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Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) satellite observations of ammonia, methanol, formic acid, and carbon monoxide over the Canadian oil sands: validation and model evaluation

Authors :
S. Chaliyakunnel
Junhua Zhang
M. Luo
Samar G. Moussa
Amy Leithead
Karen Cady-Pereira
L. Zhu
Katherine Hayden
John Liggio
Mark W. Shephard
Ralf M. Staebler
Dylan B. Millet
P. Lehr
Daven K. Henze
A. Akingunola
Shao-Meng Li
Chris A. McLinden
Mark Gordon
Paul A. Makar
J. R. Brook
Mengistu Wolde
Jesse O. Bash
Kelley C. Wells
Shannon L. Capps
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, Vol 8, Iss 12, Pp 5189-5211 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2015.

Abstract

The wealth of air quality information provided by satellite infrared observations of ammonia (NH3), carbon monoxide (CO), formic acid (HCOOH), and methanol (CH3OH) is currently being explored and used for a number of applications, especially at regional or global scales. These applications include air quality monitoring, trend analysis, emissions, and model evaluation. This study provides one of the first direct validations of Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) satellite-retrieved profiles of NH3, CH3OH, and HCOOH through comparisons with coincident aircraft profiles. The comparisons are performed over the Canadian oil sands region during the intensive field campaign (August–September, 2013) in support of the Joint Canada–Alberta Implementation Plan for Oil Sands Monitoring (JOSM). The satellite/aircraft comparisons over this region during this period produced errors of (i) +0.08 ± 0.25 ppbv for NH3, (ii) +7.5 ± 23 ppbv for CO, (iii) +0.19 ± 0.46 ppbv for HCOOH, and (iv) −1.1 ± 0.39 ppbv for CH3OH. These values mostly agree with previously estimated retrieval errors; however, the relatively large negative bias in CH3OH and the significantly greater positive bias for larger HCOOH and CO values observed during this study warrant further investigation. Satellite and aircraft ammonia observations during the field campaign are also used in an initial effort to perform preliminary evaluations of Environment Canada's Global Environmental Multi-scale – Modelling Air quality and CHemistry (GEM-MACH) air quality modelling system at high resolution (2.5 × 2.5 km2). These initial results indicate a model underprediction of ~ 0.6 ppbv (~ 60 %) for NH3, during the field campaign period. The TES/model CO comparison differences are ~ +20 ppbv (~ +20 %), but given that under these conditions the TES/aircraft comparisons also show a small positive TES CO bias indicates that the overall model underprediction of CO is closer to ~ 10 % at 681 hPa (~ 3 km) during this period.

Details

ISSN :
18678548
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9327d4189bccd13f974e1b59a995c6f5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-8-5189-2015