe and the significance of spectral monitoring in Italy
Review of the existing bibliography shows that the direction and magnitude of the long-term trends of UV irradiance, and their main drivers, vary significantly throughout Europe. Analysis of total ozone and spectral UV data recorded at four European stations during 1996â2017 reveals that long-term changes in UV are mainly driven by changes in aerosols, cloudiness, and surface albedo, while changes in total ozone play a less significant role. The variability of UV irradiance is large throughout Italy due to the complex topography and large latitudinal extension of the country. Analysis of the spectral UV records of the urban site of Rome, and the alpine site of Aosta reveals that differences between the two sites follow the annual cycle of the differences in cloudiness and surface albedo. Comparisons between the noon UV index measured at the ground at the same stations and the corresponding estimates from the Deutscher Wetterdienst (DWD) forecast model and the ozone monitoring instrument (OMI)/Aura observations reveal differences of up to 6 units between individual measurements, which are likely due to the different spatial resolution of the different datasets, and average differences of 0.5â1 unit, possibly related to the use of climatological surface albedo and aerosol optical properties in the retrieval algorithms
Validation of the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) surface UV radiation product
The TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) onboard the Sentinel-5 Precursor (S5P) satellite was launched on 13 October 2017 to provide the atmospheric composition for atmosphere and climate research. The S5P is a Sun-synchronous polar-orbiting satellite providing global daily coverage. The TROPOMI swath is 2600 km wide, and the ground resolution for most data products is 7:23:5 km2 (5:63:5 km2 since 6 August 2019) at nadir. The Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) is responsible for the development of the TROPOMI UV algorithm and the processing of the TROPOMI surface ultraviolet (UV) radiation product which includes 36 UV parameters in total. Ground-based data from 25 sites located in arctic, subarctic, temperate, equatorial and Antarctic areas were used for validation of the TROPOMI overpass irradiance at 305, 310, 324 and 380 nm, overpass erythemally weighted dose rate/UV index, and erythemally weighted daily dose for the period from 1 January 2018 to 31 August 2019. The validation results showed that for most sites 60 % 80% of TROPOMI data was within 20% of ground-based data for snow-free surface conditions. The median relative differences to ground-based measurements of TROPOMI snow-free surface daily doses were within 10% and 5% at two-Thirds and at half of the sites, respectively. At several sites more than 90% of cloud-free TROPOMI data was within 20% of groundbased measurements. Generally median relative differences between TROPOMI data and ground-based measurements were a little biased towards negative values (i.e. satellite data ground-based measurement), but at high latitudes where non-homogeneous topography and albedo or snow conditions occurred, the negative bias was exceptionally high: from 30% to 65 %. Positive biases of 10 % 15% were also found for mountainous sites due to challenging topography. The TROPOMI surface UV radiation product includes quality flags to detect increased uncertainties in the data due to heterogeneous surface albedo and rough terrain, which can be used to filter the data retrieved under challenging conditions
Validation of the IASI FORLI/EUMETSAT ozone products using satellite (GOME-2), ground-based (BrewerâDobson, SAOZ, FTIR) and ozonesonde measurements
This paper assesses the quality of IASI (Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer)/Metop-A (IASI-A) and
IASI/Metop-B (IASI-B) ozone (O3) products (total and partial
O3 columns) retrieved with the Fast Optimal Retrievals on Layers
for IASI Ozone (FORLI-O3; v20151001) software for 9Â years
(2008âJuly 2017) through an extensive intercomparison and validation
exercise using independent observations (satellite, ground-based and
ozonesonde). Compared with the previous version of FORLI-O3 (v20140922),
several improvements have been introduced in FORLI-O3 v20151001,
including absorbance look-up tables recalculated to cover a larger spectral
range, with additional numerical corrections. This leads to a change of ââŒâ4 % in the total ozone column (TOC) product, which is mainly associated
with a decrease in the retrieved O3 concentration in the middle
stratosphere (above 30 hPa/25 km). IASI-A and IASI-B TOCs are consistent,
with a global mean difference of less than 0.3 % for both daytime and
nighttime measurements; IASI-A is slightly higher than IASI-B. A global
difference of less than 2.4 % is found for the tropospheric (TROPO)
O3 column product (IASI-A is lower than IASI-B), which is partly
due to a temporary issue related to the IASI-A viewing angle in 2015. Our
validation shows that IASI-A and IASI-B TOCs are consistent with
GOME-2 (Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment-2), Dobson, Brewer, SAOZ
(SystĂšme d'Analyse par Observation
ZĂ©nithale) and FTIR (Fourier transform infrared)
TOCs, with global mean differences in the range of 0.1 %â2 %
depending on the instruments compared. The worst agreement with UVâvis
retrieved TOC (satellite and ground) is found at the southern high latitudes.
