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TEMIS UV product validation using NILU-UV ground-based measurements in Thessaloniki, Greece
This study aims to cross-validate ground-based and satellite-based models of three photobiological UV effective dose products: the Commission Internationale del’Éclairage (CIE) erythemal UV, the production of vitamin D in the skin, and DNA damage, using high-temporal resolution surface-based measurements of solar UV spectral irradiances from a synergy of instruments and models. The satellite-based Tropospheric Emission Monitoring Internet Service (TEMIS; version 1.4) UV daily dose data products were evaluated over the period 2009 to 2014 with ground-based data from a Norsk Institutt for Luftforskning (NILU)-UV multifilter radiometer located at the northern midlatitude super-site of the Laboratory of Atmospheric Physics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (LAP/AUTh), in Greece. For the NILU-UV effective dose rates retrieval algorithm, a neural network (NN) was trained to learn the nonlinear functional relation between NILU-UV irradiances and collocated Brewer-based photobiological effective dose products.
Then the algorithm was subjected to sensitivity analysis and validation. The correlation of the NN estimates with target
outputs was high (r = 0.988 to 0.990) and with a very low bias (0.000 to 0.011 in absolute units) proving the robustness of the NN algorithm. For further evaluation of the NILU NN-derived products, retrievals of the vitamin D and DNA-damage effective doses from a collocated Yankee Environmental Systems (YES) UVB-1 pyranometer were used. For cloud-free days, differences in the derived UV doses
are better than 2 % for all UV dose products, revealing the reference quality of the ground-based UV doses at Thessaloniki from the NILU-UV NN retrievals. The TEMIS UV doses used in this study are derived from ozone measurements by the SCIAMACHY/Envisat and GOME2/MetOp-A satellite instruments, over the European domain in combination with SEVIRI/Meteosat-based diurnal cycle of the cloud
cover fraction per 0.5◦ × 0.5◦ (lat × long) grid cells. TEMIS UV doses were found to be ∼ 12.5 % higher than the NILU NN estimates but, despite the presence of a visually apparent seasonal pattern, the R
2 values were found to be robustly high and equal to 0.92–0.93 for 1588 all-sky coincidences. These results significantly improve when limiting the dataset to cloud-free days with differences of 0.57 % for the erythemal doses, 1.22 % for the vitamin D doses, and 1.18 % for
the DNA-damage doses, with standard deviations of the order of 11–13 %. The improvement of the comparative statistics under cloud-free cases further testifies to the importance of the appropriate consideration of the contribution of clouds in the UV radiation reaching the Earth’s surface. For the urban area of Thessaloniki, with highly variable aerosol, the weakness of the implicit aerosol information introduced to the TEMIS UV dose algorithm was revealed by comparison of the datasets to aerosol optical depths at 340 nm as reported by a collocated CIMEL sun photometer, operating in Thessaloniki at LAP/AUTh as part of the NASA Aerosol Robotic Network
In-situ calibration of the water vapor channel for multi-filter rotating shadowband radiometer using collocated GPS, AERONET and meteorology data
The difficulty of in-situ calibration on the 940 nm channel of Multi-Filter Rotating Shadowband Radiometer (MFRSR) stems from the distinctive non-linear relationship between the amount of precipitable water vapor (PW) and its optical depth (i.e. curve of growth) compared to the counterpart of aerosols. Previous approaches, the modified Langley methods (MLM), require exact aerosol optical depth (AOD) values and a constant PW value at all points participating the regression. Instead, we propose a new method that substitutes the PW optical depth derived from collocated GPS zenith wet delay retrieval in conjunction with meteorology data and requires a constant AOD value at all points participating the regression. The main benefits of the new method include: (1) Aerosol stability is easier to fulfill than PW stability; (2) AOD stability could be inferred from adjacent channels (e.g. 672 and 870 nm) of MFRSR itself without measurements of a collocated AERONET sun photometer; and (3) When applicable, the time interval of GPS derived PW (i.e. 3 minutes) is more compatible with the MFRSR sampling interval (i.e. 3 minutes) than AERONET interpolated AOD (i.e. 15 minutes). Both MLM and the new method were applied to the MFRSR of USDA UV-B Monitoring and Research Program at the station in Billings, Oklahoma (active for 18 years so far) on July 28, 2015. The performances of the two methods are compared in order to assess their accuracy and the advantages and disadvantages.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant S13-EAR1261833-S4)United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NNX14AQ03G
Short- and long-term variability of spectral solar UV irradiance at Thessaloniki, Greece: effects of changes in aerosols, total ozone and clouds
In this study, we discuss the short- and the long-term variability of
spectral UV irradiance at Thessaloniki, Greece, using a long,
quality-controlled data set from two Brewer spectrophotometers. Long-term
changes in spectral UV irradiance at 307.5, 324 and 350 nm for the period
1994–2014 are presented for different solar zenith angles and discussed in
association with changes in total ozone column (TOC), aerosol optical depth
(AOD) and cloudiness observed in the same period. Positive changes in annual
mean anomalies of UV irradiance, ranging from 2 to 6 % per decade, have
been detected both for clear- and all-sky conditions. The changes are
generally greater for larger solar zenith angles and for shorter wavelengths.
For clear-skies, these changes are, in most cases, statistically significant
at the 95 % confidence limit. Decreases in the aerosol load and weakening
of the attenuation by clouds lead to increases in UV irradiance in the
summer, of 7–9 % per decade for 64° solar zenith angle. The
increasing TOC in winter counteracts the effect of decreasing AOD for this
particular season, leading to small, statistically insignificant, negative
long-term changes in irradiance at 307.5 nm. Annual mean UV irradiance
levels are increasing from 1994 to 2006 and remain relatively stable
thereafter, possibly due to the combined changes in the amount and optical
properties of aerosols. However, no statistically significant corresponding
turning point has been detected in the long-term changes of AOD. The absence
of signatures of changes in AOD in the short-term variability of irradiance
in the UV-A may have been caused by changes in the single scattering albedo
of aerosols, which may counteract the effects of changes in AOD on
irradiance. The anti-correlation between the year-to-year variability of the
irradiance at 307.5 nm and TOC is clear and becomes clearer as the AOD
decreases