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Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins

Variations in atmosphere total column‐mean CO(2) (XCO(2)) collected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 satellite can be used to constrain surface carbon fluxes if the influence of atmospheric transport and observation errors on the data is known...

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Autores principales: Mitchell, Kayla A., Doney, Scott C., Keppel‐Aleks, Gretchen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10078313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37034456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022JD036696
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author Mitchell, Kayla A.
Doney, Scott C.
Keppel‐Aleks, Gretchen
author_facet Mitchell, Kayla A.
Doney, Scott C.
Keppel‐Aleks, Gretchen
author_sort Mitchell, Kayla A.
collection PubMed
description Variations in atmosphere total column‐mean CO(2) (XCO(2)) collected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 satellite can be used to constrain surface carbon fluxes if the influence of atmospheric transport and observation errors on the data is known and accounted for. Due to sparse validation data, the portions of fine‐scale variability in XCO(2) driven by fluxes, transport, or retrieval errors remain uncertain, particularly over the ocean. To better understand these drivers, we characterize variability in OCO‐2 Level 2 version 10 XCO(2) from the seasonal scale, synoptic‐scale (order of days, thousands of kilometers), and mesoscale (within‐day, hundreds of kilometers) for 10 biomes over North America and adjacent ocean basins. Seasonal and synoptic variations in XCO(2) reflect real geophysical drivers (transport and fluxes), following large‐scale atmospheric circulation and the north‐south distribution of biosphere carbon uptake. In contrast, geostatistical analysis of mesoscale and finer variability shows that real signals are obscured by systematic biases across the domain. Spatial correlations in along‐track XCO(2) are much shorter and spatially coherent variability is much larger in magnitude than can be attributed to fluxes or transport. We characterize random and coherent along‐track XCO(2) variability in addition to quantifying uncertainty in XCO(2) aggregates across typical lengths used in inverse modeling. Even over the ocean, correlated errors decrease the independence and increase uncertainty in XCO(2). We discuss the utility of computing geostatistical parameters and demonstrate their importance for XCO(2) science applications spanning from data reprocessing and algorithm development to error estimation and carbon flux inference.
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spelling pubmed-100783132023-04-07 Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins Mitchell, Kayla A. Doney, Scott C. Keppel‐Aleks, Gretchen J Geophys Res Atmos Research Article Variations in atmosphere total column‐mean CO(2) (XCO(2)) collected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 satellite can be used to constrain surface carbon fluxes if the influence of atmospheric transport and observation errors on the data is known and accounted for. Due to sparse validation data, the portions of fine‐scale variability in XCO(2) driven by fluxes, transport, or retrieval errors remain uncertain, particularly over the ocean. To better understand these drivers, we characterize variability in OCO‐2 Level 2 version 10 XCO(2) from the seasonal scale, synoptic‐scale (order of days, thousands of kilometers), and mesoscale (within‐day, hundreds of kilometers) for 10 biomes over North America and adjacent ocean basins. Seasonal and synoptic variations in XCO(2) reflect real geophysical drivers (transport and fluxes), following large‐scale atmospheric circulation and the north‐south distribution of biosphere carbon uptake. In contrast, geostatistical analysis of mesoscale and finer variability shows that real signals are obscured by systematic biases across the domain. Spatial correlations in along‐track XCO(2) are much shorter and spatially coherent variability is much larger in magnitude than can be attributed to fluxes or transport. We characterize random and coherent along‐track XCO(2) variability in addition to quantifying uncertainty in XCO(2) aggregates across typical lengths used in inverse modeling. Even over the ocean, correlated errors decrease the independence and increase uncertainty in XCO(2). We discuss the utility of computing geostatistical parameters and demonstrate their importance for XCO(2) science applications spanning from data reprocessing and algorithm development to error estimation and carbon flux inference. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-01-27 2023-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10078313/ /pubmed/37034456 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022JD036696 Text en © 2023. The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mitchell, Kayla A.
Doney, Scott C.
Keppel‐Aleks, Gretchen
Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title_full Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title_fullStr Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title_short Characterizing Average Seasonal, Synoptic, and Finer Variability in Orbiting Carbon Observatory‐2 XCO(2) Across North America and Adjacent Ocean Basins
title_sort characterizing average seasonal, synoptic, and finer variability in orbiting carbon observatory‐2 xco(2) across north america and adjacent ocean basins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10078313/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37034456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022JD036696
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