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4A
Automatized Atmospheric Absorption Atlas

Introduction Description of 4A 4A/OP : Operational version available

4A for Automatized Atmospheric Absorption Atlas is a fast and accurate line-by-line radiative transfer model particularly efficient in the infrared region of the spectrum.

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Introduction

4A allows the fast computation of the transmittance of discrete non-scattering atmospheric layers, and of the radiance at a user defined observation level, thanks to the use of a comprehensive database (the atlases) of monochromatic optical thicknesses for up to 43 atmospheric molecular species (Scott and Chédin, 1981). The atlases are created once and for all by using the line-by-line and layer-by-layer model, STRANSAC (Scott, 1974), in its latest 2000 version with up to date spectroscopy from the GEISA spectral line catalogue (Jacquinet-Husson 2009). This concept has been developed by the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (LMD).
4A computes the optical thickness due to gaseous absorption for each atmospheric model layer and the 4A output is the radiance spectrum in a user defined spectral domain between 10 and 3250 cm-1.
4A can be used for a wide variety of atmospheric and surface conditions.

Iasi spectrum
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Description of 4A

Calculating transmittances, jacobians, radiances and fluxes for a given input of atmospheric and surface conditions is known as forward modelling. Basically, both research and operational studies require fast, accurate and tractable forward models.
Applications of fast forward models include:

For many years, several generations of forward models have been derived which have become more and more accurate and efficient through the exploitation of new mathematical techniques, the development of new approximation in the models to save computational time, the provision of better spectroscopic data and the availability of faster and faster computer systems.

The 4A line-by-line model to calculate forward radiative transfer is an advanced version of the nominal line-by-line STRANSAC. Both of them rely upon the information contained in the GEISA spectroscopic database.

Since 4A saves all the characteristics of a genuine line-by-line code, any kind of apparatus function may be used at the time of the convolution. 4A is and has been used for many different applications including low and high resolution spectra of the earth atmosphere (not only HIRS but also AVHRR, METEOSAT, AIRS, IASI, ...,) and spectra of planetary atmospheres (e.g. within the frame of the VOYAGER mission to giant planets).

Our models have a long history of validation in the international radiative transfer community.

Most of the validation results have been extensively discussed in a number of intercomparison exercises and in particular during the ITRA (Intercomparison of Transmittance and Radiance Algorithms) working groups - 1983, 1985, 1988, 1991 of the International Radiation Commission.(see e.g. Chédin et al., 1988) and during the ICRCCM (Intercomparison of Radiation Codes in Climate Models ) campaigns (see e.g. F. Luther et al. 1988).
More recent (between years 2000 and 2003) validation campaigns have been considered to evaluate the performances of the 4A model: results are given in (Soden et al., Garand et al., Tjemkes et al.). Furthermore, specific to IASI, validation campaigns based on airborne observations have been used to evaluate the 4A model ( R. Knuteson , private communication from Un. Wisconsin (2000) ; J. Taylor within the frame of the VIRTEM project (2000)).

Our models are regularly updated and refined in connection with the new generation of spectrometers or interferometers launched on research or operational satellite platforms.

The 4A - Automatized Atmospheric Absorption Atlas - : a brief description

Briefly, 4A is a compressed look-up table of optical depths. The concept was described in Scott N.A. and Chédin A. (J.Appl.Meteor, Vol 20, 801-812, 1981).

STRANSAC - the LMD genuine line-by-line and layer-by-layer model (Scott, 1974 and later on Tournier et al., 1995) - is used to compute the atlases of optical depths:

4A is separated into 15 cm-1 blocks, leading to several thousands (15 cm-1 / representation step) by 480 (40 layers times 12 temperatures) matrices for each gas and each 15 cm-1 region. Each matrix is compressed in wavenumber/layer/temperature and wavenumber/layer/gas space and only the significant values are kept. Values (in transmittance units) too close to zero or too close to one are kept and treated separately in order to be reintroduced and taken into account in case of high values of viewing angles or absorber amounts.

The resulting compressed matrices are stored. To do a calculation, the compressed matrix is:

Absorption from each individual gas is added up and a radiance calculation, as well as transmittance and jacobian calculations (these latter are optional), are performed.

Starting from these high spectral resolution optical depths , transmittance profiles, Jacobian profiles, brightness temperatures are generated using an appropriate "spectral integration step" combined with a relevant convolution step to take into account the various instrument functions.
Some important 4A attributes are as follows.

4A is maintained at LMD which includes introducing all the newly derived parameters for spectroscopy, for line-coupling or for continua, for aerosols and CFCs, ..., as far as they have been validated. The current version is referred to as 4A-2000.

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4A/OP : Operational version available

A new version of 4A has been developed by NOVELTIS with the collaboration of the LMD.
This operation has been supported by the CNES and the CNRS.
The code has been rewritten in standard fortran 90. It has been tested on different platforms, under UNIX or Linux operating systems.
To have a more convenient utilisation of 4A, a Graphical User Interface (GUI) has been implemented.

To have more informations on this version, please visit the NOVELTIS 4A/OP website.


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