Back to Search Start Over

Typical meteorological conditions associated with extreme nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution events over Scandinavia

Authors :
Abhay Devasthale
Manu Anna Thomas
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2017.

Abstract

Characterizing typical meteorological conditions associated with extreme pollution events helps in the better understanding of the role of local meteorology in governing the transport and distribution of pollutants in the atmosphere. The knowledge of their co-variability could further help to evaluate and constrain chemistry transport models (CTMs). Hence, in this study, we investigate the statistical linkages between extreme nitrogen dioxide (NO2) pollution events and meteorology over Scandinavia using observational and reanalysis data. It is observed that the south-westerly winds dominated during extreme events, accounting for 50–65 % of the total events depending on the season, while the second largest annual occurrence was from south-easterly winds, accounting for 17 % of total events. The specific humidity anomalies showed an influx of warmer and moisture-laden air masses over Scandinavia in the free troposphere. Two distinct modes in the persistency of circulation patterns are observed. The first mode lasts for 1–2 days, dominated by south-easterly winds that prevailed during 78 % of total extreme events in that mode, while the second mode lasted for 3–5 days, dominated by south-westerly winds that prevailed during 86 % of the events. The combined analysis of circulation patterns, their persistency, and associated changes in humidity and clouds suggests that NO2 extreme events over Scandinavia occur mainly due to the long-range transport from the southern latitudes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d69dfccb84a29b72a9a504875afc6e2c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2016-1091