Members’ Publications

Validation of ozone data from the Superconducting Submillimeter-Wave Limb-Emission Sounder (SMILES)

Authors
Imai K., Manago N., Mitsuda C., Naito Y., Nishimoto E., Sakazaki T., Fujiwara M., Froidevaux L., von Clarmann T., Stiller G. P., Murtagh D. P., Rong P.-p., Mlynczak M. G., Walker K. A., Kinnison D. E., Akiyoshi H., Nakamura T., Miyasaka T., Nishibori T., Mizobuchi S., Kikuchi K., Ozeki H., Takahashi C., Hayashi H., Sano T., Suzuki M., Takayanagi M., Shiotani M.
Journal
J. Geophys. Res.Atmos., 118, 5750-5769
DOI
10.1002/jgrd.50434
Abstract
The Superconducting Submillimeter-Wave Limb-Emission Sounder (SMILES) onboard the International Space Station provided global measurements of ozone profiles in the middle atmosphere from 12 October 2009 to 21 April 2010. We present validation studies of the SMILES version 2.1 ozone product based on coincidence statistics with satellite observations and outputs of chemistry and transport models (CTMs). Comparisons of the stratospheric ozone with correlative data show agreements that are generally within 10%. In the mesosphere, the agreement is also good and better than 30% even at a high altitude of 73 km, and the SMILES measurements with their local time coverage also capture the diurnal variability very well. The recommended altitude range for scientific use is from 16 to 73 km. We note that the SMILES ozone values for altitude above 26 km are smaller than some of the correlative satellite datasets; conversely the SMILES values in the lower stratosphere tend to be larger than correlative data, particularly in the tropics, with less than 8% difference below ~24 km. The larger values in the lower stratosphere are probably due to departure of retrieval results between two detection bands at altitudes below 28 km; it is ~3% at 24 km and is increasing rapidly down below.