Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8866936 | Remote Sensing of Environment | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
The most prominent feature in the posterior net flux is the tropical source of CO2 inferred from both products. But for the EMMA product this release, especially over South America, is with 300 gC/m2/year much more pronounced than for BESD. This confirms findings by a recent intercomparison of transport inversions using GOSAT data by Houweling et al. (2015). The reason for the larger net flux is increased heterotrophic respiration. For both products the posterior 2010 sink over Europe (without Russia) is in the range of a recent compilation of European flux estimates by Reuter et al. (2016b). The posterior 2010 uptake of Australia (including Oceania) inferred from the EMMA product is 1.3 ± 0.2 PgC/year and appears to confirm the high sink also derived from GOSAT by Detmers et al. (2015) over a slightly different period and area. While for some regions (USA, Canada, Europe, Russia, Asia) the one standard deviation uncertainty ranges derived from BESD and EMMA do overlap, for some other regions (Brazil, Africa, Australia) this is not the case. It is not clear yet whether this is due to the uncertainty specifications in the respective products or the handling of uncertainty in the assimilation chain. Assumptions on correlation of observational uncertainty in space and time have a considerable impact on the inferred flux fields (â 60 gC/m2/year). The effect of adding an uncertainty that approximates the error in the retrieval system is of similar size.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Computers in Earth Sciences
Authors
T. Kaminski, M. Scholze, M. Vossbeck, W. Knorr, M. Buchwitz, M. Reuter,