Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (Aug 2024)

The Far-INfrarEd Spectrometer for Surface Emissivity (FINESSE) – Part 1: Instrument description and level 1 radiances

  • J. E. Murray,
  • J. E. Murray,
  • L. Warwick,
  • H. Brindley,
  • H. Brindley,
  • A. Last,
  • P. Quigley,
  • A. Rochester,
  • A. Dewar,
  • D. Cummins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-17-4757-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
pp. 4757 – 4775

Abstract

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The Far-INfrarEd Spectrometer for Surface Emissivity (FINESSE) instrument combines a commercial Bruker EM27 spectrometer with a front-end viewing and calibration rig developed at Imperial College London. FINESSE is specifically designed to enable accurate measurements of surface emissivity, covering the range 400–1600 cm−1, and, as part of this remit, can obtain views over the full 360° angular range. In this part, Part 1, we describe the system configuration, outlining the instrument spectral characteristics, our data acquisition methodology, and the calibration strategy. As part of the process, we evaluate the stability of the system, including the impact of knowledge of blackbody (BB) target emissivity and temperature. We also establish a numerical description of the instrument line shape (ILS), which shows strong frequency-dependent asymmetry. We demonstrate why it is important to account for these effects by assessing their impact on the overall uncertainty budget on the level 1 radiance products from FINESSE. Initial comparisons of observed spectra with simulations show encouraging performance given the uncertainty budget.