Meteorological and Back Trajectory Modeling for the Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur Study II

Author:

Gebhart Kristi A.1,Malm William C.2,Rodriguez Marco A.3,Barna Michael G.1,Schichtel Bret A.1,Benedict Katherine B.4,Collett Jeffrey L.4,Carrico Christian M.3

Affiliation:

1. Air Resources Division, National Park Service, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA

2. Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA

3. AECOM, Inc., Fort Collins, CO 80525, USA

4. Department of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA

Abstract

The Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur (RoMANS II) study with field operations during November 2008 through November 2009 was designed to evaluate the composition and sources of reactive nitrogen in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. As part of RoMANS II, a mesoscale meteorological model was utilized to provide input for back trajectory and chemical transport models. Evaluation of the model's ability to capture important transport patterns in this region of complex terrain is discussed. Previous source-receptor studies of nitrogen in this region are also reviewed. Finally, results of several back trajectory analyses for RoMANS II are presented. The trajectory mass balance (TrMB) model, a receptor-based linear regression technique, was used to estimate mean source attributions of airborne ammonia concentrations during RoMANS II. Though ammonia concentrations are usually higher when there is transport from the east, the TrMB model estimates that, on average, areas to the west contribute a larger mean fraction of the ammonia. Possible reasons for this are discussed and include the greater frequency of westerly versus easterly winds, the possibility that ammonia is transported long distances as ammonium nitrate, and the difficulty of correctly modeling the transport winds in this area.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Pollution,Geophysics

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