IASI (Infrared Atmospheric Sounder Interferometer) soundings for the years 2014 to 2017 over sea surface for the Hawaii region have been used to retrieve column amount of CO2, CH4, N2O. The analysis allowed us to derive CO2, CH4 and N2O growth rates, trend and seasonality, which have been compared to in situ observations from the Mauna Loa validation station. Day and night soundings have been used. During the day, for CO2 and N2O we make specifically use of the IASI short wave band (2000 to 2250 cm-1), which is sensitive to sun radiation. Our forward/inverse module deals with sun radiation using a Cox-Munck model for the bidirectional reflectance distribution function. This makes it possible to exploit IASI soundings in sun-glint or close to sun-glint mode, which improves sensitivity of retrievals close to the surface. The analysis has been performed with our total IASI level 2 processor or τ2IP, which uses the whole IASI spectral coverage, therefore making it possible to exploit the whole information content of data. The code τ2IP also uses a random projection approach to reduce the dimensionality of the data space. Our analysis show that growth rate, trend and seasonality are extracted with high accuracy (we observe correlation with in situ data close or higher than 0.90). After validation, we have applied τ2IP to seven years of data over the Arctic sea basin and computed summer maps (July to September) of CO2 and sea skin temperature. The results show that the increase of skin temperature parallels the increase of CO2 column amount over the Arctic basin.
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