14 research outputs found
Ozone Anomalies in Dry Intrusions Associated with Atmospheric Rivers
As a result of their important role in weather and the global hydrological
cycle, understanding atmospheric rivers' (ARs) connection to synoptic-scale
climate patterns and atmospheric dynamics has become increasingly important. In
addition to case studies of two extreme AR events, we produce a December
climatology of the three-dimensional structure of water vapor and O3 (ozone)
distributions associated with ARs in the northeastern Pacific from 2004-2014
using MERRA-2 reanalysis products. Results show that positive O3 anomalies
reside in dry intrusions of stratospheric air due to
stratosphere-to-troposphere transport (STT) behind the intense water vapor
transport of the AR. In composites, we find increased excesses of O3
concentration, as well as in the total O3 flux within the dry intrusions, with
increased AR strength. We find that STT O3 flux associated with ARs over the NE
Pacific accounts for up to 13 percent of total Northern Hemisphere STT O3 flux
in December, and extrapolation indicates that AR-associated dry intrusions may
account for as much as 32 percent of total NH STT O3 flux. This study
quantifies STT of O3 in connection with ARs for the first time and improves
estimates of tropospheric ozone concentration due to STT in the identification
of this correlation. In light of predictions that ARs will become more intense
and/or frequent with climate change, quantifying AR-related STT O3 flux is
especially valuable for future radiative forcing calculations.Comment: 26 pages, 11 main text figures, 3 appendix figures; published in JGR:
Atmosphere
First Top-Down Estimates of Anthropogenic NO_x Emissions Using High-Resolution Airborne Remote Sensing Observations
A number of satelliteâbased instruments have become an essential part of monitoring emissions. Despite sound theoretical inversion techniques, the insufficient samples and the footprint size of current observations have introduced an obstacle to narrow the inversion window for regional models. These key limitations can be partially resolved by a set of modest highâquality measurements from airborne remote sensing. This study illustrates the feasibility of nitrogen dioxide (NO_2) columns from the Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events Airborne Simulator (GCAS) to constrain anthropogenic NO_x emissions in the HoustonâGalvestonâBrazoria area. We convert slant column densities to vertical columns using a radiative transfer model with (i) NO_2 profiles from a highâresolution regional model (1 Ă 1 km^2) constrained by Pâ3B aircraft measurements, (ii) the consideration of aerosol optical thickness impacts on radiance at NO_2 absorption line, and (iii) highâresolution surface albedo constrained by groundâbased spectrometers. We characterize errors in the GCAS NO_2 columns by comparing them to Pandora measurements and find a striking correlation (r > 0.74) with an uncertainty of 3.5 Ă 10^(15) molecules cm^(â2). On 9 of 10 total days, the constrained anthropogenic emissions by a Kalman filter yield an overall 2â50% reduction in polluted areas, partly counterbalancing the wellâdocumented positive bias of the model. The inversion, however, boosts emissions by 94% in the same areas on a day when an unprecedented local emissions event potentially occurred, significantly mitigating the bias of the model. The capability of GCAS at detecting such an event ensures the significance of forthcoming geostationary satellites for timely estimates of topâdown emissions
First Top-Down Estimates of Anthropogenic NO_x Emissions Using High-Resolution Airborne Remote Sensing Observations
A number of satelliteâbased instruments have become an essential part of monitoring emissions. Despite sound theoretical inversion techniques, the insufficient samples and the footprint size of current observations have introduced an obstacle to narrow the inversion window for regional models. These key limitations can be partially resolved by a set of modest highâquality measurements from airborne remote sensing. This study illustrates the feasibility of nitrogen dioxide (NO_2) columns from the Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events Airborne Simulator (GCAS) to constrain anthropogenic NO_x emissions in the HoustonâGalvestonâBrazoria area. We convert slant column densities to vertical columns using a radiative transfer model with (i) NO_2 profiles from a highâresolution regional model (1 Ă 1 km^2) constrained by Pâ3B aircraft measurements, (ii) the consideration of aerosol optical thickness impacts on radiance at NO_2 absorption line, and (iii) highâresolution surface albedo constrained by groundâbased spectrometers. We characterize