Jw. Harder et al., TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT NO2 CROSS-SECTIONS AT HIGH-SPECTRAL-RESOLUTION, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 102(D3), 1997, pp. 3861-3879
The importance of nitrogen dioxide in both the troposphere and the str
atosphere has been known for some years, and since the early 1970s, sp
ectroscopic determinations have played an important role in understand
ing NOx chemistry. Spectroscopic measurements of the atmosphere have i
mproved in quality in recent years to the point that an accurate deter
mination of the NO2 absorption cross section is essential to accurate
retrievals of not only NO2 but also less abundant species in the tropo
sphere and stratosphere. NO2 is such a large absorber (approximately 1
% at large air mass) in the stratosphere at twilight or in the troposp
here under even mildly polluted conditions, that if it is not properly
removed from observed spectra, the spectra of the more subtle species
are masked and cannot be measured at all. We present cross sections o
f NO2 in the spectral region 350-585 nm at four temperatures between 2
17 and 298, K and total pressures between 100 and 600 torr at a mixing
ratio of 84.1 ppmv and at a spectral resolution sufficient for accura
te convolution with instruments typically used to measure atmospheric
NO2. Data will be presented to demonstrate the presence of NO2 pressur
e dependence in high resolution. A detailed comparison with commonly u
sed literature cross sections is made to show how such instrument para
meters as wavelength accuracy, resolution, spectrograph scattered ligh
t, and data sampling affect the usefulness of the observed cross secti
on.