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Quantitative rotational spectroscopy for atmospheric applications

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Laboratoire de Physique des Lasers, Atomes et Mol cules (UMR CNRS 8523) and CERLA ... G. Cazzoli, L. Dore, C. Puzzarini (Bologna) M. Birk, G. Wagner (DLR) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quantitative rotational spectroscopy for atmospheric applications


1
Quantitative rotational spectroscopy for
atmospheric applications
  • G. WLODARCZAK
  • Laboratoire de Physique des Lasers, Atomes et
    Molécules (UMR CNRS 8523) and CERLA
  • Université de Lille 1, France

2
Goals
  • Improvement of existing databases reliable data
    for the analysis of satellite data
  • Test values for the theoretical calculations
  • Detailed lineshape analysis

3
ODIN satellite
4
ODIN satellite
  • launched in february 2001
  • Radiometer118.25-119.25 GHz 486.1-503.9 GHz
    541.0-580.4 GHz resolution 0.1 to 1 MHz
  • astrophysical observations (CI, H2O, O2, H2S,
    NH3, H2CO, CS, 13CO, H2CS, SO, SO2..)
  • aeronomy stratospheric ozone depletion, coupling
    between the upper and lower atmosphere
  • Optical spectrometer 280-800 nm and 1270 nm

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8
EOS MLS experiment (NASA)
  • LaunchAURA platform, jan. 2004 (5 years of
    operation)
  • Radiometers 190 GHz (H2O, HNO3), 240 GHz (O3),
    640 GHz (HCl, ClO, N2O), 2.5 THz (OH)
  • Coupled with infrared high resolution dynamics
    limb sounder (HIRDLS), infrared tropospheric
    emission spectrometer (TES), UV ozone monitoring
    instrument (OMI)
  • Improving our understanding of atmospheric global
    change

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JEM/SMILES Experiment
  • global mapping of atmospheric trace gases ClO,
    HCl, HO2, HNO3, BrO, O3 isotopic species
  • 624.32-626.32 GHz and 649.12-650.32 GHz
  • SIS receivers
  • launch 2005

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MASTER experiment (ESA)MM-wave acquisition for
stratosphere-troposphere exchange research
  • Launch ???, ACECHEM baseline mission
  • Bands 294.00-305.50 GHz (band B)
  • 316.50-325.50 GHz (band C)
  • 342.25-348.75GHz (band D)
  • 497.00-506.00 GHz (band E)
  • 624.00-626.50 GHz (band F)
  • Flying demonstrator MARSCHALS (bands B,C,D), oct.
    2003
  • Target species O3, H2O, HNO3, CO, N2O, HCl, ClO
  • Brightness temperature

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Rotational lineshapes
n or Eu, El m G or g, n D or d
n or Eu, El m G or g, n D or d
15
Frequency measurements
  • For the target molecules, spectroscopy is well
    known
  • But implementation in the databases not always
    done!
  • Combined rovibrational analysis of microwave and
    infrared data H2CO, HNO3, O3, CH3Cl, ClONO2,
    HCOOH,

16
Intensity measurements
  • Not easy to perform
  • For rotational transitions, intensity is a
    function of the permanent dipole moment
  • Pb some experimental values rather old
  • Dipole moment for isotopic species (HDO, 18O
    species )
  • Ab initio calculations

17
Broadening coefficients
  • Voigt profile commonly used (convolution of the
    Doppler profile (Gaussian) and the collisional
    profile (Lorentzian)
  • collisional linewidth DgL ga-a(T) Pa
    ga-b(T) Pb where a denotes the absorbing gas and
    b the foreign perturbing gas, ga-a(T) and ga-b(T)
    are the pressure broadening parameters for self-
    and foreign-broadenings at the temperature T, and
    Pa and Pb are the partial pressures of absorbing
    and foreign gases respectively.
  • Broadening by O2 or N2
  • Temperature dependence n exponent
  • g(T)g(296) (296/T)n

