Authors:
Dr. Piera Raspollini | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Bianca Maria Dinelli | Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate - National Research Council (ISAC-CNR), Italy
Flavio Barbara | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy
Massimo Bianchini | Institute of Complex Systems of the National Research Center (ISC-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Manfred Birk | DLR | Germany
Dr Bruno Carli | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Simone Ceccherini | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Angelika Dehn | ESA-ESRIN, Italy | Italy
Dr. Marco Gai | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy
Dr. Anu Dudhia | Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics, Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford University, UK | United Kingdom
Dr. Jean-Marie Flaud | Laboratoire Interuniversitaire des Systèmes Atmosphériques (LISA), Universités Paris Est Créteil et Paris Diderot, France | France
Dr. Michael Höpfner | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK), Germany | Germany
Dr. Daan Hubert | BIRA –IASB, Belgium | Belgium
Dr. Arno Keppens | BIRA –IASB, Belgium | Belgium
Dr. Michael Kiefer | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK), Germany
Dr. Anne Kleinert | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK), Germany | Germany
Dr. David Moore | National Centre for Earth Observation, University of Leicester, UK | United Kingdom
Dr. Enzo Papandrea | Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate - National Research Council (ISAC-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Gaetan Perron | ABB Inc., Québec, Canada | Canada
Alessandro Piro | SERCO for ESA/ESRIN, Frascati, Italy | Italy
Dr. Manuel Lopez-Puertas | Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC), Spain | Spain
Prof. John Remedios | National Centre for Earth Observation, University of Leicester, UK | United Kingdom
Dr. Marco Ridolfi | Istituto Nazionale di Ottica (INO-CNR), Italy | Italy
Dr. Luca Sgheri | Istituto per le Applicazioni del Calcolo (IAC) del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Section of Florence, Italy | Italy
Dr. George Wagner | DLR | Germany
Dr. Gerald Wetzel | Karlsruhe Insitute of Technology (KIT), Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK), Germany | Germany
Dr. Nicola Zoppetti | Institute of Applied Physics ‘Nello Carrara’ of the National Research Council (IFAC-CNR), Italy | Italy
MIPAS is a Fourier Transform spectrometer that measured the atmospheric limb emission spectra in the middle infrared on board the ENVISAT satellite. These measurements allowed the global monitoring of the three-dimensional (latitude, longitude and altitude) distribution of temperature and of the concentration of many species, during both day and night, for 10 years, from July 2002 to April 2012.
MIPAS measurements allowed to study the atmosphere from the upper troposphere to the stratosphere and above, up to the thermosphere.
The interest in these measurements goes beyond the end of the mission, as they can be used in long time series of data to determine changes in atmospheric composition and in our planet’s climate. Furthermore, if the Changing-Atmosphere Infra-Red Tomography Explorer (CAIRT) mission, one of four candidates for Earth Explorer 11, will be selected, MIPAS data will constitute a benchmark for these measurements. CAIRT exploits indeed the heritage of MIPAS on ENVISAT, but allows to measure the composition of the atmosphere with unprecedented three-dimensional resolution being the first imaging Fourier Transform spectrometer sounding the limb of the atmosphere from space.
For the last reanalysis of the whole MIPAS mission, a significant effort was made by the MIPAS Quality Working Group, supported by ESA, to improve both L1 [1] and L2 processors, as well as spectroscopy and Level 2 Initial Guess profiles [2], with the objectives of obtaining L2 products with increased accuracy, better temporal stability, and a larger number of retrieved species. The main improvements of L1 processor were related to the radiometric calibration and pointing. With these new processors a MIPAS full mission reprocessing has been recently performed ([1] and [3]). The quality of this final operational data set has been assessed with comprehensive validation studies including comparisons to ground-based in-situ and balloon-borne measurements. The dataset containing the new version 8 of both L1 and L2 products and covering the entire MIPAS operational lifetime period (2002-2012) is available at ESA Earth Online web site.
This paper will focus on the lessons learnt, on the quality of the reprocessed data, on the remaining problems, and on further improvements that could improve the quality of both MIPAS L1 and L2 datasets.
[1] Kleinert et al. Kleinert, A., Birk, M., Perron, G., and Wagner, G.: Level 1b error budget for MIPAS on ENVISAT, Atmos. Meas. Tech., 11, 5657–5672,https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-11-5657-2018, 2018
[2] Raspollini, P., Arnone, E., Barbara, F., Bianchini, M., Carli, B., Ceccherini, S., Chipperfield, M. P., Dehn, A., Della Fera, S., Dinelli, B. M., Dudhia, A., Flaud, J.-M., Gai, M., Kiefer, M., López-Puertas, M., Moore, D. P., Piro, A., Remedios, J. J., Ridolfi, M., Sembhi, H., Sgheri, L., and Zoppetti, N.: Level 2 processor and auxiliary data for ESA Version 8 final full mission analysis of MIPAS measurements on ENVISAT, Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2021-235, in review, 2021.
[3] Dinelli, B. M., Raspollini, P., Gai, M., Sgheri, L., Ridolfi, M., Ceccherini, S., Barbara, F., Zoppetti, N., Castelli, E., Papandrea, E., Pettinari, P., Dehn, A., Dudhia, A., Kiefer, M., Piro, A., Flaud, J.-M., Lopez-Puertas, M., Moore, D., Remedios, J., and Bianchini, M.: The ESA MIPAS/ENVISAT Level2-v8 dataset: 10 years of measurements retrieved with ORM v8.22, Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2021-215, accepted, 2021.