Proyecto de Investigación:
MEDIDA EXPERIMENTAL DE ESPECTROS DE RADIACION SOLAR ULTRAVIOLETA EN LA SUPERFICIE TERRESTRE Y EL EFECTO DE LA NUBOSIDAD EN SU VARIABILIDAD A ESCALA LOCAL - UEX

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PID2023-149390OB-C21

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Evaluation of the uncertainty of the spectral UV irradiance measured by double- and single-monochromator Brewer spectrophotometers
(European Geosciences Union, 2025-10-30) González, Carmen; Vilaplana, Jose Manuel; Redondas, Alberto; López Solano, Javier; San Atanasio, José M.; Kift, Richard; Smedley, Andrew; Babal, Pavel; Díaz, Ana; Jepsen, Nis; Gacitúa, Guisella; Serrano, Antonio; Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Brewer instruments are robust, widely used instruments that have been monitoring global solar ultraviolet (UV) irradiance since the 1990s, playing a key role in UV research. Unfortunately, the uncertainties of these measurements are rarely evaluated due to the difficulties involved in characterising the instruments. This evaluation is essential to determine the quality of the measurements as well as their comparability to other datasets. In this study, eight double- and two single-monochromator Brewers are characterised, and the uncertainty of their global UV measurements is estimated using the Monte Carlo method. This methodology is selected because it provides reliable uncertainty estimations and considers the nonlinearity of certain steps in the UV processing algorithm. The combined standard uncertainty depends on the Brewer instrument, varying between 2.5 % and 4 % between 310 and 350 nm. These uncertainties arise primarily from radiometric stability, cosine correction, and the uncertainty of the lamp used during calibration. At shorter wavelengths, the differences between single- and double-monochromator Brewers increase. For example, at 296 nm and a solar zenith angle (SZA) of 40°, the relative uncertainties of single Brewers range between 11 % and 23 %, whereas double Brewers have uncertainties of 3 %–5 %. As the measured wavelength decreases, the correction of stray light (for single Brewers), dark counts, and noise become the dominant sources of uncertainty. These results indicate that the accuracy of fully characterised double Brewers is sufficient for biological studies and trend detection, whereas single Brewers might be limited to wavelengths and SZAs below 305 nm and 70°, respectively.

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