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Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ)

Authors :
Carsten Warneke
Joshua P Schwarz
Jack Dibb
Olga Kalashnikova
Gregory Frost
Jassim Al-Saad
Steven S Brown
Wm Alan Brewer
Amber Soja
Felix C Seidel
Rebecca A Washenfelder
Elizabeth B Wiggins
Richard H Moore
Bruce E Anderson
Carolyn Jordan
Tara I Yacovitch
Scott C Herndon
Shang Liu
Toshihiro Kuwayama
Daniel Jaffe
Nancy Johnston
Vanessa Selimovic
Robert Yokelson
David M Giles
Brent N Holben
Philippe Goloub
Ioana Popovici
Michael Trainer
Aditya Kumar
R Bradley Pierce
David Fahey
James Roberts
Emily M Gargulinski
David A Peterson
Xinxin Ye
Laura H Thapa
Pablo E Saide
Charles H Fite
Christopher D Holmes
Siyuan Wang
Matthew M Coggon
Zachary C J Decker
Chelsea E Stockwell
Lu Xu
Georgios Gkatzelis
Kenneth Aikin
Barry Lefer
Jackson Kaspari
Debora Griffin
Linghan Zeng
Rodney Weber
Meredith Hastings
Jiajue Chai
Glenn M Wolfe
Thomas F Hanisco
Jin Liao
Pedro Campuzano Jost
Hongyu Guo
Jose L Jimenez
James H Crawford
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 128(2)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

The NOAA/NASA Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ) experiment was a multi-agency, inter-disciplinary research effort to: (a) obtain detailed measurements of trace gas and aerosol emissions from wildfires and prescribed fires using aircraft, satellites and ground-based instruments, (b) make extensive suborbital remote sensing measurements of fire dynamics, (c) assess local, regional, and global modeling of fires, and (d) strengthen connections to observables on the ground such as fuels and fuel consumption and satellite products such as burned area and fire radiative power. From Boise, ID western wildfires were studied with the NASA DC-8 and two NOAA Twin Otter aircraft. The high-altitude NASA ER-2 was deployed from Palmdale, CA to observe some of these fires in conjunction with satellite overpasses and the other aircraft. Further research was conducted on three mobile laboratories and ground sites, and 17 different modeling forecast and analyses products for fire, fuels and air quality and climate implications. From Salina, KS the DC-8 investigated 87 smaller fires in the Southeast with remote and in-situ data collection. Sampling by all platforms was designed to measure emissions of trace gases and aerosols with multiple transects to capture the chemical transformation of these emissions and perform remote sensing observations of fire and smoke plumes under day and night conditions. The emissions were linked to fuels consumed and fire radiative power using orbital and suborbital remote sensing observations collected during overflights of the fires and smoke plumes and ground sampling of fuels.

Subjects

Subjects :
Environment Pollution

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21698996 and 2169897X
Volume :
128
Issue :
2
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Notes :
80GSFC20C0044, , 80NM0018D0004, , 80LARC23DA003, , 80NSSC21K1456, , 80NSSC22M0001
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230012739
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022JD037758