TY - JOUR
T1 - Methane on Mars
T2 - New insights into the sensitivity of CH4 with the NOMAD/ExoMars spectrometer through its first in-flight calibration
AU - The NOMAD Team
AU - Liuzzi, Giuliano
AU - Villanueva, Geronimo L.
AU - Mumma, Michael J.
AU - Smith, Michael D.
AU - Daerden, Frank
AU - Ristic, Bojan
AU - Thomas, Ian
AU - Vandaele, Ann Carine
AU - Patel, Manish R.
AU - Lopez-Moreno, José Juan
AU - Bellucci, Giancarlo
AU - Allen, Mark
AU - Alonso-Rodrigo, Gustavo
AU - Altieri, Francesca
AU - Aoki, Shohei
AU - Bauduin, Sophie
AU - Bolsée, David
AU - Clancy, Todd
AU - Cloutis, Edward
AU - D'Aversa, Emiliano
AU - Depiesse, Cédric
AU - Erwin, Justin
AU - Fedorova, Anna
AU - Formisano, Vittorio
AU - Funke, Bernd
AU - Fussen, Didier
AU - Garcia-Comas, Maia
AU - Geminale, Anna
AU - Gérard, Jean Claude
AU - Gillotay, Didier
AU - Giuranna, Marco
AU - Gonzalez-Galindo, Francisco
AU - Hewson, Will
AU - Homes, James
AU - Ignatiev, Nicolai
AU - Kaminski, Jacek
AU - Karatekin, Ozgur
AU - Kasaba, Yasumasa
AU - Lanciano, Orietta
AU - Lefèvre, Franck
AU - Lewis, Stephen
AU - López- Puertas, Manuel
AU - López-Valverde, Miguel
AU - Mahieux, Arnaud
AU - Mason, Jon
AU - Mc Connell, Jack
AU - Hiromu Neary Nakagawa, Lori
AU - Neefs, Eddy
AU - Novak, R.
AU - Oliva, Fabrizio
N1 - Funding Information:
The NOMAD experiment is led by the Royal Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (IASB-BIRA), assisted by Co-PI teams from Spain (IAA-CSIC), Italy (INAF-IAPS), and the United Kingdom (Open University). This project acknowledges funding by the Belgian Science Policy Office ( BELSPO ), with the financial and contractual coordination by the ESA Prodex Office ( PEA 4000103401 , 4000121493 ), by Spanish MICIIN through its Plan Nacional ( AYA2009-08190 and AYA2012-39691 ) and by European Funds under grant ESP2015-65064-C2-1-P (MINECO/FEDER), as well as by UK Space Agency through grants ST/R005761/1 , ST/P001262/1 , ST/R001405/1 and ST/ R001405/1 and Italian Space Agency through grant 2018-2-HH.0 .
