Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN

The space-based Methane Remote Lidar Mission (MERLIN) on global observations of atmospheric methane is a French-German climate monitoring initiative, currently undergoing Phase A studies. Methane is, after carbon dioxide, the second most important greenhouse gas, with however more uncertain anthropo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kiemle, Christoph, Quatrevalet, Mathieu, Ehret, G., Amediek, Axel, Fix, A., Wirth, Martin
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/74988/
_version_ 1835019898312458240
author Kiemle, Christoph
Quatrevalet, Mathieu
Ehret, G.
Amediek, Axel
Fix, A.
Wirth, Martin
author_facet Kiemle, Christoph
Quatrevalet, Mathieu
Ehret, G.
Amediek, Axel
Fix, A.
Wirth, Martin
author_sort Kiemle, Christoph
collection Unknown
description The space-based Methane Remote Lidar Mission (MERLIN) on global observations of atmospheric methane is a French-German climate monitoring initiative, currently undergoing Phase A studies. Methane is, after carbon dioxide, the second most important greenhouse gas, with however more uncertain anthropogenic emissions. In addition, climate change may cause important feedbacks of yet unknown intensity by release of methane from melting permafrost soils and ocean sediments. The current observational network is not able to monitor these sources with sufficient density and accuracy: While the ground-based in-situ network is too sparse, existing passive remote sensors on spacecraft are not accurate enough and not sensitive at high latitudes over the permafrost regions. Performance simulations show that a differential absorption lidar with moderate average laser power (0.5 W at 1.6 µm wavelength) and telescope size (0.6 m diameter), installed on a small satellite with low earth orbit (500 km), has the potential to fill the observational gap by measuring methane columns with a precision of around 1 % and a spatial along-track resolution of 50 - 100 km, thus satisfying major requirements for inverse modelling of the methane sources. The main instrument and platform characteristics needed to fulfil the requirements will be addressed, and parameters critical to the measurement precision, such as instrument noise and surface reflectivity, will be highlighted. Variations of parameters in the simulations indicate the impact of each individual parameter on the instrument performance. Global maps of the simulated methane measurement precision provide an overview of the expected performance of MERLIN.
format Conference Object
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
id ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:74988
institution Open Polar
language unknown
op_collection_id ftdlr
op_relation Kiemle, Christoph und Quatrevalet, Mathieu und Ehret, G. und Amediek, Axel und Fix, A. und Wirth, Martin (2011) Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN. EGU 2011, 2011-04-04 - 2011-04-08, Wien.
publishDate 2011
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:74988 2025-06-15T14:46:51+00:00 Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN Kiemle, Christoph Quatrevalet, Mathieu Ehret, G. Amediek, Axel Fix, A. Wirth, Martin 2011-04 https://elib.dlr.de/74988/ unknown Kiemle, Christoph und Quatrevalet, Mathieu und Ehret, G. und Amediek, Axel und Fix, A. und Wirth, Martin (2011) Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN. EGU 2011, 2011-04-04 - 2011-04-08, Wien. Lidar Konferenzbeitrag PeerReviewed 2011 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:09Z The space-based Methane Remote Lidar Mission (MERLIN) on global observations of atmospheric methane is a French-German climate monitoring initiative, currently undergoing Phase A studies. Methane is, after carbon dioxide, the second most important greenhouse gas, with however more uncertain anthropogenic emissions. In addition, climate change may cause important feedbacks of yet unknown intensity by release of methane from melting permafrost soils and ocean sediments. The current observational network is not able to monitor these sources with sufficient density and accuracy: While the ground-based in-situ network is too sparse, existing passive remote sensors on spacecraft are not accurate enough and not sensitive at high latitudes over the permafrost regions. Performance simulations show that a differential absorption lidar with moderate average laser power (0.5 W at 1.6 µm wavelength) and telescope size (0.6 m diameter), installed on a small satellite with low earth orbit (500 km), has the potential to fill the observational gap by measuring methane columns with a precision of around 1 % and a spatial along-track resolution of 50 - 100 km, thus satisfying major requirements for inverse modelling of the methane sources. The main instrument and platform characteristics needed to fulfil the requirements will be addressed, and parameters critical to the measurement precision, such as instrument noise and surface reflectivity, will be highlighted. Variations of parameters in the simulations indicate the impact of each individual parameter on the instrument performance. Global maps of the simulated methane measurement precision provide an overview of the expected performance of MERLIN. Conference Object permafrost Unknown
spellingShingle Lidar
Kiemle, Christoph
Quatrevalet, Mathieu
Ehret, G.
Amediek, Axel
Fix, A.
Wirth, Martin
Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title_full Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title_fullStr Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title_full_unstemmed Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title_short Performance Simulations for the Space-based Methane Lidar Mission MERLIN
title_sort performance simulations for the space-based methane lidar mission merlin
topic Lidar
topic_facet Lidar
url https://elib.dlr.de/74988/