Remotely operable compact instruments for measuring atmospheric CO 2 and CH 4 column densities at surface monitoring sites

2010 
Abstract. Remotely operable compact instruments for measuring atmospheric CO 2 and CH 4 column densities were developed in two independent systems: one utilizing a grating-based desktop optical spectrum analyzer (OSA) with a resolution enough to resolve rotational lines of CO 2 and CH 4 in the regions of 1565–1585 and 1674–1682 nm, respectively; the other is an application of an optical fiber Fabry-Perot interferometer (FFPI) to obtain the CO 2 column density. Direct sunlight was collimated via a small telescope installed on a portable sun tracker and then transmitted through an optical fiber into the OSA or the FFPI for optical analysis. The near infrared spectra of the OSA were retrieved by a least squares spectral fitting algorithm. The CO 2 and CH 4 column densities deduced were in excellent agreement with those measured by a Fourier transform spectrometer with high resolution. The rovibronic lines in the wavelength region of 1570–1575 nm were analyzed by the FFPI. The I 0 and I values in the Beer-Lambert law equation to obtain CO 2 column density were deduced by modulating temperature of the FFPI, which offered column CO 2 with the statistical error less than 0.2% for six hours measurement.
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