Transpacific transport of ozone pollution and the effect of recent Asian emission increases on air quality in North America: an integrated analysis using satellite, aircraft, ozonesonde, and surface observations

International audience We use an ensemble of aircraft, satellite, sonde, and surface observations for April?May 2006 (NASA/INTEX-B aircraft campaign) to better understand the mechanisms for transpacific ozone pollution and its implications for North American air quality. The observations are interpr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhang, L., Jacob, D. J., Boersma, K. F., Jaffe, D. A., Olson, J. R., Bowman, K. W., Worden, J. R., Thompson, A. M., Avery, M. A., Cohen, R. C., Dibb, J. E., Flocke, F. M., Fuelberg, H. E., Huey, L. G., Mcmillan, W. W., Singh, H. B., Weinheimer, A. J.
Other Authors: Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Cambridge, USA (EPS), Harvard University Cambridge, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), University of Washington Seattle, Atmospheric Sciences Division Hampton, NASA Langley Research Center Hampton (LaRC), Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), NASA-California Institute of Technology (CALTECH), PennState Meteorology Department, Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), Penn State System-Penn State System, Department of Chemistry, University of California (UC), Climate Change Research Center Durham, University of New Hampshire (UNH), Earth Observing Laboratory Boulder (EOL), National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder (NCAR)-University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science Tallahassee (FSU, Florida State University Tallahassee (FSU), School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Atlanta, Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, Department of Physics Baltimore, University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC), University of Maryland System-University of Maryland System, NASA Ames Research Center (ARC), National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder (NCAR)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00304137
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00304137/document
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00304137/file/acpd-8-8143-2008.pdf
Description
Summary:International audience We use an ensemble of aircraft, satellite, sonde, and surface observations for April?May 2006 (NASA/INTEX-B aircraft campaign) to better understand the mechanisms for transpacific ozone pollution and its implications for North American air quality. The observations are interpreted with a global 3-D chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem). OMI NO 2 satellite observations constrain Asian anthropogenic NO x emissions and indicate a factor of 2 increase from 2000 to 2006 in China. Satellite observations of CO from AIRS and TES indicate two major events of Asian transpacific pollution during INTEX-B. Correlation between TES CO and ozone observations shows evidence for transpacific ozone pollution. The semi-permanent Pacific High and Aleutian Low cause splitting of transpacific pollution plumes over the Northeast Pacific. The northern branch circulates around the Aleutian Low and has little impact on North America. The southern branch circulates around the Pacific High and impacts western North America. Both aircraft measurements and model results show sustained ozone production driven by peroxyacetylnitrate (PAN) decomposition in the southern branch, roughly doubling the transpacific influence from ozone produced in the Asian boundary layer. Model simulation of ozone observations at Mt. Bachelor Observatory in Oregon (2.7 km altitude) indicates a mean Asian ozone pollution contribution of 9±3 ppbv to the mean observed concentration of 54 ppbv, reflecting mostly an enhancement in background ozone rather than episodic Asian plumes. Asian pollution enhanced surface ozone concentrations by 5?7 ppbv over western North America in spring 2006. The 2000?2006 rise in Asian anthropogenic emissions increased the influence by 1?2 ppbv.