18
Line broadening measurements
  • Classical MMW absorption spectrometers
  • Lille, Bologna, JPL, OSU, NAIR, Ibaraki,...
  • FIR laser Cambridge,...
  • Transient phenomena Kiel, Lille
  • Acoustic detection Nizhnii Novgorod
  • Resonator Nizhnii Novgorod
  • FTIR DLR,

19
Line broadening measurements
  • Pressure range usually lt 1 Torr except for FTIR
    and resonator experiments
  • Temperature range 200-350 K
  • Modulation techniques used (amplitude or
    frequency) see Poster M29 ( frequency modulation)

20
Line broadening measurements
  • differences observed for the same transition
    studied by different groups larger than for
    frequency measurements
  • pressure measurement
  • temperature determination, homogeneity
  • baseline substraction, power fluctuations of the
    source
  • adsorption of the sample, stability
  • need for intercomparison to provide the most
    reliable data

21
Line broadening measurements
  • OCS J9-8 transition, self-broadening coefficient
  • O12CS 6.022 (18) MHz/Torr ampl. modulation
  • O13CS 6.076 (69) MHz/Torr ampl. modulation
  • O13CS 6.133 (30) MHz/Torr freq. modulation
  • CO J1-0 transition, self-broadening coefficient
  • 3.354 (8) MHz/Torr ampl. modulation
  • 3.414 (5) MHz/Torr freq. modulation
  • from C. Puzzarini et al. J. Mol. Spectrosc. 216,
    428 (2002)

22
Line broadening measurements
  • Ex1. CO J3-2 line at 345 GHz, air-broadening
  • Lille (BWO) 2.728(17) MHz/Torr
  • DLR (FTIR) 2.745(55) MHz/Torr
  • Bologna (multiplier) 2.687(18) MHz/Torr (13CO)
  • Ex2. Ozone
  • See poster J17 for intercomparisons
    (Lille/Bologna) for lines located in the bands C
    and D of MASTER
  • See also poster L21

23
HCl, J1-0
  • Drouin (JQSRT, 2003, in press) multiplier
  • gair3.42(4) MHz/Torr
  • Davies et al (J Mol Spectrosc 220, 107-112,
    2003)TuFIR
  • gair3.30(6) MHz/Torr
  • Pine et al (J Mol Spectrosc 122, 41, 1987) FTIR
  • gair3.52(4) MHz/Torr
  • Yamada et al (Dijon 2003, poster L22)

24
Pressure broadening of HCl projected at 296 K in
N2 (black) and O2 (grey).
25
N2O Linewidths
26
O2 Linewidths
27
H2O313-220 transition, 183 GHz
  • Fig. 5. Measured values of the water line air
    pressure broadening parameter. The authors
    responsible are as follows. (1) Rusk 5 (2)
    Dryagin et al. 3 (3) Frenkel and Woods 6
    (4) Hemmi and Straiton 17 (5)Ryadov and
    Furashov 2 (6) Bauer et al. 4 (7) Bauer et
    al. 14 (8) Goyette and DeLucia 18
    (9)Pumphrey and Buehler 1MLS (10) Pumphrey and
    Buehler 1MAS (11)Krupnov et al. 7 (obtained
    using the calculated apparatus function) (12)
    This work (M. Yu. Tretyakov et al, J Mol.
    Spectrosc, 2003)

28
HNO3
Fig. 7. Comparison of pressure broadening
measurements for species and transitions in Table
1 and Table 3. The horizontal axis are OSU
measurements, and on the vertical axis the solid
circles, the HNO3O2/N2 measurements of JPL
reported in this work the open circles, the
H2OO2/N2 measurements of Refs.9 and13 and
the solid square, the COHe measurement,
Refs.11 and12. The error bars are 5
29
HNO3 Linewidths
30

LINE SHIFTS
  • Can have a high impact on the retrieval
  • Smaller than infrared values very few reliable
    data in the MMW range
  • Ex1. CO J5-4 at 576.3 GHz
  • self6 (3) kHz/Torr (Markov 2002)
  • 45.8 (214) kHz/Torr (Yamada 2003)
  • Ex2. CO J1-0 at 115 GHz
  • dself-27 (24) kHz/Torr (Fabian 1997)
  • Generally too small to be determined only
    measurable if d gt1/20 g
  • Measured for NH3, H2O (307(4) kHz/Torr for the
    110-101 transition at 556 GHz, -70(20) kHz/Torr
    for the 313-220 transition at 183 GHz), HCl