errors in the GCAS NO_2 columns by comparing them to Pandora measurements and find a striking correlation (r > 0.74) with an uncertainty of 3.5 Ă 10^(15) molecules cm^(â2). On 9 of 10 total days, the constrained anthropogenic emissions by a Kalman filter yield an overall 2â50% reduction in polluted areas, partly counterbalancing the wellâdocumented positive bias of the model. The inversion, however, boosts emissions by 94% in the same areas on a day when an unprecedented local emissions event potentially occurred, significantly mitigating the bias of the model. The capability of GCAS at detecting such an event ensures the significance of forthcoming geostationary satellites for timely estimates of topâdown emissions
Global retrieval of stratospheric and tropospheric BrO columns from the Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite Nadir Mapper (OMPS-NM) on board the Suomi-NPP satellite
Quantifying the global bromine monoxide (BrO) budget is essential to understand ozone chemistry better. In particular, the tropospheric BrO budget has not been well characterized. Here, we retrieve nearly a decade (February 2012âJuly 2021) of stratospheric and tropospheric BrO vertical columns from the Ozone Mapping and Profiling Suite Nadir Mapper (OMPS-NM) on board the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (Suomi-NPP) satellite. In quantifying tropospheric BrO enhancements from total slant columns, the key aspects involve segregating them from stratospheric enhancements and applying appropriate air mass factors. To address this concern and improve upon the existing methods, our study proposes an approach that applies distinct BrO vertical profiles based on the presence or absence of tropospheric BrO enhancement at each pixel, identifying it dynamically using a satellite-derived stratospheric-ozoneâBrO relationship. We demonstrate good agreement for both stratosphere (râ=â0.81â0.83) and troposphere (râ=â0.50â0.70) by comparing monthly mean BrO vertical columns from OMPS-NM with ground-based observations from three stations (Lauder, UtqiaÄĄvik, and Harestua). Although algorithm performance is primarily assessed at high latitudes, the OMPS-NM BrO retrievals successfully capture tropospheric enhancements not only in polar regions but also in extrapolar areas, such as the Rann of Kutch and the Great Salt Lake. We also estimate random uncertainties in the retrievals pixel by pixel, which can assist in quantitative applications of the OMPS-NM BrO dataset. Our BrO retrieval algorithm is designed for cross-sensor applications and can be adapted to other space-borne ultraviolet spectrometers, contributing to the creation of continuous long-term satellite BrO observation records.</p
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An inversion of NOx and non-methane volatile organic compound (NMVOC) emissions using satellite observations during the KORUS-AQ campaign and implications for surface ozone over East Asia
Abstract. The absence of up-to-date emissions has been a major impediment to accurately simulating aspects of atmospheric chemistry and to precisely quantifying the impact of changes in emissions on air pollution. Hence, a nonlinear joint analytical inversion (GaussâNewton method) of both volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions is made by exploiting the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite Nadir Mapper (OMPS-NM) formaldehyde (HCHO) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) tropospheric nitrogen dioxide (NO2) columns during the KoreaâUnited States Air Quality (KORUS-AQ) campaign over East Asia in MayâJune 2016. Effects of the chemical feedback of NOx and VOCs on both NO2 and HCHO are implicitly included by iteratively optimizing the inversion. Emission uncertainties are greatly narrowed (averaging kernels >â0.8, which is the mathematical presentation of the partition of information gained from the satellite observations with respect to the prior knowledge) over medium- to high-emitting areas such as cities and dense vegetation. The prior amount of total NOx emissions is mainly dictated by values reported in the MIX-Asia 2010 inventory. After the inversion we conclude that there is a decline in emissions (before, after, change) for China (87.94±44.09âGgâdâ1, 68.00±15.94âGgâdâ1, â23â%), North China Plain (NCP) (27.96±13.49âGgâdâ1, 19.05±2.50âGgâdâ1, â32â%), Pearl River Delta (PRD) (4.23±1.78âGgâdâ1, 2.70±0.32âGgâdâ1, â36â%), Yangtze River Delta (YRD) (9.84±4.68âGgâdâ1, 5.77±0.51âGgâdâ1, â41â%), Taiwan (1.26±0.57âGgâdâ1, 0.97±0.33âGgâdâ1, â23â%), and Malaysia (2.89±2.77âGgâdâ1, 2.25±1.34âGgâdâ1, â22â%), all of which have effectively implemented various stringent regulations. In contrast, South Korea (2.71±1.34âGgâdâ1, 