Introduction Instrument
Data
References Links
Contact
A
new atmospheric measurement station (MARS)
has been established
in cooperation with the University of Mérida, Physics Department in the
vicinity of the city Mérida,
Venezuela (8°N,
71°W).
This station takes advantages of the high altitude site Pico Espejo (4765 m) for
measurements with a
DOAS
instrument and a microwave
sensor.
Pico Espejo is accessible with the
world's highest cable car. Additional instruments (LIDAR, FTIR and UV-A/B
spectrometers) will also be deployed at the nearby Instituto
Astrofisico at 3600 m altitude by the Alfred-Wegener-Institut
Bremerhaven.
The
Pico Espejo station is characterized by its high altitude, facilitating
stratospheric measurements in
a tropical region that
is unperturbed by tropospheric pollution and the large tropospheric water vapour burden
usually
found at
these latitudes.
Therefore
it is an ideal site for both stratospheric research
and the validation of satellite instruments such as GOME, SCIAMACHY and MIPAS.
Using the off-axis measurements of the DOAS instrument it is also possible to
investigate trace gases in the free troposphere, and to quantify the effects of
local pollution from Mérida
and
additionally long range transport from the fires in Southern America.
The DOAS instrument in Mérida is located inside the MARS station building. It comprises a temperature
stabilized grating spectrometer equipped with a cooled CCD detector. The instrument is connected to a telescope, which is
located outside the building, with a quartz fibre bundle and a number of
electrical and control connections. The telescope has two viewing ports: One in
zenith direction, the other one towards the horizon (off-axis). In the off-axis
direction, up to 4 angles can be observed sequentially in the range of -5° to
25° elevation by means of a motorized mirror. Both line-lamp and white light
calibration lamp are integrated in the telescope box and are used for daily
calibration measurements. More on the instrument and measurement principle can
be found on our MAXDOAS page.
The instrument is fully automated and
controlled remotely through an internet connection to Bremen. To ensure
continuous operation during power black outs, it is connected to an UPS
shared with the microwave instrument.
If you have any requests, please
contact
Thomas Medeke.
- SCIAMACHY validation with ground-based DOAS observations
final report (in
German)
- A scientific, technical, and organizational summary in pdf-format for the new atmospheric research station
MARS can be found here.
If
you are interested in more information or would like to have access to our
data, please contact Thomas
Medeke.
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