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Constraining Emissions with Satellite Observations

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Presentation on theme: "Constraining Emissions with Satellite Observations"— Presentation transcript:

1 Constraining Emissions with Satellite Observations
Daniel Jacob Paul Palmer Dorian Abbot Randall Martin Kelly Chance Thomas Kurosu Sushil Chandra Jerry Ziemke

2 PRESENT AND FUTURE SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS OF TROPOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY
HCHO

3 CHALLENGE FOR THE NEXT DECADE: IMPROVE EMISSION INVENTORIES
“Nova Scotians with lung problems should stay inside until pollution levels drop warned Environment Canada”

4 Historical records imply a large anthropogenic contribution to the present-day ozone background at northern midlatitudes Ozone trend from European mountain observations, [Marenco et al.,1994] Major greenhouse gas Largely controls atmospheric oxidation Primary constituent of smog

5 ? ? ? GLOBAL BUDGET OF TROPOSPHERIC OZONE 4900 4200 500 1200
Global sources and sinks, Tg O3 yr-1 (GEOS-CHEM model) Chem prod in troposphere 4900 Chem loss in troposphere 4200 Transport from stratosphere 500 Deposition 1200 ? Formaldehyde (HCHO) ? ? hv hv,H2O Nitrogen oxides (NOx) CO, VOCs Ozone (O3) Hydroxyl (OH) Fires Biosphere Human activity

6 BOTTOM-UP EMISSION INVENTORIES ARE NOTORIOUSLY DIFFICULT TO DETERMINE!
Fuel use estimates Measurements of emission ratios Process studies Estimate biological density Temperature, water, … dependence of biological activity Extreme events "Trees cause more pollution than automobiles do."

7 HOW DO WE EVALUATE AND IMPROVE A PRIORI BOTTOM-UP INVENTORIES?
Surface NOX Isoprene during July GEIA

8 TOP-DOWN INFORMATION FROM THE GOME SATELLITE INSTRUMENT
Operational since 1995 Nadir-viewing solar backscatter instrument ( nm) Low-elevation polar sun-synchronous orbit, 10:30 a.m. observation time Spatial resolution 320x40 km2, three cross-track scenes Complete global coverage in 3 days

9 USE GOME MEASUREMENTS TO RETRIEVE NO2 AND HCHO
USE GOME MEASUREMENTS TO RETRIEVE NO2 AND HCHO COLUMNS TO MAP NOx AND VOC EMISSIONS GOME Tropospheric NO2 column ~ ENOx Tropospheric HCHO column ~ EVOC BOUNDARY LAYER NO2 NO/NO2   W ALTITUDE NO HCHO CO OH hours hours VOC lifetime <1 day HNO3 Emission Emission NITROGEN OXIDES (NOx) VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUND (VOC)

10 PERFORM A SPECTRAL FIT OF SOLAR BACKSCATTER OBSERVATIONS
absorption Solar Io Backscattered intensity IB l1 l2 wavelength Slant optical depth “Slant column” Scattering by Earth surface and by atmosphere EARTH SURFACE

11 GOME HCHO SLANT COLUMNS (JULY 1996)
Hot spots reflect high VOC emissions from fires and biosphere BIOGENIC ISOPRENE IS THE MAIN SOURCE OF HCHO IN U.S. IN SUMMER K. Chance

12 SLANT COLUMNS OF NO2 FROM GOME Dominant stratospheric structure (where NO2 is produced from N2O oxidation) Also see tropospheric hot spots (fossil fuel and biomass burning) Remove strat & instrument artifacts using obs over Pacific

13 SLANT COLUMNS OF TROPOSPHERIC NO2 FROM GOME
1996

14 GEOS-CHEM MODEL Assimilated Meteorology (GEOS) 2ox2.5o horizontal resolution, 26 layers in vertical O3-NOx-hydrocarbon chemistry Radiative and chemical effects of aerosols Emissions: Fossil fuel: GEIA (NOx), Logan (CO), Piccot (NMHCs) Biosphere: modified GEIA (hydrocarbons) & Yienger/Levy (soil NOx) Lightning: Price/Rind/Pickering, GEOS convective cloud tops Interannually varying biomass burning Cross-tropopause transport Deposition

15 IN SCATTERING ATMOSPHERE, AMF CALCULATION NEEDS EXTERNAL INFO ON SHAPE OF VERTICAL PROFILE
RADIATIVE TRANSFER MODEL ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY MODEL “a priori” Shape factor dt() Io IB EARTH SURFACE sigma () NO2 mixing ratio CNO2() norm. by column ΩNO2 Scattering weight () is temperature dependent cross-section INDIVIDUAL GOME SCENES Calculate w() as function of: solar and viewing zenith angle surface albedo, pressure cloud optical depth, pressure, frac aerosol profile, type

16 VERTICAL COLUMNS CONFINED TO REGIONS OF SURFACE EMISSIONS Cloud artifacts removed by AMF calculation
NO/NO2   WITH ALTITUDE NOx lifetime <1day

17 GEOS-CHEM Tropospheric NO2
GOME Tropospheric NO2 GEOS-CHEM Tropospheric NO2 r=0.75 bias 5% 1015 molecules cm-2

18 STRATEGY: OPTIMIZE INVENTORIES USING A PRIORI BOTTOM-UP AND GOME TOP-DOWN INFORMATION
Retrieved emissions A priori emissions A posteriori emissions A priori errors Retrieval errors

19 TOP-DOWN ERROR IN NOX EMISSIONS
GOME Spectrum ( nm) Spectral fit and removal of stratospheric column 1x1015 molecules cm-2 Tropospheric NO2 Slant Column AMF (surface reflectivity, clouds, aerosols, NO2 profile) 42% of tropospheric column Tropospheric NO2 Column 30% of tropospheric column NOx Lifetime (GEOS-CHEM) NOx Emissions

20 TOP-DOWN INFORMATION FROM GOME REDUCES ERROR IN NOX EMISSION INVENTORY
Bottom-up error a Top-down error r

21 OPTIMIZED NOX EMISSIONS

22 DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A POSTERIORI AND A PRIORI
Annual mean ratio (A posteriori / A priori)

23 TROPOSPHERIC OZONE DETERMINED FROM TOMS/MLS SUGGESTS A PRIORI NOX EMISSIONS HIGH OVER INDIA
Dobson Units for March, April, May TOMS/MLS Chandra et al. [2003] GEOS-CHEM

24 ISOPRENE EMISSIONS FOR JULY 1996 DETERMINED BY SCALING GOME FORMALDEHYDE COLUMNS
COMPARE TO… GEIA (IGAC inventory) [Palmer et al., 2003]

25 GOME (A posteriori) GEIA (A priori)
EVALUATE GOME ISOPRENE INVENTORY BY COMPARISON WITH IN SITU OBSERVATIONS USING GEOS-CHEM MODEL AS INTERMEDIARY CONSISTENT WITH IN-SITU HCHO OBSERVATIONS GEIA (A priori) GOME (A posteriori) r2 = 0.53 r2 = 0.77 Palmer et al., 2003

26 GOME HCHO COLUMNS SHOW SEASONAL EVOLUTION OF VOC EMISSIONS
D. Abbot APR JUL MAY AUG JUN SEP

27 TOP-DOWN INFORMATION FROM GOME IMPROVES BOTTOM-UP INVENTORIES Higher spatial resolution provided by SCIAMACHY


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