31
HCl lineshift J1-0 line
Drouin, JQSRT, 2003 dair 0.146 MHz/Torr
32
Theoretical calculations
  • Complex Robert-Bonamy formalism generally used
  • Semi-classical model using curved trajectories
    based on the isotropic part of the intermolecular
    potential
  • Total potential VT Ve Va-a, where Ve is the
    electrostatic potential and a short range
    atom-atom component (Lennard-Jones 6-12)
  • Various temperature dependence models tested
    (when the temperature range is large)
  • See Posters J10 (C2H2), M27 (H2O) for CRB
    calculations, M24 (semi-empirical approach)

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35
Ozone
For all these transitions the calculated
lineshift is less than 10 kHz/Torr
36
K-Dependence of the pressure broadeningCH3CN,
J12-11 (220 GHz)
37
approximate theoretical model When
dipole-quadrupole interaction is only considered,
the Birnbaum model (1) leads to the following
simple expression for the pressure broadening-para
meter (1) G. Birnbaum, Adv. Chem.
Phys. 12, 487 (1967).
38
Conclusion
  • Need for complementary measurements (see also
    conclusions of the San Diego meeting, oct. 2001
    www.atmoschem.jpl.nasa.gov)
  • Intercomparison of the data obtained by various
    (or identical) techniques
  • Dont claim unrealistic error bars
  • Need for an unified up-to-date database (with IR
    data)
  • Non resonant absorption continuum (H2O)
    measurements in all spectral ranges including MMW
    (see posters H10 and O20)

39

40
Line shape analysis
  • Departure from Voigt profile observed in
    rotational transition lineshapes for O3, N2O, CO,
    NO, CH3Cl, CH3CN, HCN,..
  • Deviations observed for some time in
    rovibrational spectra
  • Systematic deviation of the broadening
    coefficients (up to 2 )
  • Influence on the retrieval not yet considered
    (may be not negligible in upper stratosphere)

41
Line shape analysis
  • velocity/speed changing collisions (Dicke
    effect) lead to a Galatry profile (soft
    collisions, magtmb) or Rautian profile (strong
    collision, maltmb)
  • Galatry model two parameters, G0 ,relaxation
    rate, and b, diffusion rate
  • speed dependence of the relaxation rate G speed
    dependent Voigt profile
  • quadratic dependence G(va) G0 G2 ((va /
    va0)2 -3/2)
  • two parameters G0 and G2
  • from the analysis of the residuals, both models
    are equivalent but
  • b is not linear with pressure when pressure
    increases (theory predicts that G0 , G2 and b
    are linear with pressure)

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Line shape analysis
  • Conclusion speed dependent profile more
    appropriate
  • In case of small profile narrowings, we can
    write
  • b/3G2 1(3G2/aG0)(G0/kvao)2
  • Doppler regime G0 lt kvao b/3G2 1, both
    profiles equivalent
  • Collisional regime G0 gt kvao b is non linear
    versus pressure and becomes very large and for a
    limit pressure no line fitting is possible
    (observed for HCN/CH3Br in infrared)
  • See J-F dEu, B. Lemoine, F. Rohart, J. Mol.
    Spectrosc. 212, 96-110 (2002) and poster J14
  • Confirmation by theoretical calculations of the
    speed dependence of the relaxation rates
  • Full agreement with previous studies on the J1-0
    line of N2O

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45
Ackowledgments
  • CNRS Programme National de Chimie Atmosphérique,
    Programme National de Planétologie
  • European Spatial Agency
  • B. Bakri, J-F dEu, D. Priem
  • J-M Colmont, F. Rohart, J. Demaison
  • A. Perrin (Orsay)
  • G. Cazzoli, L. Dore, C. Puzzarini (Bologna)
  • M. Birk, G. Wagner (DLR)
  • C. Verdes, S. Buehler (Bremen)
  • B.J. Drouin (JPL)
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