Literature DB >> 28009371

The 1995 North American Interagency Intercomparison of Ultraviolet Monitoring Spectroradiometers.

Edward Early1, Ambler Thompson1, Carol Johnson1, John DeLuisi2, Patrick Disterhoft2, David Wardle3, Edmund Wu3, Wanfeng Mou4, Yongchen Sun4, Timothy Lucas5, Tanya Mestechkina5, Lee Harrison6, Jerry Berndt6, Douglas S Hayes7.   

Abstract

Concern over stratospheric ozone depletion has prompted several government agencies in North America to establish networks of spectroradiometers for monitoring solar ultraviolet irradiance at the surface of the Earth. To assess the ability of spectroradiometers to accurately measure solar ultraviolet irradiance, and to compare the results between instruments of different monitoring networks, the second North American Intercomparison of Ultraviolet Monitoring Spectroradiometers was held June 12 to 23, 1995 at Table Mountain outside Boulder, Colorado, USA. This Intercomparison was coordinated by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Participating agencies were the Environmental Protection Agency; the National Science Foundation; the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center; the Department of Agriculture; and the Atmospheric Environment Service, Canada. Instruments were characterized for wavelength uncertainty, bandwidth, stray-light rejection, and spectral irradiance responsivity, the latter with a NIST standard lamp operating in a specially designed field calibration unit. The spectral irradiance responsivity, determined once indoors and twice outdoors, demonstrated that while the responsivities changed upon moving the instruments, they were relatively stable when the instruments remained outdoors. Synchronized spectral scans of the solar irradiance were performed over several days. Using the spectral irradiance responsivities determined with the NIST standard lamp and three different convolution functions to account for the different bandwidths of the instruments, the measured solar irradiances generally agreed to within 3 %.

Entities:  

Keywords:  environmental monitoring; intercomparison; solar ultraviolet; spectroradiometers

Year:  1998        PMID: 28009371      PMCID: PMC4891961          DOI: 10.6028/jres.103.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Res Natl Inst Stand Technol        ISSN: 1044-677X


  2 in total

1.  Irradiances of spectral lines in mercury pencil lamps.

Authors:  J Reader; C J Sansonetti; J M Bridges
Journal:  Appl Opt       Date:  1996-01-01       Impact factor: 1.980

2.  Wavelengths of spectral lines in mercury pencil lamps.

Authors:  C J Sansonetti; M L Salit; J Reader
Journal:  Appl Opt       Date:  1996-01-01       Impact factor: 1.980

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  The 1997 North American Interagency Intercomparison of Ultraviolet Spectroradiometers Including Narrowband Filter Radiometers.

Authors:  Kathleen Lantz; Patrick Disterhoft; Edward Early; Ambler Thompson; John DeLuisi; Jerry Berndt; Lee Harrison; Peter Kiedron; James Ehramjian; Germar Bernhard; Lauriana Cabasug; James Robertson; Wanfeng Mou; Thomas Taylor; James Slusser; David Bigelow; Bill Durham; George Janson; Douglass Hayes; Mark Beaubien; Arthur Beaubien
Journal:  J Res Natl Inst Stand Technol       Date:  2002-02-01
  1 in total

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