The IASI-A and ground-based TOC comparison for the period from 2008 to July
2017 shows the long-term stability of IASI-A, with insignificant or small negative
drifts of 1 %â3 % decadeâ1. The comparison results of IASI-A and IASI-B
against smoothed FTIR and ozonesonde partial O3 columns vary with
altitude and latitude, with the maximum standard deviation being seen for the
300â150 hPa column (20 %â40 %) due to strong ozone variability and
large total retrievals errors. Compared with ozonesonde data, the IASI-A and
IASI-B O3 TROPO column (defined as the column between the surface
and 300 hPa) is positively biased in the high latitudes (4 %â5 %)
and negatively biased in the midlatitudes and tropics (11 %â13 % and
16 %â19 %, respectively). The IASI-A-to-ozonesonde TROPO comparison
for the period from 2008 to 2016 shows a significant negative drift in the
Northern Hemisphere of â8.6±3.4 % decadeâ1, which is also
found in the IASI-A-to-FTIR TROPO comparison. When considering the period
from 2011 to 2016, the drift value for the TROPO column decreases and becomes
statistically insignificant. The observed negative drifts of the IASI-A TROPO
O3 product (8 %â16 % decadeâ1) over the 2008â2017
period might be taken into consideration when deriving trends from this
product and this time period.</p
Quality assessment of the Ozone_cci Climate Research Data Package (release 2017) â Part 2: Ground-based validation of nadir ozone profile data products
Atmospheric ozone plays a key role in
air quality and the radiation budget of the Earth, both directly and through
its chemical influence on other trace gases. Assessments of the atmospheric
ozone distribution and associated climate change therefore demand accurate
vertically resolved ozone observations with both stratospheric and
tropospheric sensitivity, on both global and regional scales, and both in the
long term and at shorter timescales. Such observations have been acquired by
two series of European nadir-viewing ozone profilers, namely the
scattered-light UVâvisible spectrometers of the GOME family, launched
regularly since 1995 (GOME, SCIAMACHY, OMI, GOME-2A/B, TROPOMI, and the
upcoming Sentinel-5 series), and the thermal infrared emission sounders of
the IASI type, launched regularly since 2006 (IASI on Metop platforms and the
upcoming IASI-NG on Metop-SG). In particular, several Level-2 retrieved,
Level-3 monthly gridded, and Level-4 assimilated nadir ozone profile data
products have been improved and harmonized in the context of the ozone
project of the European Space Agency's Climate Change Initiative (ESA
Ozone_cci). To verify their fitness for purpose, these ozone datasets must
undergo a comprehensive quality assessment (QA), including (a) detailed
identification of their geographical, vertical, and temporal domains of
validity; (b)Â quantification of their potential bias, noise, and drift and
their dependences on major influence quantities; and (c)Â assessment of the
mutual consistency of data from different sounders. For this purpose we have
applied to the Ozone_cci Climate Research Data Package (CRDP) released in
2017 the versatile QA and validation system Multi-TASTE, which has been
developed in the context of several heritage projects (ESA's Multi-TASTE,
EUMETSAT's O3M-SAF, and the European Commission's FP6Â GEOmon and FP7Â QA4ECV).
This work, as the second in a series of four Ozone_cci validation papers,
reports for the first time on data content studies, information content
studies and ground-based validation for both the GOME- and IASI-type climate
data records combined. The ground-based reference measurements have been
provided by the Network for the Detection of Atmospheric Composition
Change (NDACC), NASA's Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesonde
programme (SHADOZ), and other ozonesonde and lidar stations contributing to
the World Meteorological Organisation's Global Atmosphere Watch (WMO GAW).
The nadir ozone profile CRDP quality assessment reveals that all nadir ozone
profile products under study fulfil the GCOS user requirements in terms of
observation frequency and horizontal and vertical resolution. Yet all
L2Â observations also show sensitivity outliers in the UTLS and are strongly
correlated vertically due to substantial averaging kernel fluctuations that
extend far beyond the kernel's 15âŻkm FWHM. The CRDP typically does not
comply with the GCOS user requirements in terms of total uncertainty and
decadal drift, except for the UVâvisible L4 dataset. The drift values of the
L2 GOME and OMI, the L3Â IASI, and the L4Â assimilated products are found to be
overall insignificant, however, and applying appropriate altitude-dependent
bias and drift corrections make the data fit for climate and atmospheric
composition monitoring and modelling purposes. Dependence of the Ozone_cci
data quality on major influence quantities â resulting in data screening
suggestions to users â and perspectives for the Copernicus Sentinel missions
are additionally discussed
Monitoring of UV spectral irradiance at Thessaloniki (1990–2005): data re-evaluation and quality control
We present a re-evaluation and quality control of spectral ultraviolet
irradiance measurements from two Brewer spectroradiometers operating
regularly at Thessaloniki, Greece. The calibration history of the two
instruments was re-examined and data flaws were identified by comparing
quasi synchronous measurements. Analysis of the sensitivity of both
instruments to variations of their internal temperature revealed that they
have temperature coefficients of different sign. These coefficients exhibit
small variability during the 15-year period. Using averaged temperature
coefficients, we corrected both datasets. Corrections were applied for the
angular response error using two different approaches depending on the
availability of required ancillary data. The uncertainties associated with
the measurements have been estimated and presented. Finally, the two
datasets are compared using ratios of irradiance integrals at various bands
in the UV, in order to assess any dependencies on the internal instrument
temperature, solar zenith angle and wavelength