2.95±0.58âGgâdâ1, +9â%) and Japan (3.53±1.71âGgâdâ1, 3.96±1.04âGgâdâ1, +12â%) are experiencing an increase in NOx emissions, potentially due to an increased number of diesel vehicles and new thermal power plants. We revisit the well-documented positive bias (by a factor of 2 to 3) of MEGAN v2.1 (Model of Emissions of Gases and Aerosols from Nature) in terms of biogenic VOC emissions in the tropics. The inversion, however, suggests a larger growth of VOCs (mainly anthropogenic) over NCP (25â%) than previously reported (6â%) relative to 2010. The spatial variation in both the magnitude and sign of NOx and VOC emissions results in nonlinear responses of ozone production and loss. Due to a simultaneous decrease and increase in NOxâVOC over NCP and YRD, we observe a âŒ53â% reduction in the ratio of the chemical loss of NOx (LNOx) to the chemical loss of ROx (RO2+HO2) over the surface transitioning toward NOx-sensitive regimes, which in turn reduces and increases the afternoon chemical loss and production of ozone through NO2+OH (â0.42âppbvâhâ1)âHO2 (and RO2)+NO (+0.31âppbvâhâ1). Conversely, a combined decrease in NOx and VOC emissions in Taiwan, Malaysia, and southern China suppresses the formation of ozone. Simulations using the updated emissions indicate increases in maximum daily 8âh average (MDA8) surface ozone over China (0.62âppbv), NCP (4.56âppbv), and YRD (5.25âppbv), suggesting that emission control strategies on VOCs should be prioritized to curb ozone production rates in these regions. Taiwan, Malaysia, and PRD stand out as regions undergoing lower MDA8 ozone levels resulting from the NOx reductions occurring predominantly in NOx-sensitive regimes
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Methane point source quantification using MethaneAIR: a new airborne imaging spectrometer
The MethaneSAT satellite instrument and its aircraft precursor, MethaneAIR, are imaging spectrometers designed to measure methane concentrations with wide spatial coverage, fine spatial resolution, and high precision compared to currently deployed remote sensing instruments. At 12 960 m cruise altitude above ground (13 850 m above sea level), MethaneAIR datasets have a 4.5 km swath gridded to 10 m Ă 10 m pixels with 17-20 ppb standard deviation on a flat scene. MethaneAIR was deployed in the summer of 2021 in the Permian Basin to test the accuracy of the retrieved methane concentrations and emission rates using the algorithms developed for MethaneSAT. We report here point source emissions obtained during a single-blind volume-controlled release experiment, using two methods. (1) The modified integrated mass enhancement (mIME) method estimates emission rates using the total mass enhancement of methane in an observed plume combined with winds obtained from Weather Research Forecast driven by High-Resolution Rapid Refresh meteorological data in Large Eddy Simulations mode (WRF-LES-HRRR). WRF-LES-HRRR simulates winds in stochastic eddy-scale (100-1000 m) variability, which is particularly important for low-wind conditions and informing the error budget. The mIME can estimate emission rates of plumes of any size that are detectable by MethaneAIR. (2) The divergence integral (DI) method applies Gauss's theorem to estimate the flux divergence fields through a series of closed surfaces enclosing the sources. The set of boxes grows from the upwind side of the plume through the core of each plume and downwind. No selection of inflow concentration, as used in the mIME, is required. The DI approach can efĂŻÂŹ ciently determine ĂŻÂŹ uxes from large sources and clusters of sources but cannot resolve small point emissions. These methods account for the effects of eddy-scale variation in different ways: The DI averages across many eddies, whereas the mIME re-samples many eddies from the LES simulation. The DI directly uses HRRR winds, while mIME uses WRF-LES-HRRR wind products. Emissions estimates from both the mIME and DI methods agreed closely with the single-blind volume-controlled experiments (N Combining double low line 21). The York regression between the estimated emissions and the released emissions has a slope of 0.96 [0.84, 1.08], R Combining double low line 0.83 and N Combining double low line 21, with 30 % mean percentage error for the whole dataset, which indicates that MethaneAIR can quantify point sources emitting more than 200 kg h-1 for the mIME and 500 kg h-1 for the DI method. The two methods also agreed on methane emission estimates from various uncontrolled sources in the Permian Basin. The experiment thus demonstrates the powerful potential of the MethaneAIR instrument and suggests that the quantification method should be transferable to MethaneSAT if it meets the design specifications