G
Gabriele Stiller
Researcher at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Publications - 245
Citations - 9269
Gabriele Stiller is an academic researcher from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stratosphere & Atmospheric sounding. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 230 publications receiving 8468 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
MIPAS: an instrument for atmospheric and climate research
Horst Fischer,Manfred Birk,C. E. Blom,Bruno Carli,Massimo Carlotti,T. von Clarmann,L. Delbouille,Anu Dudhia,D. H. Ehhalt,M. Endemann,Jean-Marie Flaud,Roland Gessner,Anne Kleinert,Rob Koopman,J. Langen,Manuel López-Puertas,Peter Mosner,Herbert Nett,Hermann Oelhaf,Gaetan Perron,John Remedios,Marco Ridolfi,Gabriele Stiller,Rodolphe Zander +23 more
TL;DR: The Michelson Interferometer for Pas- sive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) is a mid-infrared emission spectrometer which is part of the core payload of ENVISAT as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI
The atmospheric chemistry general circulation model ECHAM5/MESSy1: consistent simulation of ozone from the surface to the mesosphere
Patrick Jöckel,Holger Tost,Andrea Pozzer,Ch. Brühl,J. Buchholz,Laurens Ganzeveld,Peter Hoor,Astrid Kerkweg,Mark Lawrence,Rolf Sander,Benedikt Steil,Gabriele Stiller,M. Tanarhte,Domenico Taraborrelli,J. van Aardenne,Jos Lelieveld +15 more
TL;DR: The Modular Earth Submodel System (MESSy) as discussed by the authors describes atmospheric chemistry and meteorological processes in a modular framework, following strict coding standards, and it has been coupled to the ECHAM5 general circulation model.
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Process-evaluation of tropospheric humidity simulated by general circulation models using water vapor isotopologues: 1. Comparison between models and observations
Camille Risi,Camille Risi,David Noone,John Worden,Christian Frankenberg,Gabriele Stiller,Michael Kiefer,Bernd Funke,Kaley A. Walker,Peter F. Bernath,Matthias Schneider,Matthias Schneider,Debra Wunch,Vanessa Sherlock,Nicholas M. Deutscher,Nicholas M. Deutscher,David W. T. Griffith,Paul O. Wennberg,Kimberly Strong,Dan Smale,Emmanuel Mahieu,Sabine Barthlott,Frank Hase,Omar García,Justus Notholt,Thorsten Warneke,Geoffrey C. Toon,David S. Sayres,Sandrine Bony,Jeonghoon Lee,D. P. Brown,Ryu Uemura,Christophe Sturm +32 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a large number of isotopic data sets (four satellite, sixteen ground-based remote-sensing, five surface in situ and three aircraft data sets) are analyzed to determine how H2O and HDO measurements in water vapor can be used to detect and diagnose biases in the representation of processes controlling tropospheric humidity in atmospheric general circulation models (GCMs).
Journal ArticleDOI
Retrieval of temperature and tangent altitude pointing from limb emission spectra recorded from space by the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS)
T. von Clarmann,Norbert Glatthor,Udo Grabowski,Michael Höpfner,Sylvia Kellmann,Michael Kiefer,Andrea Linden,Gizaw Mengistu Tsidu,Mathias Milz,T. Steck,Gabriele Stiller,D. Y. Wang,Herbert Fischer,Bernd Funke,Sergio Gil-Lopez,Manuel López-Puertas +15 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an optimal estimation-based method is presented to infer abundances of atmospheric species from limb infrared emission spectra using the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) onboard the Envisat research satellite.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Atmospheric Trace Molecule Spectroscopy (ATMOS) Experiment: Deployment on the ATLAS Space Shuttle Missions
Michael R. Gunson,M. M. Abbas,M. C. Abrams,Mark Allen,Linda R. Brown,T. L. Brown,A. Y. Chang,A. Goldman,Fredrick W. Irion,L. L. Lowes,Emmanuel Mahieu,Gloria L. Manney,Hope A. Michelsen,Michael J. Newchurch,Curtis P. Rinsland,Ross J. Salawitch,Gabriele Stiller,G. C. Toon,Yuk L. Yung,Rodolphe Zander +19 more
TL;DR: The ATMOS Fourier transform spectrometer was flown for a fourth time on the Space Shuttle as part of the ATLAS-3 instrument payload in November 1994 as discussed by the authors, where more than 190 sunrise and sunset occultation events provided measurements of more than 30 atmospheric trace gases at latitudes 3-49°N and 65-72°S, including observations both inside and outside the Antarctic polar vortex.