Funding Information:
The NOMAD experiment is led by the Royal Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (IASB-BIRA), assisted by Co-PI teams from Spain (IAA-CSIC), Italy (INAF-IAPS), and the United Kingdom (Open University). This project acknowledges funding by the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO), with the financial and contractual coordination by the ESA Prodex Office(PEA 4000103401, 4000121493), by Spanish MICIIN through its Plan Nacional (AYA2009-08190 and AYA2012-39691) and by European Funds under grant ESP2015-65064-C2-1-P (MINECO/FEDER), as well as by UK Space Agency through grants ST/R005761/1, ST/P001262/1, ST/R001405/1 and ST/ R001405/1 and Italian Space Agency through grant 2018-2-HH.0.This work was supported by NASA's Mars Program Office under WBS 604796, “Participation in the TGO/NOMAD Investigation of Trace Gases on Mars”, and by NASA's SEEC initiative under Grant Number NNX17AH81A, “Remote sensing of Planetary Atmospheres in the Solar System and beyond”
Funding Information:
This work was supported by NASA ’s Mars Program Office under WBS 604796 , “Participation in the TGO/NOMAD Investigation of Trace Gases on Mars”, and by NASA's SEEC initiative under Grant Number NNX17AH81A , “Remote sensing of Planetary Atmospheres in the Solar System and beyond”
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2019/3/15
Y1 - 2019/3/15
N2 - The Nadir and Occultation for MArs Discovery instrument (NOMAD), onboard the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) spacecraft was conceived to observe Mars in solar occultation, nadir, and limb geometries, and will be able to produce an outstanding amount of diverse data, mostly focused on properties of the atmosphere. The infrared channels of the instrument operate by combining an echelle grating spectrometer with an Acousto-Optical Tunable Filter (AOTF). Using in-flight data, we characterized the instrument performance and parameterized its calibration. In particular: an accurate frequency calibration was achieved, together with its variability due to thermal effects on the grating. The AOTF properties and transfer function were also quantified, and we developed and tested a realistic method to compute the spectral continuum transmitted through the coupled grating and AOTF system. The calibration results enabled unprecedented insights into the important problem of the sensitivity of NOMAD to methane abundances in the atmosphere. We also deeply characterized its performance under realistic conditions of varying aerosol abundances, diverse albedos and changing illumination conditions as foreseen over the nominal mission. The results show that, in low aerosol conditions, NOMAD single spectrum, 1σ sensitivity to CH4 is around 0.33 ppbv at 20 km of altitude when performing solar occultations, and better than 1 ppbv below 30 km. In dusty conditions, we show that the sensitivity drops to 0 below 10 km. In Nadir geometry, results demonstrate that NOMAD will be able to produce seasonal maps of CH4 with a sensitivity around 5 ppbv over most of planet's surface with spatial integration over 5 × 5° bins. Results show also that such numbers can be improved by a factor of ~10 to ~30 by data binning. Overall, our results quantify NOMAD's capability to address the variable aspects of Martian climate.
AB - The Nadir and Occultation for MArs Discovery instrument (NOMAD), onboard the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) spacecraft was conceived to observe Mars in solar occultation, nadir, and limb geometries, and will be able to produce an outstanding amount of diverse data, mostly focused on properties of the atmosphere. The infrared channels of the instrument operate by combining an echelle grating spectrometer with an Acousto-Optical Tunable Filter (AOTF). Using in-flight data, we characterized the instrument performance and parameterized its calibration. In particular: an accurate frequency calibration was achieved, together with its variability due to thermal effects on the grating. The AOTF properties and transfer function were also quantified, and we developed and tested a realistic method to compute the spectral continuum transmitted through the coupled grating and AOTF system. The calibration results enabled unprecedented insights into the important problem of the sensitivity of NOMAD to methane abundances in the atmosphere. We also deeply characterized its performance under realistic conditions of varying aerosol abundances, diverse albedos and changing illumination conditions as foreseen over the nominal mission. The results show that, in low aerosol conditions, NOMAD single spectrum, 1σ sensitivity to CH4 is around 0.33 ppbv at 20 km of altitude when performing solar occultations, and better than 1 ppbv below 30 km. In dusty conditions, we show that the sensitivity drops to 0 below 10 km. In Nadir geometry, results demonstrate that NOMAD will be able to produce seasonal maps of CH4 with a sensitivity around 5 ppbv over most of planet's surface with spatial integration over 5 × 5° bins. Results show also that such numbers can be improved by a factor of ~10 to ~30 by data binning. Overall, our results quantify NOMAD's capability to address the variable aspects of Martian climate.
KW - Infrared spectroscopy
KW - Instrumentation
KW - Mars atmosphere
KW - Methane
KW - NOMAD
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U2 - 10.1016/j.icarus.2018.09.021
DO - 10.1016/j.icarus.2018.09.021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85058999002
SN - 0019-1035
VL - 321
SP - 671
EP - 690
JO - Icarus
JF - Icarus
ER -